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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69824 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69824)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The works of Richard Hurd, Volume 8
-(of 8), by Richard Hurd
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The works of Richard Hurd, Volume 8 (of 8)
-
-Author: Richard Hurd
-
-Release Date: January 18, 2023 [eBook #69824]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF RICHARD HURD,
-VOLUME 8 (OF 8) ***
-
-[Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Italicized text delimited by underscores.
-
-There are many special characters in this text that require a utf-8
-compliant font. If you find characters that appear as a question mark in
-a black box or a small rectangle with numbers in it, you should check
-your reader’s default font. If you have a font installed with SIL after
-the font name, you should use that one.]
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- WORKS
-
- OF
-
- RICHARD HURD, D.D.
-
- LORD BISHOP OF WORCESTER.
-
- VOL. VIII.
-
- Printed by J. Nichols and Son,
- Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London.
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- WORKS
-
- OF
-
- RICHARD HURD, D.D.
-
- LORD BISHOP OF WORCESTER.
-
- IN EIGHT VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. VIII.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON:
-
- PRINTED FOR T. CADELL AND W. DAVIES, STRAND.
-
- 1811.
-
-
-
-
- THEOLOGICAL WORKS.
-
- VOL. IV.
-
-
-
-
- SERMONS ON PUBLIC OCCASIONS.
-
- CHARGES TO THE CLERGY.
-
- AND
-
- AN APPENDIX:
-
- CONTAINING
-
- CONTROVERSIAL TRACTS
-
- ON DIFFERENT SUBJECTS AND OCCASIONS.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-OF
-
-THE EIGHTH VOLUME.
-
-
- SERMONS.
-
- _A Sermon, preached before the House of
- Lords, Dec. 13, 1776; being the Day of
- the General Fast, on account of the American
- Rebellion_ 1
-
- _A Sermon, preached before the Society for
- the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
- Parts, Feb. 16, 1781_ 17
-
- _A Sermon, preached before the House of
- Lords, January 30, 1786; being the Anniversary
- of King Charles’s Martyrdom_ 35
-
-
- CHARGES.
-
- _A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Lichfield and Coventry, in 1775 and 1776_ 55
-
- _A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1782_ 73
-
- _A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1785_ 87
-
- _A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1790_ 103
-
- _A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1796_ 117
-
- _A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1800_ 129
-
-
- APPENDIX.
-
-
- CONTROVERSIAL TRACTS.
-
- _Remarks on the Rev._ W. WESTON’S _Enquiry
- into the Rejection of the Christian Miracles
- by the Heathens, 1746_ 145
-
- _The Opinion of an eminent Lawyer, concerning
- the Right of Appeal from the Vice-Chancellor
- of Cambridge to the Senate, 1751_ 185
-
- _On the Delicacy of Friendship, 1755_ 255
-
- _A Letter to the Rev. Dr._ THOMAS LELAND,
- _Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin; on his
- Dissertation on the Principles of Human
- Eloquence, &c. 1764_ 303
-
-
-
-
- THREE SERMONS
-
- PREACHED ON
-
- PUBLIC OCCASIONS.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- SERMON
-
- PREACHED BEFORE
-
- THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
-
- THE HOUSE OF LORDS,
-
- IN THE
-
- ABBEY CHURCH OF WESTMINSTER,
-
- ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1776,
-
- BEING
-
- The Day appointed by AUTHORITY for a GENERAL FAST,
- on Account of the AMERICAN REBELLION.
-
-
-_Die Veneris, 13ᵒ Decembris 14, 1776, Post Meridiem._
-
-ORDERED, by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, in Parliament assembled,
-That the Thanks of this House be, and are hereby, given to the Lord
-Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, for the Sermon by him preached before
-this House, this day, in the Abbey Church, Westminster; and he is hereby
-desired to cause the same to be forthwith printed and published.
-
- ASHLEY COWPER,
- Cler. Parliamentor.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON, &c.
-
-PSALM CXIX. v. 59.
-
-_I called mine own ways to remembrance: and turned my feet unto thy
-testimonies._
-
-
-The great object of this day’s solemnity, is, _to humble ourselves before
-Almighty God, in order to obtain pardon of our sins_. But this end
-requires, that we enter into an earnest recollection of our _ways_, and
-stedfastly resolve to _forsake_ all those, which we shall find reason to
-condemn.
-
-Such is the example set us by the royal author of the text: And, though
-it might claim our respect at all times, it especially does so, at this
-juncture, when our sins have brought down upon us the heaviest of those
-judgments, with which it pleases God to visit, and, if it may be, to
-reclaim, offending nations.
-
-And the hand of Heaven is not the less, but the more visible in this
-calamity, for it’s befalling us, when the acknowledged power of our
-country seemed to secure it against all resistance, both within and
-without; and when it was not to be expected, from the usual course of
-human affairs, that an attempt of this nature, so unprovoked, at once,
-and so hazardous, would be made. Something there must have been, much
-amiss in that people, against whom the Almighty permits the sword of
-civil fury, under _such_ circumstances, to be drawn.
-
-From what _causes_, and by what _steps_, this portentous mischief hath
-grown up to it’s present size and terror, it is not needful, and may not
-be proper, for me to say. For which of us is unacquainted with these
-things? And how ill suited to the modest piety of this day would be,
-the vehement accusation of others, or the sollicitous justification of
-ourselves!
-
-Yet, among the various pretences, which have served to pervert the
-judgments of many, ONE is so strange, and of so pernicious a tendency,
-were it to be generally admitted, that a word or two cannot be
-misemployed in the censure of it.
-
-It is in the order of things, that they who, for any purpose, wish to
-draw the people into a scheme of resistance to an established government,
-should labour to impress them, first of all, with a persuasion of their
-being ill governed. Acts of tyranny and oppression are, therefore, sought
-out with diligence; and invented, when they cannot be found: And the
-credulous multitude have but too easily, at all times, lent an ear to
-such charges.
-
-But it is quite new, and beyond measure extravagant, to tell us,
-That, although there be no considerable abuse of the government, as
-it now stands, we are bound in conscience to resist it, because such
-abuse is possible, and because a more desirable form of government
-may be conceived. And yet, to the disgrace of an age, calling itself
-philosophical, such sophistry has passed, not on the multitude only, but,
-as it is said, on wise men.
-
-On the other hand, it would be unjust to say, that speculations on the
-nature and end of government are, therefore, useless or even hurtful,
-because we see them, in the present instance, so egregiously misapplied.
-Theories on government, when framed by sober and thinking men, cannot
-but be of great importance, as serving to remind both the governors and
-governed of their respective interests and duties; nay, and as tending
-ultimately to improve establishments themselves; but by degrees only, and
-by constitutional means. Our own excellent establishment has, in this
-way, been much improved: And we surely owe our thanks to those theorists,
-whose generous labours have contributed to this end.
-
-But to apply these theories, how reasonable soever in themselves,
-directly to the correction of established governments, and to insist,
-that force may, or should, be called in to realize these visions, is
-a sort of fanaticism, which, if suffered to take it’s course, would
-introduce the utmost confusion into human affairs; would be constantly
-disturbing, and must, in the end, subvert, the best government, that ever
-did, or ever can, subsist in the world.
-
-Thus much, then, in reproof of so wild and destructive a principle,
-I could not help saying in the entrance of a discourse, which, to
-suit the occasion, should have little of altercation and dispute; and
-which, agreeably to the text, must turn chiefly on the great duties of
-Recollection and Repentance.
-
-But what, you will say, “Is a criminal enterprize, like this, which
-occasions our present meeting, to be charged on those only, against
-whom it is directed? And must we be the worst of sinners, because there
-are those of our fellow-subjects, who have taken up arms against their
-Sovereign?”
-
-Far be it from me to affirm either of these things! Yet he was a wise
-man, who said, that, _when a man’s ways please the Lord, he maketh even
-his enemies to be at peace with him_[1]: And I think it clear from the
-tenour of scripture, and even from our own experience, that no national
-distress is ever inflicted, before it is deserved.
-
-And the conviction of this sad truth is ground enough for us to turn
-ourselves to the great work of Repentance; which does not require us
-to form discouraging, or indeed any, comparisons between ourselves and
-the enemies we contend with, but to call to mind that we have, indeed,
-merited the evil, we suffer, whether brought upon us immediately by
-our own sins, or those of other men. A civil war is the most dreadful
-of those instruments, by which the moral government of God is
-administered in this world. And, _when such a judgement is in the earth_,
-be our comparative merits what they may, we shall do well to _learn
-righteousness_[2].
-
-But, after all, who, or what are we, that we should talk of _merits_, or
-scruple to place this alarming visitation of Heaven to the account of our
-sins?—Merciful God! Do thou incline our hearts to follow the example of
-thy servant, David, this day, in _calling our own ways to remembrance_,
-and we shall presently see what need there is for us to _turn our feet
-unto thy testimonies_!
-
-1. To begin from that point, whence all true worth and goodness,
-proceeds, I mean, from RELIGION.
-
-There is no people on the face of the earth, more deeply indebted to
-Providence for blessings of all sorts, spiritual as well as temporal,
-than we of this Christian and Protestant nation. But has our pious
-gratitude kept pace with these obligations?
-
-Infinite are the benefits, that descend upon us from our WELL-REFORMED
-Religion, and from the watchful care of Heaven in the support and
-protection of it. Yet who reflects on these things? Should we so much as
-hear a word on the subject, if it did not suit the purpose, sometimes,
-of peevish men and parties among us, to revive the memory of it? Have we
-even a decent regard for the honour of our great Reformers? And is not
-the little zeal, we have left for Protestantism itself, spent in idle
-cavils at the stupendous work, atchieved by their hands?
-
-But why speak I of _reformed_ religion? Is there any of us, almost, who
-is animated with that zeal for CHRISTIANITY itself, which glowed in the
-breasts of our fathers?
-
-Too many proclaim their disbelief of it, nay, their utter contempt of
-all that is called Religion; and yet appear to give no offence (where,
-methinks, it should be taken) by their manifest, their avowed, their
-ostentatious impieties. Is it not even growing into a maxim, in certain
-quarters, that Religion, or Irreligion, is a matter of no moment in
-the characters of men, and that none, but a bigot, is affected by that
-distinction?
-
-It is true, the wiser, and, in every sense of the word, better, part
-of the public have an abhorrence of this profligacy. They profess, and
-without doubt entertain, a respect for the authority of their divine
-religion. Yet who has not observed, that more than a few of these reduce
-that authority to just nothing, and, in a sort of philosophical delirium,
-are for setting up their Reason, that is, their _own_ authority, in it’s
-stead?
-
-Even we, of the Clergy, have we not some need to be put in mind of _doing
-our first works_, and of returning to _our first love_[3]? Has not the
-contagion of the times sicklied over the complexion of even _our_ zeal
-and charity? while we neither repell the enemies of the faith with that
-vigour, nor confirm the faithful themselves with that vigilance, which
-did so much honour to our predecessors in the sacred ministry.
-
-But to come to plain _practical Religion_, as evidenced in our churches,
-and houses, and in the offices of common life.
-
-How few are there, in comparison, who make a conscience of serving
-God, either in public, or in private? Is there so much as the air of
-piety in numberless families, even on that day, which by God and man
-is set apart for the duties of it? Nay, is not that day, I had almost
-said, in preference to others, prophaned by every sort of amusement
-and dissipation? As if there was a full purpose to shake off even that
-small appearance of religion, which the Lord’s day has hitherto, and but
-barely, kept up. So little do we retain of that habitual seriousness,
-that awful sense of God, and of our dependence upon him, in which the
-essence of the religious character consists!
-
-2. And, if such be the state of religion among us, who will wonder, that
-the MORAL VIRTUES, which have no firm abode in the Godless mind, are
-deserting us so fast? Who can think it strange, that oaths have lost
-their power? And that the most solemn engagements, even those contracted
-at the altar itself, are falling apace, or rather are _fallen_ with many,
-into contempt?
-
-Our _natural_ appetites, indeed, are impatient for their respective
-gratifications; and the lower classes of men, uneducated and
-undisciplined, are, at all times, too generally enslaved by them. But an
-overflow of wealth, and, it’s consequence, ingenious Luxury, has now made
-our _fantastic_ wants, as clamorous, as the natural; and the rage, with
-which the objects of them, or what we call polite and elegant pleasures
-and accommodations, are pursued in the higher ranks of life, discovers
-an impotency of mind, equal to that of the lowest vulgar, and more
-ruinous in its effects. For, whence is it, else, that bankruptcies are so
-frequent? that every species of fraud and rapine is hazarded? that a lust
-for gaming is grown epidemical and uncontroulable? that the ruin of noble
-and opulent families surprizes nobody? that even suicide is the crime of
-almost every day, nay and justified, too, as well as committed?
-
-If horrors, like these, admit of aggravation, it is, that they meet us in
-a country, where the religion of Jesus is taught in it’s purity, and, as
-yet, is publicly professed; in a country, that wants no means of knowing
-it’s duty, and, among it’s other motives to the practice of it, has one,
-as rare as it is valuable, I mean, The best example in the highest place.
-
-3. In this relaxed state of _private morals_, it is easy to guess what
-must be the tone of our CIVIL or POLITICAL virtues.
-
-Vice is never so shameless, as when it pretends to public spirit. Yet
-this effrontery is so common, that it scandalizes nobody. If, indeed,
-noise and clamour and violence; if an affected tumour of words, breaking
-out in a loud defiance of dignities; if intemperate invectives against
-the most respected characters, and a contempt of all that wears the face
-of authority among us——were proofs of a just concern for the common weal;
-there would be no want of this virtue.
-
-But who sees not, that true patriotism dares not allow itself in
-these liberties? that, if, in pursuit of a favourite object, it goes,
-occasionally, some lengths, scarce justifiable itself, it never fails,
-however, to stop at a certain point, and to respect, at least, the firm
-immoveable barriers of the Constitution? But has such been the modesty
-of our times? Let every one judge for himself. And, for the rest, I wish
-it had not appeared of late, that such a spirit of rapine and corruption
-prevails, both at home and abroad, as threatens the subversion of all our
-public interests;—a spirit! which neither the vigilance of parliament,
-for the severity of public justice, hath been able to controul.
-
-I PASS RAPIDLY over these things, and omit a thousand others, that
-might be mentioned, because I would rather suggest matter to your own
-reflexions, than enlarge on so unwelcome a subject, myself. Besides,
-I know what is commonly thought of such representations. Some will
-treat them, as decent words, on this occasion; others, as charges much
-aggravated, if not groundless; even, on many well-intentioned men an
-old and oft-repeated complaint will make, it is possible, but a slight
-impression.
-
-Still, it is _our_ duty to speak plainly, on such a day, as this; and
-if we speak truly too, it is very clear what must be the duty of our
-_hearers_. Reason stands aghast at the sight of an “unprincipled,
-immoral, incorrigible” publick: And the word of God abounds in such
-threats and denunciations, as must strike terror into the heart of every
-Believer. And, although Repentance may not ensure success in the great
-contest, now depending, (for the All-wise Disposer of events may see fit
-to decree otherwise); yet the likeliest method we can take to procure
-that success will be, by rendering ourselves somewhat less unworthy of
-it, than, assuredly, we now are. At all events, an amendment of life will
-recommend us to the favour of God, and must therefore be useful, indeed
-is the only thing that, in the end, can be truly so, to us.
-
-Let us then (every one for himself) try what Repentance can do, under
-this conviction of a too general depravity, and in this hour of national
-distress. One natural effect of it will be, A readiness to submit
-ourselves to the authority of Government in all those just measures,
-which it may see fit to take in the present emergency, and to give the
-utmost effect to them by our entire agreement and unanimity.
-
-And would to God, we had always been of this mind!—But, let us, at
-length, resolve to be so. Then may we hope, with the divine blessing
-(which we have supplicated this day) on his Majesty’s arms and councils,
-that this unnatural Rebellion will be soon composed; the just rights of
-the nation restored; and a way opened for the re-establishment of _law_
-and _order_ in those miserably distracted provinces, which have now
-learned, from experience, the just value of both.
-
-To conclude; a pious and Christian use of the present occasion, in
-putting up our vows to heaven for the return of the public tranquillity,
-and in forsaking, every one of us, the error of our ways, will perfectly
-correspond to the views of our most religious and gracious Sovereign;
-who, in calling upon us to join with him in this solemn fast, in the
-midst of his successes, demonstrates, that his trust is not in his own
-strength, but that of the Almighty; that He regards this necessary
-chastisement of his undutiful subjects as a matter of the deepest
-humiliation; and that Victory itself but redoubles his ardour to procure
-for us, and for all his people, the blessings of Peace.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- SERMON
-
- PREACHED BEFORE
-
- THE INCORPORATED SOCIETY
-
- FOR THE
-
- PROPAGATION OF THE GOSPEL IN FOREIGN PARTS;
-
- AT THEIR ANNIVERSARY MEETING
-
- IN THE PARISH CHURCH OF ST. MARY-LE-BOW,
-
- ON FRIDAY FEBRUARY 16, 1781.
-
-
-_At the Anniversary Meeting of the_ Society for the Propagation of the
-Gospel in Foreign Parts, _in the_ Vestry-Room _of St._ Mary-le-Bow, _on_
-Friday _the_ 16_th Day of_ February, 1781;
-
-AGREED, That the Thanks of the SOCIETY be given to the Right Reverend the
-Lord Bishop of _Lichfield_ and _Coventry_, for the Sermon preached by his
-Lordship this day before the SOCIETY; and that his Lordship be desired to
-deliver a copy of the same to the SOCIETY to be printed.
-
- _William Morice_, Secretary.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON, &c.
-
-HEBREWS, xiii. 8.
-
-_Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever._
-
-
-These words, if considered with an eye to the preceding verses, may
-mean, “That our Lord Jesus Christ is always attentive to the wants and
-distresses of his faithful followers, and always at hand to relieve
-them:” Or, if we connect them with the verse immediately following, we
-may understand them as expressing this proposition, “That the doctrine of
-Jesus Christ is always one and the same, independently of the wayward and
-changeable fancies of men.” In either way, I say, the words may be taken;
-and they do not necessarily imply more than the one or the other of these
-two senses, which the context will oblige us to bestow upon them.
-
-But the minds of the Apostles, full of the greatest ideas, and swelling
-with the suggestions of the holy Spirit, which, in no scanty measure, was
-imparted to them, perpetually overflow, as it were, the subject of their
-discourse, and expatiate into other and larger views, than seem necessary
-to the completion of the argument, immediately presented to them.
-
-This being the manner of the inspired writers, it can be thought no
-forced or violent construction of the text, to take it in the full extent
-of the expression; which is so striking and awful, as naturally to turn
-our thoughts towards the contemplation of the three following particulars:
-
-First, The ineffable glory of our Lord’s _Person_;
-
-Secondly, The immensity of the scheme of _Redemption through his
-blood_[4]; And
-
-Lastly, The unchangeable nature of his _Religion_.
-
-In these several senses, it is truly and emphatically said of Jesus
-Christ, That _he is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever_.
-
-I. The transcendent dignity of our blessed Lord’s PERSON is expressed in
-these words.
-
-For what less do they imply than a perfect state of being, a proper
-eternity of existence? Agreeably to what we read elsewhere, That _he was
-in the beginning_[5]—_before all things_[6]—that _he is Alpha and Omega,
-the first and the last_[7]—that _his throne is for ever and ever_[8]—and
-_his goings forth from everlasting_[9]: Nay, and suitably to the very
-turn of phrase, which the Holy Ghost employs in characterizing the
-Supreme Majesty of Heaven, _I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the
-ending, saith the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come,
-the Almighty_[10].
-
-When Jesus Christ, therefore, is held out to us in the text, as being
-_the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever_, we may be allowed, or rather
-we are required, to elevate our thoughts to the utmost, and to conceive
-with inexpressible awe and veneration _of that glory which he had with
-the Father, before the world was_[11].
-
-II. We are called upon by these words to reflect on the constant, uniform
-tenour of that amazing scheme of REDEMPTION, which was planned before
-the ages, was unfolded by just degrees, and was finally completed in
-_Christ Jesus_; in this sense, likewise, so interesting to us, _the_ SAME
-_yesterday, to-day, and for ever_.
-
-_The works of the Lord_, says the Psalmist, _are great, and sought out
-of all those that have pleasure therein_[12]. But which of his works is
-so stupendous, or carries the enraptured mind to so high an original, as
-that which respects the redemption by Christ Jesus? Man was produced in
-time, and stationed on this earth at the distance of no more years, than
-our chronology easily reckons up. But who can go back to that moment,
-when the Godhead sate in council on _the dispensation of Grace_ by the
-Gospel? _On the mystery, which from the beginning of the world hath been
-hid in God, who created all things by Jesus Christ; to the intent that_,
-in the fullness of time, _unto the principalities and powers in heavenly
-places might be known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God, according
-to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord_[13]?
-Inspired language itself labours, we see, in setting forth the extent of
-this dispensation; in declaring to us _what is the breadth, and length,
-and depth, and height_ of this scheme of divine wisdom, _through the love
-of Christ, which passeth knowledge_[14].
-
-_Known unto God_, indeed, _are_ ALL _his works from the beginning_[15].
-But this great work of love seems to have been ever present to him; to
-have engaged and occupied, if we may presume so to speak, the constant,
-the unremitting, the unwearied attention of the divine mind; and to have
-entered into all the counsels of his providence, which he had formed for
-the display of his glory, _through all ages, world without end_[16].
-
-Such is the idea which the Scriptures oblige us to entertain of _the
-manifold wisdom_ of God in Christ Jesus: _manifold_, as it presents to us
-the various evolutions of an eternal and infinitely extended dispensation
-of Grace; but _one and the same_, with regard to the end in view, the
-redemption of a ruined world, and to the conduct and completion of them
-all by the means, and in the person, of the Redeemer.
-
-What parts of this scheme lie out of the verge of our world, and how much
-of it hath respected, or may hereafter respect, other and higher natures
-by far, than the sons of men, it would be fruitless to inquire, as these
-deep things of God have not been distinctly revealed to us. Yet one thing
-deserves our notice, That _the Angels themselves[17] desire to look into
-this_ scheme of salvation; and are surely some way concerned in it, since
-it was designed to comprehend, _and gather together in one, all things
-in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth, even in_
-HIM[18].
-
-But conceive of the interest which celestial beings have in Jesus Christ,
-as you will; there can be no doubt, that he has been invariably the
-end of all God’s revelations to mankind. The history of Redemption is
-coæval with that of the Globe itself, has run through every stage of its
-existence, and will outlast its utmost duration. The precious hope of a
-Redeemer was the support of fallen man; the theme of all the Patriarchs;
-the basis of all the Covenants; the boast and exultation of all the
-Prophets; and the desire of all nations.
-
-Look round on the shifting scenes of glory, which have been exhibited in
-the theatre of this world; and see the success of mighty conquerors, the
-policy of states, the destiny of empires, depend on the secret purpose of
-God in his son Jesus: before whom all the atchievements and imaginations
-of men must bow down, and to whose honour all the mysterious workings
-of his providence are now, have hitherto been, and will for ever be,
-directed.
-
-Such is the uniform, immutable, everlasting tenour of that dispensation,
-we call Christian; the power and wisdom of God in _Jesus Christ, the same
-yesterday, to-day, and for ever_. But
-
-III. Lastly, these words express the unchangeable nature and perpetual
-obligation of Christianity, considered as a _Law of Religion_, or _Rule
-of Life_, as well as a scheme of wisdom and mercy unspeakable for the
-redemption of mankind.
-
-Salvation by the blood of Christ was the eternal purpose of God, the
-ultimate end of all his counsels. But, for the attainment of it, He chose
-to reveal his will gradually by several intermediate and preparatory
-communications. Hence the divine Law, though still directed to the same
-end, has been diversified, according as the Legislator saw fit, _at
-sundry times, and in divers manners, to speak in times past unto the
-Fathers by the_ PROPHETS.
-
-But now, at length, _He hath spoken to us by his_ SON; whose word has
-become the standing law of mankind; obligatory on all, to whom it is
-made known, and unalterable by any authority, or by any change of
-circumstances whatsoever. The terms of salvation are irrevocably fixed.
-They are proposed to all, and required of all, without distinction
-of seasons or persons. The everlasting Gospel is addressed to _all
-that dwell on the earth; to every nation and kindred and tongue and
-people_[19]. The extent of it is universal; and the obligation so
-indispensable, that _if an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel than
-that we have received_, he is to be rejected by us; nay, an anathema
-rests upon him[20]. Since _the sound of the Gospel is gone out into all
-the world_[21], we are to listen to no other. Nor is it to be modified to
-our expectations or fancies. _We are complete in_ HIM, _which is the head
-of all principality and power_[22]; even in JESUS CHRIST, with regard to
-the perpetuity and eternity of his Law, as well as in the other senses
-before considered, _the_ SAME _yesterday, to-day, and for ever_.
-
-AFTER THIS explanation of the text, every one sees with what force
-it applies to the occasion of our present meeting. For surely such a
-Religion, as that of Jesus, so divine in its origin, so extensive in its
-views, and so permanent in its obligations, deserves to be propagated
-through the world; and justifies, or rather demands, the utmost zeal of
-its professors to spread it abroad among all nations.
-
-And such is the end of this venerable Society; instituted for the double
-purpose of converting the Heathen, who sit in darkness and the shadow
-of death, to the blessed hopes of the Gospel; and of keeping up and
-promoting in professed Christians that _faith_, which they have already
-received, but, through indigence, ignorance, or a vicious life, have
-suffered to languish and die away, or have not, at least, cultivated to
-any valuable purpose.
-
-And can either of these objects be indifferent to us? Be it but the
-_latter_ of the two, it must deeply affect a good and compassionate mind.
-Where the want of instruction is extreme in those who bear the name
-of Christians, and the means of obtaining it clearly not within their
-power, there is no doubt that both benevolence and piety call upon us to
-administer what relief we properly can to their pressing necessities.
-
-But the _former_, I suppose, is the main object of the Society: And if,
-on this occasion, we may have leave to enlarge our ideas a little, and
-to contemplate that object in the extent to which it has been carried by
-the zeal not of our’s only, but of other ancient and modern missions, we
-shall find it above measure interesting to all true believers in Jesus.
-
-For look on the various wild and uncivilized tribes of men, of whatever
-name or colour, which our ambition, or avarice, or curiosity has
-discovered, in the new or old world; and say, if the sight of human
-nature in such crying distress, in such sordid, disgraceful, and more
-than brutal wretchedness, be not enough to make us fly with ardour to
-their relief and better accommodation.
-
-To impart some ideas of order and civility to their rude minds, is
-an effort of true generosity: But, if we can find means at the same
-time, or in consequence of such civility, to infuse a sense of God and
-Religion, of the virtues and hopes which spring out of faith in Christ,
-and which open a scene of consolation and glory to them, who but must
-regard this as an act of the most sublime charity?
-
-Indeed, the difficulties, the dangers, the distresses of all sorts, which
-must be encountered by the Christian Missionary, require a more than
-ordinary degree of that virtue, and will only be sustained by _him_, whom
-a fervent love of Christ and the quickening graces of his Spirit have
-anointed, as it were, and consecrated to this arduous service. Then it
-is, that we have seen the faithful minister of the word go forth with
-the zeal of an Apostle, and the constancy of a Martyr. We have seen him
-forsake ease and affluence; a competency at least, and the ordinary
-comforts of Society; and, with the Gospel in his hand and his Saviour
-in his heart, make his way through burning deserts and the howling
-wilderness: braving the rage of climates, and all the inconveniencies
-of long and perilous voyages; submitting to the drudgery of learning
-barbarous languages, and to the disgust of complying with barbarous
-manners; watching the dark suspicions, and exposed to the capricious
-fury, of impotent savages; courting their offensive society, adopting
-their loathsome customs, and assimilating his very nature, almost, to
-their’s; in a word, _enduring all things, becoming all things_, in the
-patient hope of finding a way to their good opinion, and of succeeding,
-finally, in his unwearied endeavours to make the word of life and
-salvation not unacceptable to them.
-
-I confess, when I reflect on all these things, I humble myself before
-such heroic virtue; or, rather, I adore the grace of God in Christ Jesus,
-which is able to produce such examples of it in our degenerate world.
-
-The power of Religion has, no doubt, appeared in other instances; in
-PENANCES, suppose, in PILGRIMAGES, in CRUSADES; and we know in what light
-they are now regarded by reasonable and judicious men.
-
-But let not things so dissimilar be compared together, much less
-confounded. Uncommanded, useless, sanguinary zeal provokes your contempt
-and abhorrence; and with reason: Only remember, for pity’s sake, under
-what circumstances of ignorance and barbarity the provocation was given.
-But when the duty is clearly enjoined[23] by the Redeemer himself; when
-no weapon is employed by the enterprizing adventurer but that of the
-Spirit; when the friendliest affections prompt his zeal; and the object
-in view is eternal life; when, I say, the authority is unquestionable,
-and the means blameless; the motive so pure, and the end so glorious—O!
-let not the hard heart of Infidelity prophane such a virtue, as this,
-with the disgraceful name of _fanaticism_, or _superstition_.
-
-Nay, Candour, methinks, should be ready to make allowance for some real
-defects or miscarriages, which will ever attend the best performances
-of mortal men. What though some error in judgment, some impropriety of
-conduct, some infirmity of temper, I had almost said, some imbecillity of
-understanding, be discernible in the zealous Missionary? Something, nay
-much, may be overlooked, where so much is endured for Christ’s sake. It
-is enough that the word of the Cross is preached _in simplicity and godly
-sincerity_[24]. He, whose _strength is made perfect in weakness_[25],
-will provide that even the frailties of his servants contribute, in the
-end, to the success of so good a cause, and the display of his own glory.
-
-Thus much I could not help saying on the behalf, and in admiration, of a
-CHARITY, which intends so much benefit to the souls of men, which brings
-out so many shining virtues in its ministers, and reflects so much honour
-on the Christian name. They that feel themselves unworthy to be made the
-immediate instruments of carrying on this great work of conversion among
-savage tribes and infidel nations, should bless God for the nobler gifts
-of zeal, and resolution, and fortitude, which he has bestowed on others;
-and should promote it by such means as are in their power, by their
-countenance, their liberality, their counsel; by a strenuous endeavour,
-in this humbler way, to spread the honour of their Saviour, and the
-invaluable blessings of his Religion, to the ends of the world.
-
-Thus shall we make some amends for those multiplied mischiefs, and, I
-doubt, injuries, which our insatiable Commerce occasions; and second
-the gracious designs of an all-wise Providence, which brings good out
-of evil, and turns to his own righteous ends even those VICES which our
-boisterous passions produce, and which He sees it not fit, in this our
-day of trial, to prevent or restrain.
-
-Lastly, Thus shall we act as becomes the professors of that Religion,
-which is divine, universal, perfect; in one word, the gift and the
-likeness of HIM, who is THE SAME YESTERDAY, TO-DAY, AND FOR EVER.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- SERMON
-
- PREACHED BEFORE
-
- THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
-
- THE HOUSE OF LORDS,
-
- IN THE
-
- ABBEY CHURCH OF WESTMINSTER,
-
- ON MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1786,
-
- BEING
-
- The Anniversary of KING CHARLES’S MARTYRDOM.
-
-
-_Die Lunæ, 6ᵒ Februarii, 1786._
-
-ORDERED, by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament assembled,
-That the Thanks of this House be, and are hereby, given to the Lord
-Bishop of Worcester, for the Sermon by him preached before this House, on
-Monday last, in the Abbey Church, Westminster; and he is hereby desired
-to cause the same to be forthwith printed and published.
-
- ASHLEY COWPER,
- Cler. Parliamentor.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON, &c.
-
-1 ST. PETER, ii. 16.
-
-_As free, and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness, but as
-the servants of God._
-
-
-Christianity, while it provides, chiefly, for the future interests of
-men, by no means overlooks their present; but is, indeed, studious to
-make its followers as happy in both worlds, as they are capable of being.
-
-As an instance of this beneficent purpose, we may observe, that the
-religion of Jesus is most friendly to the CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTIES
-of mankind.
-
-There is something in the constitution of our nature, which leads men to
-expect, and even claim, as much independence on the will and caprice of
-each other, as the ends of society, and the form of government, under
-which they live, will permit.
-
-Agreeably to these instincts, or conclusions of reason, call them
-which you will, the Gospel, both in its genius and precepts, invites
-its professors to the love and cultivation of LIBERTY. It allows the
-freedom of private judgment, in which the essence of _religious_ liberty
-consists: And it indulges our natural love of _civil_ liberty, not only
-by giving an express preference[26] to it, before a state of slavery,
-when by just and lawful means we can obtain it; but, also, by erecting
-our thoughts, and giving us higher notions of the value and dignity of
-human nature (now redeemed by so immense a price, as the blood of the
-Lamb of God), and consequently by representing a servile condition as
-more degrading and dishonourable to us, than, on the footing of mere
-reason, we could have conceived.
-
-But now this great indulgence of Heaven, like every other, is liable to
-be misused; and was, in fact, so misused even in the early times, when
-this indulgence of the Gospel to the natural feelings of men was, with
-the Gospel itself, first notified and declared. For the zealot Jews,
-full of theocratic ideas, were forward to conclude, that their Christian
-privileges absolved them from obedience to _civil government_: And the
-believing Gentiles (who had not the Jewish prejudices to mislead them)
-were yet unwilling to think that the Gospel had not, at least, set them
-free from _domestic slavery_; which was the too general condition of
-those converts in their heathen state.
-
-These notions, as they were not authorized by Christianity (which made
-no immediate and direct change in the politic and personal condition of
-mankind), so, if they had not been opposed and discountenanced, would
-have given great scandal to the ruling powers in every country, where the
-Christians resided, and have very much obstructed the propagation of the
-Christian faith.
-
-The holy Spirit, therefore, to guard the rising Church from these
-mischiefs, saw fit, by the Apostle Peter, to admonish both the Jewish
-and Gentile converts to conduct themselves as _free men_ indeed, so far
-as they were, or could honestly contrive to become free (for that their
-religion no way disallowed); but not as _misusing_ the liberty they
-had, or might have (which every principle of their religion, as well
-as prudence, forbad). _As free_, says he, _and not using your liberty
-for a cloak of maliciousness_: As if he had said, “Be careful to observe
-a due mean in this matter: Maintain your just liberties; yet so, as
-not to gratify your malignant passions under pretence of discharging
-that duty.” And the better to secure the observance of this precept, he
-adds—_but as the servants of God_—that is, “Remember ye are so to employ
-your liberty as never to forget the service ye owe to God; who, in the
-present instance, commands you to _obey Magistrates_; that is, to submit
-yourselves to the government, under which ye live, _not only for wrath_,
-for fear of punishment, _but for conscience sake_.”
-
-And this caution, so guarded by religious as well as moral
-considerations, was the more important, because no word is so fascinating
-to the common ear, as that of _Liberty_, while the few only know what it
-means; and the many, of all ranks, in all times, mistake it for _licence_.
-
-And well had it been if this warning voice of the holy Apostle, which
-sunk deep into the hearts of the first Christians, had continued to make
-the same impression on the whole Christian world; which, unhappily, has
-contemned, or at least neglected it, in almost all ages; but never more
-remarkably, than in those disastrous days, which the present solemnity
-calls upon us to recollect and lament.
-
-I. The great quarrel of the times I speak of, was opened with the cry of
-RELIGIOUS LIBERTY; not without reason, it must be confessed, yet with an
-ill grace in the complainants; who certainly would have denied to others
-what they so peremptorily, and indeed with too much petulance, demanded
-for themselves.
-
-The source of this evil (to do justice to all sides) is to be sought in
-the Reformation itself; which, when it had succeeded in its great view
-of cleansing Religion from the corruptions of Popery, concluded that no
-man could have reason, thenceforth, to dissent from the national church;
-and that an universal conformity to its discipline and doctrine was to
-be exacted. The conclusion was natural enough in their situation; and
-the benefit of such conformity, past dispute. But it was not considered,
-that differences _will_ arise, many times, without reason; and, when they
-do, that force is not the proper way to compose them. This oversight
-continued long, and had terrible effects. It kept the Protestants of
-all denominations from entertaining just ideas of _Toleration_; the
-_last_ great point of reformed religion which was clearly understood, and
-perhaps the _only_ one of real moment in which the extraordinary persons,
-whom Providence raised up to be the conductors of _our_ Reformation, were
-deficient.
-
-In this state of things, it unfortunately happened that the Reformation
-was suddenly checked by the return of Popery, which forced many pious
-and eminent men to take refuge in the Protestant churches abroad; where
-they grew enamoured of certain forms of church-government, different from
-those that prevailed at home; and which, on their subsequent return, they
-fanatically strove to obtrude on their brethren, and to erect, under the
-new name of THE DISCIPLINE, on the ruins of the established hierarchy. So
-unreasonable a pretension naturally alarmed and exasperated those who had
-power in their hands, and had their prejudices too, not less violent than
-those by which the _Puritans_ (for that was the name they went by) were
-possessed. The consequence was what might be expected. A _toleration_
-for their discipline out of the establishment, which was all they should
-have aimed at, and to which they had a right, would not have satisfied
-them; and their iniquitous claim of _Dominion_ was too naturally repaid
-by penal laws and compulsive statutes: that is, one sort of tyranny was
-repressed and counteracted by another. And thus matters continued through
-several reigns; till some more pressing claims of civil liberty, mixing
-with these struggles for church-dominion, overthrew, in the end, the
-ancient ecclesiastical government; drove the bishops from their sees,
-the liturgy from our churches, and brought in the classical regimen,
-enforced, in its turn, as the episcopal one had been, with the rigours of
-persecution.
-
-Still, the restless spirit of the times continuing, or rather increasing,
-this new model was forced to give may to another, which assumed the more
-popular name of _Independency_; under whose broad wing a thousand sects
-sprung up, each more extravagant than the other, till, in the end, all
-order in religious matters, and religion itself, disappeared, under the
-prevailing torrent of fanaticism and confusion.
-
-Such is the brief, but just, account of the religious factions of those
-days: from which we collect how miserably the zealots for religious
-liberty defeated their own aims; or rather how wickedly they contended
-for power and libertinism, under the mask of liberty: An evil, which
-could not have happened, had they paid the least regard to the Apostle’s
-injunction of _being free, but not as using their liberty for a cloak of
-maliciousness_.
-
-II. The claims of CIVIL LIBERTY (which sprung up amid this rage of
-religious parties) were better founded; were for a time carried on more
-soberly; and, as was fitting, were, at first, attended with better
-success.
-
-The mixed form of the English government, originally founded on the
-principles of liberty, had, from many concurring causes, degenerated into
-a kind of monarchical despotism, which an unquestionably virtuous, but
-misinformed and misguided Prince, was for moulding into a regular system.
-Happily the growing light and spirit of the times excited a general
-impatience of that project; and produced a steady and constitutional
-opposition to it. The distresses of government aided the friends of
-liberty, who managed their advantage so well as, in process of time, to
-support their claims, redress their grievances, establish their rights,
-and, in a word, to reduce the Crown, from the exorbitances it affected,
-within the ancient and legal boundaries of the Constitution.
-
-This the Patriots of that time effected; with great advantage to their
-country, and with singular honour to themselves. Nothing indeed could
-have equalled their glory, had their labours in the cause of liberty
-stopped there. But, besides that some means employed by them, in the
-prosecution of their best-intended services, cannot be justified; the
-intention itself of many of them, hitherto so pure, began to grow
-corrupt; their fears and passions transported them too far; their public
-ends degenerated into selfish: having vindicated the constitution, their
-own security, or some worse motive, prompted them to make free with
-it, that is, to commit the very fault they had so justly resented at
-the hands of their Sovereign: In a word, the patriots, in their turn,
-insulted the Crown, and invaded the Constitution.
-
-The particulars are well known. Ambitious leaders arose, or the old
-leaders in the popular cause turned ambitious. Unconstitutional claims
-were made: unconstitutional schemes were meditated: what before was
-self-defence and sober policy, was, now, revenge and hate: the nation
-grew delirious, and the civil war followed.
-
-The rest is recorded in the disgusting annals of those times. Six
-desolating years brought on the subversion of the monarchy; and (as if
-the victors meant to insult the law itself), by I know not what forms
-of mock-justice, the bloody scene was wantonly closed with the public
-arraignment, trial, condemnation, and execution of the monarch.
-
-The tragedy of this day was the last insolent triumph of pretended
-liberty. What followed, was the most avowed tyranny; upheld for a while
-by force and great ability, but terminating at length in wild and
-powerless anarchy.
-
-Such, again, were the miserable consequences of not observing the
-Apostle’s rule of _being free, but not as using liberty for a cloak of
-maliciousness_. Freedom was, first, justly sought after, and happily
-obtained: It was, then, made the cover of every selfish and malicious
-passion, till the wearers of it were enabled to throw it off, as an
-useless disguise; when barefaced tyranny and licentious misrule were seen
-to emerge from beneath this specious mantle of public liberty.
-
-The RESTORATION, which followed, redeemed these nations from some part of
-the miseries, which their madness had brought on themselves. But for the
-full establishment of our civil and religious rights, we were finally and
-chiefly indebted to the REVOLUTION.
-
-From that memorable æra, we became, in every sense of the word, a free
-people. Conscience was secured in the exercise of its just rights by
-a legal toleration: and the civil constitution was restored to its
-integrity.
-
-III. Such are the observations, which the sad story of the times we have
-been reviewing obviously suggests to us. And now let us pause a little:
-And having before us what the nation so long suffered, and what it so
-late acquired; that is, the horrors of fanatical tyranny on the one hand,
-and the blessings of established order and freedom on the other; let us
-inquire dispassionately what improvements we have made of both. Have the
-black pages of our annals given us a just abhorrence of the principles
-and practices, which brought that cloud over them? And have the bright
-ones, which so happily at length succeeded, affected our hearts and
-lives, as, in all reasonable expectation, they ought? In particular (to
-keep the momentous admonition of my text in full view) has the most
-perfect LIBERTY, civil and religious, been acknowledged with that
-thankfulness it calls for, or been enjoyed with that sobriety which so
-inestimable a gift of Heaven should naturally inspire?
-
-1. To begin with RELIGIOUS liberty.
-
-Has this great privilege, so rightfully belonging to us, as men, as
-Protestants, and as Christians, which so many ages had panted after,
-and the last so happily obtained, Has this invaluable acquisition been
-employed by us to the promotion of its proper ends, the cultivation
-of just inquiry, and manly piety? On the contrary, has not the right
-of private judgment been abused to the worst of purposes; the open
-profession of libertinism in principle, and its consequent encouragement
-of all corruption in practice? Has not religious liberty been the
-_cloak_, under which revealed and even natural religion has been
-insulted; infidelity, and even atheism, avowed; and the most flagitious
-tenets propagated among the people? In a word, has not every species of
-what is called _free-thinking_, _free-speaking_, and _free-writing_, been
-carried to an extreme?
-
-But to come to those who are not guilty of these excesses; have _we_
-all of us made the proper use of the fostering liberty we enjoy in
-religious matters? Have we been careful to apply it to the purpose of
-dispassionately studying the sacred scriptures; of investigating their
-true sense with a due veneration for the high authority they claim,
-and for the awful subjects they set before us; and of maintaining our
-conclusions from them with a becoming modesty, which in such inquiries
-can hardly be too great? Have we betrayed no symptoms of bigotry even in
-disclaiming it? Are we ready to indulge that candour to others, which we
-so justly expect ourselves? And is the public wisdom itself treated by
-those who speculate, at their ease, under the most tolerant establishment
-of Christianity that ever existed, Has it been treated, I do not say,
-with a blind submission (God forbid!) but with that decent respect,
-which is surely due to it? In short, have we, in our several situations
-and characters, been careful to exert the full spirit of Christianity,
-which, one is ready to think, should naturally spring up from Christian
-liberty; or, at least to observe that temper of mutual forbearance, which
-should seem to be an easy as well as reasonable duty, now that all unjust
-restraints and provoking severities are withdrawn?
-
-2. Thus much for our religious liberties. Have our CIVIL, on which we
-equally, and with good reason, value ourselves, been secured from all
-abuse? Have we that reverence of just authority, not only as lodged in
-the persons of inferior magistrates, or in the sacred person of the
-supreme Magistrate, but as residing in the LAW itself (in which the
-public will, that is, the whole collective authority of the State is,
-as it were, concentered)—Have we, I say, that ingenuous and submissive
-respect for this authority, which not only reason and religion, but
-true policy, and every man’s proper interest requires? Our boasted
-Constitution itself, now so accurately defined and generally understood,
-Does it meet with that awful regard from us, which it justly deserves?
-Are we anxious, that, of its several parts, each should have its full
-play, without interfering with any other? And are we sufficiently on our
-guard against a spirit of innovation, which, after all our experience,
-can have no probable view of effecting much good, but may easily do
-unforeseen and irreparable mischief? It is true, in the less perfect
-forms of government, alterations may not be so sensibly felt. But in
-a Polity like our’s, so nicely and artificially adjusted, and, like a
-well-constructed arch, held together by the intimate relation and mutual
-pressure of its several parts, the removal or even change of any one may
-loosen the connexion of the rest, and, by disjointing the whole fabrick,
-bring it unexpectedly on our heads.
-
-Let me, then, repeat the question. Have we that religious reverence
-for the Constitution which its value, its authority, its compact and
-harmonious contexture, so evidently demands? And, when it hath bestowed
-upon us the blessings of civil liberty, in as full measure as is perhaps
-consistent with government itself, are we only solicitous to preserve
-it pure, enjoy it thankfully, and transmit it, unimpaired by hasty and
-hazardous experiments, to the generations to come?
-
-If to these, and other questions of the like sort, we can answer to our
-satisfaction, it is well. If we cannot, we should lay hold on the present
-occasion of recollecting the miscarriages and the miseries of past times,
-and of regulating our conduct by the instructive lessons, which they read
-to us. We shall see, in every instance I have suggested to you, how the
-abuse of religious and civil liberty kept operating in those days, till
-it produced the ruin and the loss of both—the _irreparable_ loss, if it
-had not pleased a gracious Providence to be much kinder to us than we
-deserved, or had reason to expect.
-
-Not to profit by this experience would be inexcusable; especially, when
-the date of it is so recent, and when this solemn day of humiliation
-(for that purpose kept up by authority) so affectingly reminds us of it.
-We cannot, if we reflect on what it sets before us, but see in the most
-convincing manner, that, to reap the benefits of the best government, we
-must, ourselves, be moderate and wise; and that _to use our liberty for
-a cloak of maliciousness_ is, at once, the greatest impiety in those who
-profess themselves _the servants of God_, and the greatest folly in those
-who are, and would continue to be, a _free_ and happy people.
-
-
-
-
-SIX CHARGES
-
-DELIVERED TO THE CLERGY.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- CHARGE
-
- DELIVERED TO THE CLERGY
-
- OF THE
-
- DIOCESE OF LICHFIELD AND COVENTRY,
-
- AT THE BISHOP’S PRIMARY VISITATION
-
- IN 1775 AND 1776.
-
-
-
-
-A CHARGE, &c.
-
-
-REVEREND BRETHREN,
-
-It having pleased God to call me to the care of this large Diocese, I
-thought it became me to take the first opportunity, which the established
-course of Visitation afforded, of meeting my brethren, the Clergy: that
-so we might be the sooner acquainted with each other; and that, by means
-of their prudent advice and information, I might be the better enabled to
-sustain the weighty office imposed upon me.
-
-I may, hereafter, as occasion serves, be more _particular_ in my
-directions to you. At this time, it will be sufficient to lay before you
-some _general_ considerations on our common PASTORAL DUTY, and to animate
-myself and you to a faithful discharge of it.
-
-When our blessed Lord and Master sent forth his favoured servants to
-labour in that ministry to which he had called them, he addressed them in
-these memorable words—_I have chosen and ordained you_, THAT YE SHOULD
-GO AND BRING FORTH FRUIT, AND THAT YOUR FRUIT SHOULD REMAIN[27]: “That
-ye may go with this commission to plant my doctrine in the world; and
-that, by your cultivation of it, it may take such root as to bring forth
-a fruitful harvest of believers, and continue to do so through all ages.”
-
-But what, then, is this _mature and perpetual harvest_, which is here
-proposed to the Disciples, as the end of their labours? Is it a harvest
-of such believers, as shall barely give their name to Christ? Certainly,
-not; but of such as shall be found worthy of him. It is a harvest, then,
-of _well-informed_, _pious_, and _righteous_, believers. This is the
-precious everlasting _fruit_, which it was entrusted to their office to
-produce: and this fruit, the due discharge of their office, under the
-blessing of God, makes them _capable_ of producing.
-
-In these affecting words, then, of our divine Master (the more affecting,
-because among the last that were uttered by him) the _Apostles_, first,
-and, after them, _all_ succeeding ministers of the Gospel, are called
-upon to bring forth,
-
-1. The fruit of a RIGHT FAITH in their hearers; as resulting from the
-soundness of their doctrine. 2. The fruit of PIETY in their flocks; in
-consequence of a diligent ministration in all the offices of their sacred
-function. And, 3. The fruit of CHARITY in their Christian brethren; as
-springing out of their godly exhortations and blameless examples.
-
-Such, my reverend brethren, is the end for which WE are _chosen and
-ordained_ to serve in the church of Christ. And though, in setting this
-end before you, I shall but reflect your own thoughts: yet, in doing
-this, I may be a no unuseful, certainly, no ungrateful, remembrancer;
-since it is the duty, the desire, and the glory of us all, that we _bring
-forth fruit_, and that _our fruit remain_.
-
-I. The FIRST object of our ministry is, to instruct our hearers in the
-RIGHT FAITH: and to this end, we are required to _take heed to our
-doctrine_[28].
-
-The Religion of Jesus claiming to be from God, the _doctrines_, it
-delivers, are as well to be believed, as its _precepts_ to be observed.
-Thus, a _dogmatic theology_ becomes essential to Christianity; its
-professors are equally bound by a certain rule of _faith_, and of
-_manners_.
-
-When the Scriptures of the New Testament were made public, these were
-that Rule of faith to the whole church of Christ. And, if that Church
-had _agreed_ in the interpretation of them; or, if peace and charity
-could have consisted with its _disagreement_, no other provision for the
-maintenance of the faith had been thought needful. But the Scriptures,
-like all other writings, being liable to a different construction,
-according to the different views and capacities of uninspired men; and
-it being presently found that such difference of construction produced
-the most violent animosities among Christians, while each sect pretended
-a divine authority for its own fancies; no remedy occurred for these
-disorders, but that the _catholic_ church should be held together by one
-and the same confession, received and acknowledged by all its ministers;
-or, when, afterwards, this extensive project was found impracticable,
-that those, who agreed in the same interpretation of the sacred oracles,
-should be allowed to separate from all others, and unite themselves into
-one distinct and _subordinate_ church.
-
-Thus, _Schism_, though it be always an evil, and may be a crime, was
-introduced into the church, and was even tolerated there, to prevent
-other and greater evils, as well as crimes, from flowing into it. For,
-though a diversity of interpretation, in consequence of this liberty,
-prevailed in _different_ Christian communities, which yet acknowledged
-the same common Rule, _the Scriptures of God_; still, peace was, by
-this means, preserved in _each_ particular community; and, by virtue of
-that general principle of mutual toleration, which the expedient itself
-implied, it was, or might be, in good measure, preserved through _all the
-quarters_ of the Catholic church.
-
-This, in one word, is the ORIGIN, and, at the same time, the
-JUSTIFICATION, of Creeds and Confessions; which are only a bond of union
-between the members of each Christian society. For the purpose of them
-is not to set up human decisions against the word of God; but, by larger
-comments, and more explicit declarations, in such points of doctrine as
-have been differently apprehended, and much controverted, to express and
-ascertain the sense, in which THEY interpret that word, who communicate
-together in the same Church.
-
-Thus the case stands, before the State gives a preference to any
-particular Church. Thenceforth, indeed, the State concurs with the Church
-to enforce one common Confession, by confining the emoluments, which it
-provides for the encouragement of Religion, to the peculiar doctrines
-of the favoured Church. This, the State does, in _equity_ towards that
-religious society, with which it is now so closely connected: it does it,
-too, in _prudence and good policy_; because it conceives its own true
-interests to be concerned in maintaining those peculiar doctrines.
-
-Thus, whether we regard the _Church_, before it acquires the countenance
-of the State, as intent on truth and orthodoxy, and only meditating how
-best to preserve that truth in the bosom of _peace_; or, whether we
-regard the _State_, after it affords that countenance to the Church,
-as studious to provide for its own great object, _General Utility_, of
-which the preservation of peace makes so considerable a part; either way
-we understand why an agreement of opinion is required in the appointed
-Guides and Teachers of Religion. But, as such agreement cannot be
-expected, or not maintained, where every Teacher is left to inculcate
-what doctrines he thinks fit, hence some _common formulary_ of faith
-(not in opposition to that delivered in the Scriptures, but by way of
-more precise explanation of what is believed to be its true meaning) is
-reasonably proposed to the assent of those Guides and Teachers, before
-they exercise their office in any particular Christian society; as a
-TEST of their opinions; and as a RULE, by which, in subordination to
-the general Rule of Christians, they undertake to frame their public
-instructions.
-
-This Confession, or formulary of faith, with us, is THE THIRTY-NINE
-ARTICLES: to which a subscription is required from every candidate of the
-Ministry. So that THE SCRIPTURE, interpreted by _those articles_, is the
-proper rule of doctrine, to every Minister of our Church.
-
-It follows from what has been said, that such, as cannot honestly
-assent to this formulary, _must_ (if they aspire to be public Teachers
-of Religion) unite themselves with some other _consentient_ Church.
-This compulsion may, sometimes, be a _hardship_; but can, in no case,
-be an injury: or, if some may chuse to consider it in the light of an
-_injury_, it is such an one as must be suffered by individuals for the
-general good of that Society, to which they belong.
-
-It is nothing, that some object to these articles, as _improper_, or
-_ill-drawn_. The Church will judge for itself of these points. Societies
-have surely the same right of private judgement as Individuals; and, till
-they revoke a constitution, it should, methinks, be presumed that they
-see no cause to do it: just as it is very fitly presumed, on the other
-hand, that such individuals, as will not subscribe to this constitution,
-cannot. But it is forgotten in this dispute, that, although _truth_ can
-only be on one side, _good faith_ may be on either.
-
-Still, it may be said—“_These articles are themselves liable to various
-interpretations_.” Without doubt, they are: and so would any other,
-which could be contrived. Yet, with all the latitude of interpretation
-of which they are capable, they still answer, in a good degree, the main
-end of their appointment; as may be seen from the animosity expressed by
-some against them, as too strict. And, if we only use _that_ latitude,
-which the expression fairly admits, and which the Church allows, they
-will continue to answer the _great_ end, hitherto effected by them, of
-preserving, among the members of our Church, _an unity of the spirit in
-the bond of peace_.
-
-Such then is the fruit of a _right faith_, which the ministers of our
-Church are required to bring forth, by the _soundness of their doctrine_.
-
-II. They are, in the next place, ordained to produce the fruit of PIETY,
-in their several congregations, by a faithful discharge of the sacred
-offices, committed to them.
-
-The LITURGY of the Church of England, in which these offices are
-contained, is composed with so much wisdom, and is animated, at the time,
-with so true a spirit of piety, that impartial men have generally agreed
-in the commendation of it. That the _forms_, prescribed by it, may be
-lawfully used, few at this time of day will dispute. That _other_ forms,
-more complete and perfect, _may_ be devised, _as_ it is not denied by
-_us_, who hold those forms, however excellent, to be of human composition
-only; _so_, that any such forms of greater perfection are likely to be
-devised by those who are the readiest to find fault with our Liturgy,
-will hardly be expected by reasonable and knowing men. Much indeed,
-abundantly _too_ much, has been said and written on this subject. Most
-of the defects, which some have pretended to find in our Ritual, are
-purely imaginary: the rest are certainly unimportant. So that our concern
-is plainly to submit all deliberations of this sort to the wisdom of
-the Church itself; and, in the mean time, to give all the effect, that
-depends on _us_, to the ministration which it requires.
-
-And to this end, it must be our duty to perform the sacred offices with
-_regularity_, _decency_, and _fervour_.
-
-1. By _regularity_, I mean such an observance of times and seasons,
-and of all the modes of performance, as the Church hath thought fit
-to prescribe. To this observance we are, indeed, constrained by
-ecclesiastical penalties: but I mention it as a fit testimony of respect
-to public authority; and as the means of promoting the true interests of
-Religion. For what is _punctually_ performed by the Minister will acquire
-a due consideration with the people: and the uniformity of _our_ service
-will make the attendance on religious offices more acceptable, more
-convenient, more edifying to _them_.
-
-2. Nor is it enough that these offices be performed regularly, or
-according to stated rules: they must also be performed _decently_, or
-with due grace and propriety in the _manner_ of discharging them. For it
-is not, perhaps, enough considered, how much a becoming celebration of
-the sacred offices contributes to make men delight in them, and profit
-by them: or, on the contrary, how much any degree of negligence in the
-_posture_, or of impropriety in the _accent_, or indifference in the
-_air_, of the officiating Minister, sinks the credit and authority of his
-ministration, and deadens the attention and devotion of his flock.
-
-3. Still, this regular and decent discharge of our duty, how useful
-soever, is but an _outward_ thing, and may, to a degree at least, be
-counterfeited by those who are, otherwise, very unfit to be employed in
-this service. To enliven, to animate, to consecrate our ministry, we must
-bring to it all the zeal of _internal_ devotion; such as is sober indeed,
-but real, active, and habitual; such as flows from a religious temper,
-and is wrought into the very frame and constitution of our minds. For to
-this end, more especially, are we set apart from secular pursuits, to
-give ourselves up to reading, to meditation, to all spiritual exercises;
-that so we may be thoroughly penetrated and informed with pure affections
-and heavenly dispositions. When these prevail in us, they will naturally
-break forth and express themselves in all our ministrations; they will
-be seen and felt by all who partake of them, and, by a kind of sympathy,
-will force the hearts of others to _consent_ with our own.
-
-III. The _last_ and best fruit we are to produce, is the fruit of
-CHARITY, or a good life, in those committed to our charge; which is
-more especially cultivated and matured by our _godly exhortations_, and
-_blameless examples_.
-
-1. As to our public exhortations, and discourses from the Pulpit, such an
-audience as this cannot want to be instructed in the manner of preparing
-them. Permit me only to say, “_That your Sermons cannot well be too
-plain; and that they ought to be wholly Christian_.”
-
-The word of God is designed for the edification of all sorts and
-degrees among us, and should be so dispensed as to reach the hearts
-and understandings of all. And I need not say to you who hear me, that
-to frame a discourse in this manner, as it is the usefullest way of
-preaching, so it will afford full scope and exercise for all the talents
-which the ablest of us may possess.
-
-But, further, you will allow me to observe, that the topics and
-principles, on which we form our discourses, must be _wholly Christian_.
-I do not mean to exclude natural Reason from our public exhortations, but
-to employ it in giving force to those best and most efficacious arguments
-for a good life, which the Gospel supplies. I would only say, That we are
-not to preach morality, in exclusion of Christianity: for that would be
-to incur the guilt of _preaching ourselves_, and not _Jesus Christ_.
-
-The various motives to virtue and all goodness, which may be drawn from
-the great doctrines of the Christian Revelation, as they are infinitely
-more persuasive and affecting than all others; so they should be
-constantly and earnestly impressed on our hearers. To live as becometh
-the Gospel, is the duty of Christians: and therefore to preach that
-Gospel must be the proper duty of Christian Ministers.
-
-For that _other_ requisite of a _good example_, the case is too plain
-to require more than one word. Our blessed Master has told us, that we
-are _the salt of the earth_: and we remember what he pronounces of that
-salt, _when it hath lost its savour_. This warning may suffice to guard
-the minister of the word from gross vice and immorality. But much more
-is expected from him. He is to _excell_ in all virtue, and in such sort
-as to make it amiable in the eyes of men. He is to take care, that even
-_his good be not evil-spoken of_, and that _the ministry be not blamed_.
-For there are certain decencies, which must be ranked by us in the place
-of virtues. To be wanting in _these_, is to scandalize the brethren, and
-dishonour ourselves. Our profession is so sacred, that even our Christian
-liberty must be abridged on many occasions; and we must deny ourselves an
-_innocent_ amusement, when we have reason to conclude that others will
-take offence at it.
-
-How far, and in what respects, this sacrifice must be made to the
-decencies of our profession, is a matter of great _prudence_ and
-_charity_; and can only be determined, in particular cases, by an honest
-exertion of those _two principles_.
-
-Ye have now, my reverend Brethren, presented to you a brief sketch of
-our ministerial duties. And our encouragement, for the performance of
-them, is, That hereby _we shall bring forth fruit_, and that _our fruit
-will remain_: that is, we shall be instrumental in producing a RIGHT
-FAITH, a PIOUS OBSERVANCE OF RELIGION, and a TRULY CHRISTIAN LIFE, in
-our several charges and congregations; and we shall, likewise, be the
-means of transmitting these blessings to Posterity, and of perpetuating
-these good fruits to the end of the world. Thus, that which is the _end_
-of our ministry, is also the reward of it. Nor will the recompence of
-our labours end here. In saving others, by the means now recommended,
-we shall assuredly save ourselves. For, by giving this full proof of
-our ministry, we shall be _sincere, and without offence till the day of
-Christ; being filled with all the fruits of righteousness, which are by
-Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God_[29]. AMEN.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- CHARGE
-
- TO THE
-
- CLERGY
-
- OF THE
-
- DIOCESE OF WORCESTER,
-
- DELIVERED AT THE BISHOP’S PRIMARY
-
- VISITATION IN 1782.
-
-
-
-
-A CHARGE, &c.
-
-
-REVEREND BRETHREN,
-
-On this first occasion of our meeting, you will think it agreeable to
-the relation I have the honour to bear to you, if I take leave to remind
-you of such of your Clerical Duties as tend more immediately to your own
-credit, and to the good order of this Diocese: Not, as if I suspected you
-of being, in any peculiar degree, deficient in them; but as, from the
-general state of the _present_ times, and from the singular importance of
-them at _all_ times, these Duties deserve to be frequently and earnestly
-recommended to you.
-
-The Clergy of the Reformed Church of England have always distinguished
-themselves by the soundness of their learning, by the integrity of
-their manners, and by a diligent discharge of the pastoral office. But
-these virtues could not have flourished so much and so long, had it not
-been for the PERSONAL RESIDENCE of the Clergy. Hence that leisure which
-enabled them to excell in the best literature: hence those truly clerical
-manners, unadulterated by too free a commerce with the world: and hence
-that punctuality in performing the sacred offices, so edifying to the
-people, and, from their being always upon the spot, so easy to themselves.
-
-Now this Residence, which the very institution of Parishes supposes,
-and the Common Law intends, has, from early times, been bound upon us
-by ecclesiastical canons, and, from the Reformation, also by express
-Statute. So that, in the style of Law, and even in common language,
-_Incumbent_ is the proper name of every Parochial Minister.
-
-I know, indeed, what exceptions there are to the Statute, and needs must
-be in a Constitution like our’s, founded on a principle of Imparity
-and Subordination. I know, too, how many more exceptions must be made
-on account of the poverty of very many Cures, and the necessity there
-unfortunately is of having several churches served by the same person.
-Lastly, I do not forget that, in the case of ill health, and doubtless
-in other cases that may occur, there will sometimes be good reason for
-the Incumbent to desire, and therefore for the Ordinary to grant, an
-occasional suspension, or relaxation, at least, of the general Rule. But,
-when these cases are allowed for, no Clergyman, who considers the nature
-of his office, and the engagements he is under, or who respects as he
-ought, either the esteem of others, or the satisfaction of his own mind,
-will suffer himself to solicit, or even to accept, an exemption from
-Residence.
-
-And even they, who have to plead the privilege of the Statute, or
-can alledge any other just and reasonable excuse, will endeavour to
-compensate for their absence, _by_ occasional visits to their benefices;
-_by_ diligent inquiries into the conduct of their assistants; _by_
-acts of benevolence, hospitality, and piety; in short, _by_ such
-means as testify a readiness to do all the good they can under their
-circumstances, and manifest a serious consideration of the duties which,
-in some degree or other, are inseparable from the Pastoral Care.
-
-In short, the reason of the thing speaks so strongly for the incumbency
-of Parochial Ministers, that they, who have the best excuse to make for
-themselves, will lament their absence, and accept the leave granted to
-them with regret. And the rest of the Clergy will not allow themselves to
-desert their charge, and forfeit the dignity and almost the use of their
-destination, for such slight and frivolous reasons as can neither satisfy
-themselves nor others: for the convenience, suppose, of living in a
-better air or neighbourhood; of seeing a little more, or, what is called,
-_better_, company; or sharing in the advantages and amusements, be they
-ever so innocent, of the larger and more populous towns.
-
-Pretences of this sort are nothing, when they come in competition _with_
-the decency and utility of being where we ought to be, and among those
-whom we ought to serve; _with_ the obligation that lies upon us to
-make ourselves acquainted with the spiritual and temporal wants of our
-people, and, as far as we can, to relieve them; _with_ the precious
-opportunities, which a personal residence affords, of knowing their
-characters, and of suiting our publick and private applications to them;
-_of_ watching over their lives, and contributing to reform or improve
-them; _of_ guarding them against the attempts of those who lie in wait
-to pervert their minds, and indispose them to our Communion; _with_ the
-heart-felt satisfaction of being beloved by our flocks, or of meriting,
-at least, to be so; of knowing, in short, that we discharge our duty
-towards them; and, while we approve ourselves faithful ministers of the
-Church in which we serve, are promoting the noblest ends which a mortal
-can propose to himself, The salvation of souls, and the honour and
-interest of our divine Religion.
-
-These considerations are so animating, that they cannot but make a deep
-impression upon every serious mind; and are so obvious at the same time,
-that just to have mentioned them to you must be quite sufficient.
-
-I return, therefore, to the duty of those who, on several accounts, may
-very reasonably excuse themselves from a constant personal residence. And
-with regard to such of you as may be in this situation, I must,
-
-II. In the second place, recommend it to you, in most particular manner,
-that you be careful in looking out for proper persons to supply your
-place, and that you faithfully co-operate with me in appointing none but
-_regular_, _well-qualified_, and _exemplary Curates_.
-
-By REGULAR Curates, I mean such as lie under no legal disabilities, and
-have received episcopal ordination. You will perhaps think it strange
-that these cautions should be thought necessary. But in our licentious
-times there are those who will presume to offer themselves to you to be
-employed as Curates, although they have incurred the public censure of
-their superiors, or have not perhaps been admitted into holy Orders.
-You will be careful, therefore, before you allow any one to officiate
-for you, though for a short time, and on a pressing occasion, to inform
-yourself of his general character, and to inspect his Letters of Orders.
-
-But, if you mean to take him for your settled Curate, you must do a
-great deal more. You must send him with a _Title_ and _Testimonial_ to
-be examined and allowed by me. And then I shall have it in my power,
-not only to prevent your being imposed upon by _irregular_ persons,
-but to see that you take for your assistants only such as are in all
-respects WELL QUALIFIED: including under this term _a competent degree of
-knowledge for the service of the Cure to which they are nominated; a good
-report of their moral and religious conduct by credible and respectable
-witnesses; and a willing conformity to the discipline and doctrine of the
-Church of England_.
-
-With these qualifications, it is to be presumed that your Curates will
-represent you not unworthily, and will instruct and edify your people
-as you yourselves would endeavour to do, if you lived amongst them. And
-the rather, as both you and I are concerned _to take care, as much as
-possible, that whosoever is admitted to serve any Cure_ DO RESIDE IN THE
-PARISH WHERE HE IS TO SERVE: _especially in livings that are able to
-support a resident Curate; and, where that cannot be done, that he do
-reside at least_ SO NEAR TO THE PLACE, _that he may conveniently perform
-all the duties both in the Church and Parish_[30].
-
-Still, it is not enough that an officiating Minister, whether principal
-or substitute, be of no ill fame, and under no disability, nay that he
-possess the _qualifications_ and the _means_ of discharging his duty.
-It is further expected of all who are commissioned to minister in holy
-things, and therefore of Curates as well as others, that they execute
-their important trusts with fidelity and zeal, that they be EXEMPLARY in
-their whole conduct and conversation.
-
-To merit the application of this term to himself, a Clergyman will not
-only perform the duties of his Church with becoming seriousness, and
-with exact punctuality, but he will be ready at fit seasons to advise
-or exhort, to comfort or rebuke, as occasion requires, such of his
-parishioners, whether in sickness or health, as may stand in need of his
-charitable assistance. He will spend much of his leisure in reading and
-meditation, particularly in the study of the sacred Scriptures, that he
-may adorn and purify his mind, and qualify himself the better for his
-spiritual ministrations. He will even take care that his very amusements
-be inoffensive, and not pursued with an eagerness or constancy that may
-give occasion for censure or misconstruction. He will be so far from
-drawing upon himself the imputation of any gross vice (which it would
-be dreadful for a minister of the Gospel to deserve), that he will not
-be suspected of levity or dissipation; _but_, as the Canon directs,
-_will always be doing the things which shall appertain to honesty, and
-endeavouring to profit the Church of God; having always in mind that the
-ministers of religion ought to excell all others in purity of life, and
-should be examples to the people of good and Christian living_[31].
-
-Such is the conduct which the Church requires of those whom you employ in
-the care of your parishes. I hope therefore I shall not be thought too
-severe, if I give a particular attention to the appointing and licensing
-of Curates, and if I expect of the beneficed Clergy that they chearfully
-and heartily concur with me in this necessary circumspection.
-
-To this end, and that the Church may be served with reputable and useful
-ministers, I must,
-
-III. Further make it my earnest request (and this is the _last_
-particular I have at present to give in charge to you), that you take
-especial care _what persons you recommend to me on all occasions_.
-
-It is my duty, and if it were not, it would be my inclination, to rely
-much on your advice in all things; much more, to lay the greatest stress
-on your opinion and sentiments, when presented to me under your hands in
-the solemn way of a Testimonial. No consideration, therefore, I hope will
-ever prevail with you, no bias of acquaintance, neighbourhood, civility,
-or compassion (for I shall never suspect my brethren of any worse
-motive), to give the credit of your testimony to any person whatever that
-is unworthy of it, whether for the purpose of obtaining holy Orders, or
-my License to a Cure, or Institution to a Benefice. The most scrupulous
-good faith must be observed in all these cases; or it will be impossible
-for me to prevent those scandals, which an unqualified Clergy will be
-sure to give to the world, and the infinite mischiefs they do to Religion.
-
-Whenever you set your hand to a testimonial, consider, I beseech you,
-that the honour of the Church is concerned in what you are doing; that
-the edification of the people, the integrity of their lives and purity
-of their faith, the salvation, in short, of their souls, depends on
-your signature. When such momentous interests as these are at stake,
-inattention is something worse than _neglect_, and the easiness of
-good-nature the greatest _cruelty_.
-
-And now, my reverend brethren, by observing these few plain directions—by
-residing on your benefices when you can, and by improving that residence
-to its proper uses—or, when you cannot reside yourselves, by employing
-only resident and respectable Curates—and, lastly, by a scrupulous use
-of your credit with me in recommending none but fit persons for the
-several departments of the Ministry.—By complying, I say, with my earnest
-request, in these several instances, you will render the government of
-this Diocese easy and pleasant to me. I reckon so much on your kindness
-to me as to believe that _this_ consideration will be some inducement to
-you. But there are _others_ of more importance. For you will consult your
-_own_ honour, and that of your _Order_: You will rejoice the hearts of
-your _friends_, and stop the mouths of your _enemies_.
-
-I said, _of your enemies_; for enemies you will always have, so long as
-there are bad men. And, while we endeavour to lessen the number of these,
-it should be our utmost care that none but _such_ be ill-affected towards
-us. God forbid that the friends of virtue and religion should have so
-much as a pretence to speak or think ill of us! They cannot have this
-pretence, but through our own fault. Be we therefore strictly observant
-of our duty: Let us be seen, where the world will naturally look for us,
-in our proper places, intent on our proper business; and acting in our
-proper characters; and we shall infallibly secure the esteem of _good_
-men, and till it please God to touch and convert their hearts, we may
-defy the malice of _bad_ ones.
-
-The truth is, my reverend brethren, it depends very much on ourselves,
-whether the world shall conceive well or ill of us. Licentious and
-unbelieving as that world is, a learned and prudent and pious Clergyman
-will force respect from it. The more it may be inclined to blame, the
-greater must be our diligence and circumspection. And to animate myself
-and you to this care, is the whole end and purpose of this friendly
-address to you.
-
-It only remains that _I pray_, with the holy Apostle, _that we may abound
-in knowledge and in all judgment; that we may approve things that are
-excellent; that we may be sincere and without offence till the day of
-Christ; being filled with the fruits of righteousness, which are by Him
-to the glory and praise of God_[32].
-
-The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the
-fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with us all evermore. Amen.
-
-
-
-
- _The Use and Abuse of Reason in Matters
- of Religion_:
-
- A
-
- CHARGE
-
- OF THE
-
- BISHOP OF WORCESTER
-
- TO THE
-
- CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.
-
- DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1785.
-
-
-
-
-A CHARGE, &c.
-
-
-REVEREND BRETHREN,
-
-Without the use of Reason in Religion, we are liable to be imposed upon
-by others. With the immoderate or indiscreet use of it, we impose upon
-ourselves. Both extremes are to be carefully avoided: but the _latter_,
-being that into which we are most in danger of falling in these times,
-will possibly deserve your first and principal attention.
-
-Indeed the great Apostle of the Gentiles, foreseeing the mischiefs which
-the pride of human reason would produce in the Church of Christ, gave
-a timely warning to the Roman converts, _not to be wise in their own
-conceits_[33]. And whoever considers the history of the Church from that
-time to this, will find that nothing has been so injurious to it as the
-affectation of being wise _above_, or _beside_, what is written; I mean,
-in opposing our own sense of things to the authority of Scripture, or
-(which is the commoner, because something the modester way of the two)
-in forcing it out of the sacred text by a licentious interpretation. In
-either way, we idolize our own understandings; and are guilty of great
-irreverence towards the word of God.
-
-It infinitely concerns the preachers of the Gospel to stand clear of
-these imputations; and therefore it may not be unsuitable to the occasion
-of our present meeting, if I set before you what I take to be the whole
-office of REASON on the subject of revealed Religion; what it has to do,
-and what it should forbear to attempt; how far it may and should go, and
-where it ought to stop; and lastly, how important it is for a Christian
-teacher, and indeed for every Christian man, to confine his curiosity
-within those bounds.
-
-I. The first and principal office of Reason on this subject is to see
-whether Christianity be a divine Religion; in other words, whether the
-Scriptures, especially those of the New Testament, which contain the
-religion of Christians, be written by inspiration, or have no higher
-authority than the compositions of mere fallible men.
-
-Now, for this purpose, you will collect and examine the numerous proofs,
-_external_ and _internal_, which have been alledged as the proper grounds
-of assent to the truth of Christianity: The proof EXTERNAL; first, from
-_Prophecy_, involving in it an incredible number of probabilities,
-some less striking than others, but all of them of some moment in your
-deliberation; secondly, from _Miracles_, said to have been purposely
-wrought to attest the truth of Christianity; recorded by persons of the
-best character, who themselves performed there miracles, or saw them
-performed, or had received the accounts of them immediately from the
-workers and eye-witnesses of them; and not questioned, as far as we know,
-by any persons of that time, or for some ages afterwards. In the next
-place, you will consider the INTERNAL PROOF, from the history and genius,
-from the claims and views and pretensions of this Religion.
-
-Under this _last_ head, you will particularly attend to the promises said
-to have been made by Jesus to his disciples; and to the manner in which
-those promises appear to have been made good: the promise of inspiration
-to the Apostles, and the evidence they afterwards gave of their being
-actually so inspired.
-
-Above all, you will carefully inspect those books which contain the
-account of these and other momentous things, as well as the doctrines of
-Christianity itself; and you will see whether the _facts_ they relate
-be, any of them, contradicted by authentick history, or the _doctrines_
-they deliver be repugnant to the first and clearest principles of human
-knowledge. You will next inquire whether these books, containing nothing
-but what is credibly or supposeably true, were indeed written by the
-persons whose names they bear, and not by persons of later times, or by
-persons of that time, whose authority is more questionable. You will,
-further, consider what _degree_ of inspiration these writings claim
-to themselves, and whether their claims have, in any instance, been
-discredited and confuted. You will, lastly, take into your account the
-_event_ of things, and will reflect how far the success of so great
-an undertaking has corresponded to the supposition of its having been
-divinely directed; if, in short, you can any way account for what you
-know and see to be clear and evident _fact_ on any other supposition.
-
-Such, I think, is the outline of what must be thought the duty of a
-reasonable inquirer into the pretensions of Christianity. To fill up
-this sketch would require a volume: but you see from these hints that
-here is room enough for the exercise of the understanding, for the full
-display, indeed, of its best faculties. If Christianity, which invites,
-will stand the test of this inquiry, you cannot complain that Reason has
-not enough to do, or that your reception of it, as a divine revelation,
-is not founded on reason. Only, let me caution you against coming hastily
-to a conclusion from a slight or summary view of the particulars here
-mentioned. You must have the patience to evolve them all; to weigh the
-moment of each taken separately, and to decide at length on the united
-force of these arguments, when brought to bear on the _single_ point to
-which you apply them, the DIVINE AUTHORITY of your religion.
-
-To grasp all these considerations in one view will require the utmost
-effort of the strongest mind: And, when you have done this, you will
-remember that very much (so widely extended and so numerous are the
-presumptions on this subject) has probably, nay, has certainly, escaped
-your best attention.
-
-However, on these grounds, I will now suppose that a serious man, who
-would be, and is qualified to be, a believer on conviction, has fully
-satisfied himself that Christianity is true, and that the Scriptures, in
-which the whole of that religion is contained, are of divine authority.
-
-II. A second and very momentous use of Reason will then be, To scrutinize
-these Scriptures themselves, now admitted to be divine; that is, to
-investigate their true sense and meaning. For, whatever their authority
-be, as they were written for the use of men, they must be studied, and
-can only be understood, as other writings are, by applying to them the
-usual and approved rules of human criticism.
-
-I have already supposed, that you have seen enough of these Scriptures to
-be satisfied of their containing no contradictions to the clear intuitive
-principles of human knowledge. For this satisfaction must precede the
-general conclusion, that the Scriptures are divinely revealed; all truth
-being consistent with itself, and it being impossible that any evidence
-for the truth of revelation should be stronger than that of Intuition.
-Still, it remains to inquire of doctrines taught in these books, and
-apparently, as to the general sense of them, not inadmissible, what is
-their precise and accurate interpretation.
-
-And here, besides the use of languages, antiquities, history, and such
-other helps as are necessary to the right understanding of all ancient
-books, you will have ample scope for the exercise of your sagacity in
-studying the character of the sacred writers, the genius and views of
-each, with the peculiarities of their style and method; in tracing
-the connexion of their ideas, the pertinence and coherence of their
-reasonings; in comparing the same writer with himself, or different
-writers with each other; in explaining the briefer and darker passages
-by what is delivered more at large and more perspicuously elsewhere; in
-apprehending the harmony of their general scheme, and the consistency of
-what they teach on any particular subject.
-
-In all these ways, and if there be any other, your Reason may be and
-should be employed with all the attention of which ye are capable. And
-when this task is now performed, and you have settled it in your own
-minds what the true genuine doctrines of Christianity are; what our
-religion teaches of divine things, and what it prescribes to us in moral
-matters; What more remains to be done? Clearly, but this—To BELIEVE, AND
-TO LIVE, according to its direction.
-
-But, instead of acquiescing in this natural and just conclusion, the
-curiosity of the human mind is ready to engage us in new and endless
-labours. “_The wise in their own conceits_ will examine this Religion,
-and see if it be REASONABLE: for surely nothing can proceed from Heaven
-but the purest and brightest reason.”
-
-Here, _first_, they perplex themselves and others, by the use of an
-ambiguous term: for, by _reasonable_ is meant, either what is _not
-contrary_ to the clearest principles of reason, or what is _clearly
-explicable_, in all respects, by those principles. In the _former_ sense,
-it must be maintained that Christianity is a _reasonable_ Religion, and
-that no such contrariety to reason is to be found in it. In the _latter_
-sense, it may be true that Christianity is _not reasonable_, I mean,
-that the reasons on which it is founded are not always apparent to us:
-but then this sense of the word is not pertinent to the case in hand;
-and we may as well pretend that the constitution of the natural world is
-_unreasonable_, as that the system of Revelation is so, because we are
-in the same ignorance, for the most part, of the grounds and reasons on
-which either fabrick is erected.
-
-In the _next_ place, supposing that, by intense pains, and a greater
-sagacity than ordinary, we are enabled to see, or guess at least, in some
-instances, on what principles of reason the great scheme of revelation
-or some of its doctrines at least are founded, what do we get by the
-discovery? Only, the addition of a little speculative knowledge, which
-does not make us at all _wiser_ to salvation, than we were before, and
-possibly not _so wise_; since _knowledge_, we know, _puffeth up_, and
-_God giveth grace to the humble_.
-
-But, _lastly_, how do we arrive at this supposed pre-eminence of wisdom?
-Generally, by forcing the word of God to speak _our_ sense of it, and not
-his; by taking advantage of some difficult texts, and by wresting many
-plain ones; by making every thing bend, in short, to our presumptuous
-fancies and preconceived opinions.
-
-You see, then, what my meaning is—“That the EVIDENCE of Christianity, and
-not its _rationale_ (which, however justly conceived and ably executed,
-cannot extend so far as curious men require, because Reason itself is so
-limited); I say then that the _evidence_ of our religion is the proper
-object of inquiry;” and “that the _Scriptures_ are to be admitted in that
-sense which they obviously bear, on a fair unforced construction of them,
-although that sense appear strange to us, or be, perhaps, inexplicable;”
-in a word, that the AUTHORITY and RIGHT INTERPRETATION of Scripture
-are what we ought to look after, and not the REASONABLENESS of what it
-teaches.
-
-THE TRUTH is (for I would now, in conclusion, point out to you the
-mischievous _effects_ of this curious theology, which has so much engaged
-the minds of Christians), the truth, I say, is, That we know not what we
-do, when we take heaven, as it were, to task, and examine a confessedly
-divine Revelation by the twilight of our Reason.
-
-1. One effect is (and can there be a more dreadful one?) that this
-inquisitive humour, thus leads directly to _Infidelity_, and even
-_Atheism_. For _the wise in their own conceits_, not being able to clear
-up many parts of the divine dispensations, whether of nature or grace,
-to their satisfaction, hastily conclude that there _is_ no fitness
-or wisdom, where they _see_ none, and make their inapprehension an
-argument for their rejection of both. A perverse conduct, indeed! but so
-common, that I doubt whether there be any _other_ so fruitful source of
-irreligion. But
-
-2. When the mischief does not proceed to this extreme, still it is no
-small evil, that heresies arise, and must for ever arise, among believers
-themselves, from this way of subjecting the word of God to the scrutiny
-of our reason. For this faculty, being a different thing, under the same
-name, in every pretender to it, and, in its most improved state, being
-naturally incapable, where the revelation itself is silent or obscure,
-of deciding on what is fit and right in the divine counsels, must needs
-lead to as many different views and conclusions, as there are capacities
-and fancies of curious men. And, as every man’s reason is infallible to
-himself, because his _own_ reason, his zeal in the propagation of what
-he calls _truth_, will keep pace with his presumption, till all is noise
-and dissonance and discord; till peace and charity forsake the world;
-till Religion herself disappears; and what is left to usurp her name and
-place is only an art, or rather a fit, of disputation. Then consider
-
-3. How immense a sacrifice we make to the indulgence of a wanton
-curiosity. The Gospel was given to fix our faith and regulate our
-practice; to purify our hearts and lives, and to _fill us with all joy
-and peace in believing_. Instead of these substantial fruits, we reap I
-know not what phantom of self-applause for our ingenious speculations:
-we lose our precious time in reasoning, when we should act, and hardly
-ever come to an end of our reasonings: we grope on in these dark and
-intricate paths of inquiry, without ever attaining the heart-felt joy of
-conviction: we are so intent on _trying_ all things, that we _hold fast_
-nothing: we spend a great part of our lives, some of us our whole lives,
-in suspense and doubt: and are so long examining what our _faith_ is,
-and whether it be reasonable or no, that, with a divine directory in our
-hands, we drop into our graves before we come to a resolution of those
-questions.
-
-These are the sad effects of this intemperate wisdom, which therefore we
-shall do well to exchange for a little modest piety. And such has been
-uniformly the advice of the ablest and wisest men, from the foundation
-of Christianity down to this day. It would be endless to refer you to
-particular instances in their writings. Their sentiments on this subject
-are concisely and forcibly expressed in the following passage of as
-great a master of reason as hath appeared in the Christian world since
-the revival of letters, which I will therefore leave with you, and would
-recommend to your most attentive consideration.
-
-“Rationibus humanis scrutari divinæ naturæ (and what he observes of the
-_divine nature_, is equally true of the divine councils) cognitionem,
-temeritas est: loqui de his, quæ nullis verbis explicari queunt, dementis
-est: definire, impietas est.” And again—“Satis est ad consequendam
-salutem æternam, ea de Deo credere, quæ palam ipse de se prodidit
-in sacris literis, per selectos ad hoc viros, spiritu suo afflatos;
-quæque post versans in terris ipse discipulis aperuit: ac demum per
-spiritum sanctum iisdem in hoc selectis discipulis patefacere dignatus
-est. Hæc simplici fide tenere, Christiana philosophia est: hæc puro
-corde venerari, vera Religio est: per hæc tendere ad cœlestis vitæ
-meditationem, pietas est: in his perseverare, victoria est: per hæc
-vicisse, summa fœlicitatis est. Cæterum HOMINEM ULTRA HÆC HUMANIS
-RATIONIBUS DE REBUS DIVINIS VESTIGARE, PERICULOSÆ CUJUSDAM ATQUE IMPIÆ
-AUDACIÆ EST[34].”
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- CHARGE
-
- OF THE
-
- BISHOP OF WORCESTER
-
- TO THE
-
- CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.
-
- DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1790.
-
-
-
-
-A CHARGE, &c.
-
-
-REVEREND BRETHREN,
-
-It has been observed, that men of sense and parts are not always on the
-side of Christianity: And it is asked, how the unbelief of such men can
-consist with the honour of that Religion?
-
-We find this topic insisted upon, or insinuated at least, with much
-complacency, in all the free writings of these times. And some of them,
-however offensive for their impiety, being composed with vivacity, and
-delivered in a popular style, gain more credit with unwary readers than
-they deserve.
-
-It behoves us to be on our guard against those insinuations, and to
-prevent their having an effect upon others. It will not therefore be
-unsuitable to the design of our meeting, if I suggest to the younger
-part of you (for the elder and more experienced have no need of my
-instruction), if I expose in few words the _folly_ of inferring the
-falshood of religion from the rejection of it by a few plausible or
-learned men. And to give what I have to say the greater weight with
-you, I shall deliver my sentiments on the subject in a short comment
-on a remarkable text of St. Paul; who has indeed long ago obviated
-this prejudice, and fully accounted for the supposed _fact_, without
-derogating in any degree from the honour of our divine Religion.
-
-For no sooner was Christianity published to the world, than it was
-opposed by all the wisdom of that age, which was, in truth, distinguished
-by its wisdom. But then it was _human_ wisdom only, confiding in itself,
-and wholly unacquainted with _divine_ wisdom. These were often at
-variance, and sometimes irreconcileable with each other. No wonder then,
-that _not many wise men after the flesh_, as the Apostle expresseth it,
-_were called_, i. e. converted to Christianity, and that the wisdom of
-Revelation was deemed _folly_ (as it is in our days, and as it always
-will be) by the idolaters of their own _carnal_ wisdom.
-
-This early and popular prejudice, therefore, against the religion of
-Jesus, the great Apostle of the Gentiles found it expedient to remove.
-And he does it effectually in that oracular sentence delivered by him in
-the first Epistle to the Corinthians, in these words;
-
-“_The natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God; for they
-are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them; because they are
-spiritually discerned[35]._”
-
-The meaning of the words is clearly this: “That no man can, by the force
-of his natural understanding, however improved, discover the doctrines of
-the Gospel; nor even relish them, when they are proposed to him, so long
-as he judges of them by the light of his reason only: and that upon this
-account, _because_ those doctrines are solely derived from the wisdom of
-God, which is superior to our wisdom; and will even seem _foolishness_ to
-such a man, _because_ those doctrines are not such as his natural reason,
-or wisdom, would suggest to him.”
-
-The text therefore, you see, consists of two distinct _affirmations_,
-with a _reason_ assigned for each. 1. That the natural man receiveth not
-the things of the spirit of God, _for_ they are foolishness unto him: and
-2. that he cannot know them, _because_ they are spiritually discerned.
-
-I begin with the _last_ of these assertions. I. That the natural man
-cannot _know_, i. e. discover, the doctrines of the Gospel, is so clear,
-that this assertion hardly requires any proof; or, if it do, the reason
-given in the text is decisive—_because they are spiritually discerned_—i.
-e. because the knowledge of them is derived from the spirit of God. For,
-how can man’s understanding penetrate the secrets of divine counsels?
-Or, as the Apostle himself manages the argument much better, _What man
-knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? Even
-so, the things of God knoweth no man, but the spirit of God._
-
-II. His other assertion—_That the natural man receiveth not the things
-of God_, i. e. is indisposed to receive them—is more interesting to us,
-and will require a larger illustration. His reason for this assertion is,
-_For they are foolishness unto him_. The reason is very general, and
-therefore obscure: for you ask how or whence is it, _that those things
-are foolishness unto him_?
-
-I answer then, 1. because, _he could not discover them_. It is argument
-enough, many times, with the natural man, to reject any doctrine, which
-his own sagacity was unable to find out. For, taking for granted the
-all-sufficiency of human reason, and that what is knowable of divine
-things is within the reach of his own faculties, he concludes at once
-that such doctrines as he could not have discovered are therefore false.
-If it be only in matters of human science, a discovery, which very
-much transcends the abilities of common inquirers, is for that reason
-ill-received and slighted by many persons. Much more may we suppose this
-prejudice to be entertained against discoveries which no human abilities
-whatever could possibly have made.
-
-But 2. a further reason why such things are thought _foolish_ by the
-natural man is, because they are widely different from his notions and
-apprehensions. He was not only unable to _invent_ them himself; but,
-when proposed to him, he cannot see how they should merit his regard,
-being so little suited, as they are, to the previous conclusions of his
-own understanding. Now this prejudice is of great extent; and is almost
-natural to the pride of human reason.
-
-For, supposing a divine Revelation to be given at all, men form to
-themselves certain notions of what it must needs be; and finding that it
-does not correspond to those notions, _they receive it not_, i. e. they
-conclude it to be unreasonable.
-
-Thus, _one_ man imagines that the Gospel could be only a republication
-of the law of nature. He finds it is much more; and therefore, without
-further search, infers its falshood. _Another_ man admits that the Gospel
-might be an extraordinary scheme for the advancement of human virtue and
-happiness: but then he presumes that these ends could only, or would
-best, be answered by a complete system of moral truths, and by making the
-future happiness of man depend upon moral practice only. He understands
-that the Gospel proposes to reform mankind by _faith_, and holds out
-its rewards only to such as are actuated by that principle. He rejects
-then a scheme of religion which so little accords to his expectations. A
-_third_ person allows that _faith_ may be the proper object of reward,
-but a faith in _God_ only: to his surprize he perceives that this faith
-is required to be in Jesus, the son of God indeed, but the son of man
-too, and in him _crucified_; that the Gospel supposes mankind to have
-been under the curse of mortality, and to be redeemed from it only in
-virtue of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross. This strange dispensation is
-nothing like that which he should have planned himself: it is therefore
-disbelieved by him.
-
-Thus it appears how the _natural man_ is disposed to think unfavourably
-of the Gospel, because its doctrines are not such as he should previously
-have expected. But another and more fatal prejudice misleads him. For
-
-3. The things of the spirit seem _foolishness_ to the natural man,
-because on the strictest inquiry he cannot perhaps find out the reasons
-of them; and must admit them, many times, upon trust, as we say, or,
-in the language of Scripture, on a principle of _faith_ only. This
-experienced inability to search the deep things of God hurts his pride
-most of all. That the divine counsels are _beyond_ his discovery, may
-be true; that they should be _besides_ his first hasty expectations,
-may be digested: but that, when discovered and considered, they should
-yet elude his grasp, and not submit to be comprehended by his utmost
-capacity, this disgrace is insupportable to him. Yet such are the
-fundamental doctrines of the Christian Revelation. “The forfeiture of
-life and immortality, for all mankind, in consequence of one man’s
-disobedience,” implies a degree of rigour in the divine justice, of which
-he cannot understand the reason. On the other hand, “The restoration
-of that lost inheritance by the transcendent humiliation of the Son of
-God,” is an abyss of mercy which he can still less fathom. These two
-principles, on which the whole scheme of the Gospel turns, are not to be
-scanned by human wisdom, and must be admitted on the authority of the
-Revelation only. The natural man finds his reason so much discountenanced
-and abased by its fruitless efforts to penetrate these mysteries, that
-he has no disposition to _receive_, nay, he thinks the honour of his
-understanding concerned in _rejecting_, such doctrines.
-
-4. The _fourth_ and last reason I shall mention (and but in one word)
-for the natural man’s unfavourable sentiments of revealed religion,
-is, That the wisdom of this scheme, so far as it may be apprehended
-by us, can only appear from considering the harmony of its several
-parts, or, as St. Paul expresses it, by _comparing spiritual things
-with spiritual_[36]; a work of time and labour, which he is by no
-means forward to undertake. So that, as, in the former instances, his
-indisposition arose from the _pride_ of reason, it here springs from its
-_laziness and inapplication_.
-
-I omit other considerations, which indispose men for the reception of the
-Gospel; such I mean as arise from the perversity of the human _will_;
-because I confine myself at present to those only which respect the
-exercise of human _Reason_. Now it has been shewn, that this faculty,
-as it is commonly employed by those who pride themselves most in it,
-is unpropitious to Revelation—_because_, it cares not to admit what it
-could not discover—_because_, it willingly disbelieves what it did not
-expect—_because_, it is given to reject what it cannot at all, or cannot,
-at least, without much pains, comprehend. So good reason had the Apostle
-for asserting, that _the natural man receiveth not the things of the
-spirit of God_!
-
-Very much of what his been here observed of _Unbelief_, might be applied
-to what is so prevalent in our days, and is termed _Socinianism_: which,
-though it do not disown altogether the authority of revealed religion,
-yet takes leave to reduce it to a small matter, and to explain away
-its peculiar doctrines, by a forced and irreverend interpretation of
-Scripture. So that the difference is only this: the _unbeliever_ rejects
-revelation in the gross, as wholly inconsistent with _human_ reason; the
-_Socinian_ admits so much of it as he can bend, or torture into some
-conformity with his _own_ reason.
-
-But I have considered this species of _Unbelief_ on a former occasion.
-
-At present, I conclude, on the authority of the text now explained and
-justified, that no abilities whatsoever of the professed unbeliever
-bring any the least discredit on Christianity, because we know that the
-two inherent defects of the natural man, _pride_ and _indolence_, very
-fully account for his unbelief, without supposing any want of evidence or
-reasonableness in the Christian Religion.
-
-Let it then be no discredit to the Gospel, that it requires _faith_,
-which is but another term for MODESTY, in its professors. With this
-amiable, and surely not unreasonable, turn of mind, the sublimest
-understanding will not scruple to receive the things of the spirit
-of God; without it, the natural man cannot receive them: _for_, as
-the Apostle declares, and this whole discourse testifies, _they are
-foolishness unto him_.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- CHARGE
-
- OF THE
-
- BISHOP OF WORCESTER
-
- TO THE
-
- CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.
-
- DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1796.
-
-
-
-
-A CHARGE, &c.
-
-
-REVEREND BRETHREN,
-
-The Christian Church has, in no age, been exempt from trials. The
-_faith and patience of the Saints_ have been successively exercised by
-persecution, by heresies, by schisms, by superstition, by fanaticism, by
-disguised or avowed infidelity, and sometimes by downright atheism.
-
-In the midst of these perpetual changes, the duty of US, the Ministers of
-the Gospel, is one and the same, TO PREACH THE WORD, _in season and out
-of season_, that is, whether the circumstances of the time be favourable
-to us or not[37].
-
-Concerning the _evidences_ of the Gospel, or the grounds on which our
-belief of it is founded, I say no more at present, than that they have
-been accurately considered, and set forth at large, by ancient and modern
-writers, and are in themselves abundantly satisfactory.
-
-Taking for granted therefore, as we well may, the divine authority of our
-holy Religion, there can be no dispute about the obligation we are under
-to PREACH it with diligence. But this may be done in several _ways_:
-and it may be of use to consider in WHAT way we shall most effectually
-discharge that duty.
-
-The Apostle delivers the whole secret in one word, when he ordains—IF ANY
-MAN SPEAK, LET HIM SPEAK AS THE ORACLES OF GOD. And my present business
-will be to unfold the meaning of this text, or rather to deduce the
-_consequences_ which naturally flow from it.
-
-We are to _speak as the Oracles of God_: that is, as men, who have it in
-charge to deliver the will and word of God.
-
-I. It follows then, FIRST, that we are to preach the Gospel SIMPLY AND
-PLAINLY; i. e. 1. to deliver Scripture truths, in opposition to merely
-human tenets and positions: And 2. cogent and immediate inferences from
-those truths, in exclusion of far-fetched and fanciful deductions.
-
-1. Having a _message_ to deliver, our business is to report it with
-fidelity, and, as a message coming from _God_, with all imaginable
-reverence. Human ingenuity may be employed in other compositions, but
-has no place here. Our own fancies, and even persuasions, so far as they
-rest on our own discovery, must be kept distinct from revealed truths;
-and _the two sorts of learning, philosophy and divinity_ (as the wisest
-man[38] of the last age advised), _are on no account to be blended
-together_. The reason is, that they stand on different foundations; the
-one, on the use of our natural faculties, the other, on supernatural
-illumination only. The latter we call _Faith_; the former, _Opinion_, or,
-as it may chance, _Knowledge_.
-
-Some regard must be had to this distinction, in discoursing on Christian
-_morals_, where Reason can do most. But, as to articles of _faith_, that
-is, the sum and substance of Christianity, properly so called, the rule
-is to be observed universally and inviolably.
-
-2. It follows also, from our speaking as the _oracles of God_, That
-we take great care how we deviate from the sacred text, either in our
-conclusions from it, or in our glosses upon it. Our _conclusions_, unless
-immediate and direct, and even countenanced by the inspired writers
-themselves, may easily mislead us. For the nature of the subject being
-not at all, or very obscurely, known, we have but a dim view of the
-truths necessarily connected with it. Great caution, then, is in this
-respect necessary. It is not less so, in _explaining_ the sacred text. An
-oracle of God should be delivered either in its own words, or, at least,
-in words clearly, and according to the best rules of interpretation,
-explicatory of them. The contrary practice is evidently irreverent,
-rash, and even prophane. Had this circumspection in reasoning _from_
-revealed truths, and in commenting _upon_ them, been strictly observed,
-all those heresies which have corrupted, and still corrupt the faith,
-had been prevented; and the Church of Christ had happily enjoyed the
-great blessing we daily pray for, _The unity of the spirit in the bond of
-peace_.
-
-II. It follows, in the next place, from our being instructed to _speak
-as the Oracles of God_, that we preach the truths of the Gospel
-AUTHORITATIVELY, in exclusion of doubt or hesitation.
-
-This is a consideration of great weight, and puts a wide difference
-between the Christian preacher and the theoretical discourser. When weak
-men have no ground to stand upon in their moral or religious enquiries
-but their own industry and ingenuity, they may well suspect the soundness
-of their conclusions, and had need deliver them with distrust and
-caution. But the word of God is unquestionable. What is built upon it is
-certainly true. Our modesty therefore suffers nothing from announcing
-truths, so derived, with perfect assurance[39].
-
-The advantage of this mode of preaching must be obvious to every body. It
-was observed by the Jews in the case of our Lord himself; who, _speaking
-as the oracles of God_, and as _God_, astonished his auditory, for that
-_he taught them as one having authority, and not as the Scribes_[40]:
-as having _authority_, because he uttered nothing but infallible truth,
-which he had received from God, and had even a right to deliver in his
-own name; and not as the _Scribes_, who might indeed have spoken with
-authority, if they had duly respected the Law of Moses, which was the
-Law of God; but had forfeited this advantage by the liberty they took
-of mixing with it their own glosses and traditions[41]. A perpetual and
-awakening admonition to the Christian preacher never to forget or betray
-his high privilege of speaking with that tone of authority which becomes
-his office, and commands attention[42].
-
-This authoritative mode of preaching requires that we carefully avoid,
-in our public discourses, whatever has the air of CONTROVERSY[43]. Our
-business is to speak undoubted truths, not to dispute about uncertain
-opinions. There are many points, no doubt, relative to the Christian
-Religion, besides the evidences of it, that may be properly inquired
-into, but not in our Churches. We are to press _there_ only what we
-know to be true, and to press it _for that reason_. Let such persons,
-then, as are curious to pry into abstruse questions, have recourse to
-the _Schools_, where such discussions are in their place; or to _Books_,
-where they may be regaled with this sort of entertainment to satiety.
-But let them not carry this sceptical humour into that _Chair_, whence
-oracles only should proceed.
-
-The preacher will indeed say, his design is to recommend and illustrate
-the truth by the use of reason. It may be so: but let him remember, that
-_the plainest truths lose much of their weight when they are rarefied
-into subtleties_[44]; and that what is readily admitted on the authority
-of God’s word, becomes doubtful to the common hearer, when we would prove
-it by ingenious argumentation.
-
-To compleat the character of a Christian Preacher, it follows as a
-
-III. Third inference from the Apostle’s rule of _speaking as the oracles
-of God_, That he inculcate his doctrine with EARNESTNESS and ZEAL, and
-not with that indifference which is usually found, and cannot be much
-wondered at, in a teacher of his own inventions.
-
-The Christian preacher should, I say, speak with _earnestness_; that is,
-with a solicitous concern to instruct and persuade, such as the known
-truth of his doctrine warrants. This earnestness must also be attended
-with _zeal_; by which I mean nothing extravagant or fanatical; but such
-a fervour of application as must become an Instructor, who, besides the
-certainty, knows the _moment_ of what he utters.
-
-These rules, it is true, were not unknown to the ancient masters of
-Rhetoric, who told their scholars, That to _convince_, and, much more,
-to _persuade_, they were to speak with force and warmth. But to do this,
-they were first to be convinced and persuaded _themselves_[45]; which,
-in their case, was no easy matter. For the principles they went upon
-in their reasoning on moral or religious matters, were frequently such
-as they could not confide in; or the end they aimed at, in applying to
-the passions, was in no high degree interesting. In spite of the rule,
-then, their discourses were often feeble and unimpressive. It is quite
-otherwise with the Christian preacher. For we are not recommending a
-scheme of notions which we have framed out of our _own heads_, or which
-we think in some _small_ degree conducive to the benefit of our hearers.
-But we speak that which is _indisputably_ true; and inforce that which,
-out of all question, concerns us most, “The salvation of our souls, and
-eternal happiness.” The coldest heart must be touched with sure truths,
-and cannot impart them without vehemence.
-
-I intimate, rather than express, my meaning to you in few words; both
-because the time allows me to do no more, and because I know to whom
-these hints are addressed. For your experience in the ministry of the
-word must have prevented me in all I have _said_, and will readily supply
-what I have _omitted_ to say. I assure myself, therefore, you will come
-with me to this short conclusion, “That in our sermons we should execute
-our commission with FIDELITY, because it is _a commission_—in the way of
-AUTHORITY, because it is a _divine_ commission—and lastly with ZEAL, as
-knowing the _end_ of our commission, and the infinite importance of it.”
-
-By this method of instruction (of which there is no want of examples,
-or even _models_, in the sermons of our best preachers[46]), by this
-Apostolic mode of preaching, I say, we shall do justice at once to our
-ministry and ourselves. By speaking as _the oracles of God_, we shall
-speak as we ought to speak; and we shall speak with an energy that
-can rarely fail of effect. We shall alarm the careless, instruct the
-ignorant, confirm the weak, reclaim the perverse, disconcert the wise,
-and silence the prophane. We shall do this, and more, in the strength of
-him who bade us _teach all nations_. And if we teach them in the _way_
-which the Holy Spirit enjoins, we may confidently expect the completion
-of that gracious and animating promise—LO, I AM WITH YOU ALWAYS, EVEN TO
-THE END OF THE WORLD[47].
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- CHARGE
-
- OF THE
-
- BISHOP OF WORCESTER
-
- TO THE
-
- CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.
-
- DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1800.
-
-
-
-
-A CHARGE, &c.
-
-
-REVEREND BRETHREN,
-
-I found it necessary to defer my Visitation of you somewhat longer than
-the usual time; and have even now no pressing occasion to trouble you
-with many words of advice or pastoral exhortation.
-
-For it is with great satisfaction I observe that, in the present eventful
-crisis, the clergy in general, and those in particular committed to my
-charge, have zealously performed their duty in those instances, that have
-chiefly called for their exertions.
-
-If the unprecedented _expences_ of a just and unavoidable war, against an
-enemy the most outrageous that has ever alarmed Christendom, have been
-felt by all; you have not only supported your share of them with becoming
-alacrity, but have done your utmost to infuse into others the same ready
-obedience to the authority of Government, and the same zeal for the
-support and maintenance of our invaluable Constitution.
-
-If, again, for the punishment of our sins, and to recall us to a due
-sense of sobriety and piety, it has pleased God to visit us with
-_inclement seasons_, and with the usual effect of them, an extraordinary
-scarcity; you have every where come forth to assist the poor out of your
-own, not always affluent, incomes, and to solicit the contributions of
-your parishioners with such effect, as demonstrates _their_ Christian
-temper, as well as your own watchful care and diligence.
-
-If, lastly, the _portentous libertinism_ of the times hath menaced the
-destruction of all civil subordination, and even set at defiance all the
-sacred ties of our holy Religion; you have not been wanting, in your
-respective spheres, to admonish the people of their duty; to revive in
-them that veneration of God’s word and will, which had been their support
-and safety in former ages; and, agreeably to your solemn engagements
-at your Ordination, _to banish and drive away all erroneous and strange
-doctrine_.
-
-Having then so much to approve in your conduct, little remains but to
-put you in mind of those standing duties of our ministry, which should
-never be omitted, and cannot be too frequently recollected by us. And, of
-these, one is so particularly called for in the present moment, that I
-shall make it the subject of my address to you.
-
-I mean the duty of _Catechizing_ the children of your respective
-parishes. For, since the enemies of all goodness are unwearied in their
-endeavours to corrupt the young and unwary, and to eradicate from their
-minds, as far as they can, the first principles of religion and virtue,
-the Christian minister cannot by any means so effectually counteract
-their designs, as by a contrary conduct. In other words, he must labour
-incessantly to instruct the rising generation in the first grounds
-and elements of Christianity, contained in that excellent summary of
-faith and practice, which the Church has enjoined to be taught in its
-CATECHISM[48].
-
-Now the uses of discharging this part of the pastoral care with
-persevering industry are evidently very great in respect, 1. To the
-Catechumens; 2. To the congregation present at these exercises; And, 3.
-lastly, To the officiating clergy themselves, the younger part of them
-especially.
-
-1. The Catechumens themselves cannot but be greatly benefited by this
-regimen. For the intention of the Church is, that, by the care of their
-parents, and by means of those little schools which are set up in all
-places, young children should be taught, as soon as they are able to
-attend to any thing, the Church Catechism. And when, by some practice
-in this discipline, they can repeat it well, they are to be sent to the
-Minister of the parish, to be by him publicly in the Church, at appointed
-seasons, proved and examined before the Congregation. This usage being
-continued for some years, not only the responses to the interesting
-questions in the Catechism must be deeply infixed in their memories, but
-something of the sense and meaning of what they have learned, will be
-gradually apprehended by them. So that, by the time they appear before
-the Bishop for Confirmation, if their respective masters and teachers
-be not wanting to them, they must have acquired a competent knowledge
-of those important doctrines and precepts, which are contained in it.
-Add to this, that, though at the time of learning their Catechism
-their knowledge of it be not considerable, yet it is of the highest
-importance that it be learnt, and that they can readily recite it. For,
-this foundation being laid, they will, in maturer years, and as their
-understandings open, the more easily call to mind the rules of their
-duty, and profit the more by any future instructions conveyed to them in
-sermons, in the use of the Liturgy, and otherwise.
-
-Such will especially be the case, if the children be accustomed, as they
-should be, to make their answers distinctly and deliberately; and, if the
-Minister intermix some short hints and observations of his own, tending
-to make the sense of those answers easy and familiar to them. So much for
-the _Catechumens_; I observe,
-
-2. Further, that the whole _Congregation_ present at these exercises must
-be specially edified by them.
-
-The parents and friends of the catechized children will, for obvious
-reasons, take a lively interest in this public trial of their
-sufficiency. They will listen themselves, more attentively perhaps than
-they had ever done before, to the _questions_ and _answers_, and will
-enter further into the drift and use of them. Nay, the whole congregation
-will be put in mind of those fundamental lessons of piety, which they
-had heretofore learnt and repeated themselves, and be now capable of
-reflecting more deeply upon them. So that the old will carry away with
-them much solid instruction, while the young are training up to smaller
-degrees of it.
-
-There is no doubt, then, of the benefit which the Congregation would
-derive from this practice of Catechising. But it would rise still higher,
-if the Catechizers, besides interrogating the children, and trying their
-memories, would further take this opportunity of teaching all present
-the momentous truths contained in this breviary: I mean, if, during
-the season of Catechizing, they would make the several parts of the
-Catechism the subject of their Sermons. And, to induce them the rather to
-do this, I add,
-
-3. Lastly, that, by exerting their industry and talents in this way,
-the Clergy themselves will derive no small use from this Catechetical
-institution.
-
-From the earliest times of Christianity, care has been always taken
-to provide _Confessions_, _Creeds_, and _Catechisms_, for the use of
-Converts and the newly baptized. These were so contrived as to contain in
-few words the fundamental doctrines and commands of our Religion; that
-so they night be easily understood and remembered. Of these summaries,
-several were drawn up by our Reformers; and, after some changes and
-improvements, were reduced at length into our present _Church Catechism_,
-the most convenient and useful, because the simplest and shortest, of all
-others.
-
-All these, whether of earlier or later date, are well known to the
-Clergy, and without doubt are studied by them.
-
-Besides, some of the most eminent of our Divines have applied themselves
-particularly to write comments on these Catechisms, to explain their
-meaning more fully, and to give the most accurate expositions of them.
-These expositors are so numerous, and so well known, that I should scarce
-have mentioned the names of any, if two of them, I mean Bishop Pearson
-and Dr. Barrow, did not deserve to be specially recommended to the
-student in Divinity, for their superlative excellence.
-
-Now then, by the use of our protestant Catechisms, and of the many
-learned Commentators upon them, the younger clergy, as well as the more
-advanced, will have such abundant materials before them, that they may,
-with no great trouble, and with extraordinary benefit to themselves,
-draw up a set of Sermons and Lectures to accompany their Catechetical
-examinations. I say with extraordinary benefit to _themselves_; because
-it is certain that he who takes due pains to teach others, teaches
-himself: nor can the least prepared of our brethren be at a loss to
-furnish his mind with a competent, indeed a sufficient, degree of
-knowledge; so as to instruct his congregation in all the Articles of the
-Church Catechism, that is, in all the necessary points of Christian faith
-and practice.
-
-In contemplation therefore of these benefits, I recommend this mode of
-catechizing, and of expounding the Catechism in occasional concomitant
-discourses, to all my brethren very particularly. The children will be
-trained up for Confirmation in the knowledge of the first principles of
-their religion; those of riper years will be confirmed in what they had
-before learnt; and the teachers of both will advance their own skill and
-ability by this course of theological study.
-
-We shall be told perhaps by some, that this way of catechizing is the
-way to fill the minds of the Catechumens with _prejudices_. And, without
-doubt, what is taught them in this way is _pre-judged_ for them. But by
-whom? Not by weak, or unskilful, or dishonest persons; but by men, the
-ablest, the most learned, and the holiest, that have appeared in the
-Christian world. Such doctrines, so derived, and, let me add, clearly
-sanctioned by apostolic authority, may surely deserve the name of
-_truths_, and not of prejudices.
-
-I am persuaded, therefore, that a Regimen, so reasonable and so salutary,
-will recommend itself to your special notice, as the likeliest means of
-putting some stop to the licentious principles of the times. I will
-not suppose that your zeal to do good can be, at such a juncture, less
-operative, than that of others to do mischief. In a word, by adapting a
-set of clear, plain, earnest, and scriptural sermons to the authorized
-office of catechetical examination, we shall provide, at once, that our
-Congregations be _instructed_ in the right way; the way which the wisdom
-of the Church prescribes; and that we ourselves be duly qualified to
-_impart_ that instruction.
-
-The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the
-fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen[49].
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX:
-
- CONTAINING
-
- FOUR OCCASIONAL TRACTS
-
- ON
-
- DIFFERENT SUBJECTS AND OCCASIONS.
-
-
-
-
- OCCASIONAL TRACTS,
-
- CHIEFLY
-
- CONTROVERSIAL.
-
-
-
-
-_ADVERTISEMENT._
-
-
-_The controversial Tracts, which make up this Volume, were written and
-published by the Author at different times, as opportunity invited, or
-occasion required. Some sharpness of style may be objected to them; in
-regard to which he apologizes for himself in the words of the Poet_:
-
- ——Me quoque pectoris
- Tentavit in dulci juventâ
- Fervor——
- ——nunc ego mitibus
- Mutare quæro tristia.
-
- R. W.
-
-
-
-
- REMARKS
-
- ON
-
- MR. WESTON’S “ENQUIRY
-
- INTO
-
- THE REJECTION OF THE
-
- CHRISTIAN MIRACLES
-
- BY THE HEATHENS.”
-
- FIRST PRINTED IN 1746.
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISEMENT
-
-IN 1746.
-
-
-The following Remarks were drawn up within a few weeks after the
-publication of Mr. Weston’s Book; but without any intention of printing
-them at that time, when it was conceived not unlikely that some more
-elaborate Answer might come out. But nothing of that kind appearing, and
-it being now no longer probable that there is in fact any such design,
-the Author has been induced to review his papers, and to give them,
-with some small additions and alterations, to the Public. How far that
-_Public_ will esteem itself obliged to him for having suppressed them
-thus long, he presumes not to say; but believes himself well intitled to
-the thanks of the learned _Inquirer_, as having _still_ this merit, that
-he is the FIRST who has paid his respects to him.
-
-
-
-
- REMARKS
-
- ON A LATE BOOK, ENTITLED,
-
- AN ENQUIRY
-
- INTO
-
- THE REJECTION OF THE
-
- CHRISTIAN MIRACLES
-
- BY THE HEATHENS.
-
-
-
-
-REMARKS ON A LATE BOOK, &c.
-
-
-The Writer of the _Inquiry into the Rejection of the Christian Miracles
-by the Heathens_[50] having, as he is well assured[51], an undoubted
-claim to one of the two reasons for making a work public, _that what
-it contains_ SHOULD _be new_, and not willing that so uncommon a merit
-should be thrown away upon his reader, is careful to advertise us of this
-point himself, and accordingly flourishes upon it with much apparent
-alacrity and satisfaction through a great part of his Preface. For, not
-content with this bare assertion of his claim, he grows so elate, as to
-wonder this important theme should be reserved for him[52], and that no
-sagacity of former times had been blessed in the discovery. Nay, lest his
-very Patron should neglect him, or as if he suspected my Lord might look
-no farther than the Dedication, he scruples not to mention even there
-the excellency of his work; and is very frank in declaring his own _good
-opinion_ of it[53].
-
-An exordium like this, we know, is generally inauspicious. However,
-it may serve to one end, not the least considerable, it may be, in an
-author’s views, to engage the public attention. For it is indeed but
-natural to inquire into the peculiar merit of a work that could inspire
-its writer with such boasts, and fill a place in it, till now sacred to
-a real or pretended modesty, with such unusual confidence and triumph.
-And this, we are told, consists in _the discovery of a new solution of a
-difficulty about miracles[54], which had long perplexed the Inquirer more
-than all the rest put together_. For, taking into his consideration the
-argument for the divinity of our holy Religion, as arising therefrom,
-_he could not help thinking it extremely odd, that such numbers of men,
-for so long a time, could reject what to Christians in general, and
-himself in particular, seemed to be of so great weight_[55]. And the
-embarras he was under from this difficulty put him _upon looking for
-some solution of it amongst the variety of authors on this subject, both
-ancient and modern_; but to no purpose, it seems, till the felicity of
-his own genius had struck out a new route, and led him to seek it _in the
-low opinion which the heathens entertained of miracles_.
-
-And now the whole discovery is out; and, to say the truth, is every way
-so surprizing, that an author of less modesty than ours had assumed a
-still farther merit upon it. For, wherefore else should he rest in the
-honour of a new _solution_, when the _objection_ itself is _his_? And
-surely at this time of day, when every species of hostility has been
-tried, and the whole armoury of the enemy been exhausted in the service,
-it must be deemed a higher praise of _invention_ to have furnished new
-arms, than to counteract the use of them. Nor do I pay the author too
-great a compliment in supposing the objection _his_, since he fairly
-owns _it has always been passed over_[56], which, in an age like this,
-when every difficulty relating to Revealed Religion has been sedulously
-urged, and honestly examined, is in effect saying it was never _started_.
-And, indeed, this is so much the case, that, instead of dreaming of any
-objection from this quarter, Christian writers have universally agreed
-in representing the quick and speedy conversion of the heathen world, as
-an undeniable evidence of its divinity. And, for the truth of the fact,
-they appeal to the testimony of the heathens themselves complaining of
-the enormous growth of the _new sect_; which had spread itself over at
-orders and degrees of men, insomuch that their altars were neglected,
-and the temples of their gods left in a manner desolate[57]. Nay, the
-Christian apologists, we know, braved them to their very face with the
-incredible progress of Christianity[58]. And thus, instead of its being
-true, as the Inquirer candidly insinuates, _that there was something so
-exceedingly perplexed and intricate in the subject itself, or something
-so critical and dangerous in the solution of it, that it was always
-thought proper to be kept from view_[59], nothing, on the contrary,
-can be more evident than that there is no difficulty to be accounted
-for at all; or, if some more forward projector should affect to make
-one of it, the pretence might easily, and without any danger, admit a
-_solution_. So that, upon the whole (if a dealer in novelties were not
-too much disgraced by so _stale_ an allusion), one should be apt to
-regard the learned writer as having been pushed on to this Inquiry by
-much the same spirit as, in an evil hour, led the valorous Knight of
-_Manca_ out upon his rambles. For, struck with the conceit of his own
-superior prowess, and considering withal the loss the world might sustain
-by his not appearing in it, he marched forth into the land of Religious
-Disputation, in quest of adventures; where, finding no _real_ objections
-to encounter, he was determined however to create _imaginary_ ones, and
-so, converting the next innocent thing he came at into a monster, laid
-out his whole strength and force in the combat. Where too the success
-of the adventurers is not unlike. For the difficulty, if it be one,
-is much too hard for the abilities of our Inquirer; as, whatever his
-antagonist was, the unlucky Knight had always the worst of it. For, in
-examining the other part of the author’s discovery, his answer to the
-supposed objection, we shall find that as he set out with a difficulty
-without grounds, so he will salve it by a fact without proof. And this,
-it will be owned, consistently enough: for, where a phantom only is to
-be engaged, the hero but exposes himself that goes against it in _real
-armour_.
-
- ——Frustra _ferro_ diverberet _umbras_.
-
-But let us hear the fact itself. It is maintained then as the basis of
-the Inquirer’s whole work, _that the heathens in general had a very low
-opinion of miracles; and that this was not put on by them to serve some
-particular purposes, but was really a principle that influenced their
-actions on the most interesting and trying occasions_[60]. The Inquirer
-has more than once[61] expressed his apprehensions that the _novelty_ of
-his doctrine would, at least with many of his readers, be a prejudice
-against its reception; but not once, that I can find, does he appear
-to have entertained any the least distrust or concern about the truth
-of it. And yet the public will be apt to think this the fitter object
-of his fears. For, allowing the utmost weight and force to the several
-testimonies he has put together, the whole amount of their evidence is
-this:—_that a few particular persons, many of them under inveterate
-prejudices against Christianity, expressed but a low opinion of miracles,
-which they knew to be_ FALSE, _or of certain_ REAL _ones, which they
-did not believe_. And where is the wonder? Or how has the Inquirer, with
-all his sagacity, been able to collect a proof of the _low opinion of
-miracles amongst the heathen in general_ from the unavailing evidence of
-such witnesses? For, is it strange that the Roman præfects[62] were not
-the immediate converts of Jesus and Paul, on account of the wonders said
-to have been done by them? If the Inquirer believes such testimonies to
-his purpose, I will engage to furnish a long list of them, even as many
-as there were unconverted heathens, who had the means and opportunity of
-informing themselves of the truth of his history. Is it remarkable that
-the miracles of one impostor[63] are not spoken of with _much_ esteem by
-writers, who were not delivering the popular opinion concerning them, and
-who had plainly too much sense to believe them themselves? Or is it so
-much as _true_, either of him, or the others he mentions, that they were
-then negligently treated by their professed admirers and encomiasts[64]?
-Or, were it _true_, could any thing more be collected from it than that
-the miracles imputed to them were too trifling in themselves, or too
-weakly supported, to be believed?
-
-But we have not yet done with the writer’s negative testimonies. For he
-thinks _that_ of _Marcellinus_ should not be passed over; though the
-most he can make of it is, that the historian _dissembles_ a miracle[65]
-wrought to the utter confusion of his Master, and _relates an event,
-which he was not at liberty to confute_.
-
-What comes next is indeed _positive_, but still less to the writer’s
-purpose. We can scarce think him serious, when he would urge the
-testimony of Hierocles, Celsus, and Julian, the avowed and virulent
-opposers of Christianity[66], as an evidence of a general contempt
-of miracles in the heathen world. Nor has he better luck with his
-philosophers. For, is the opinion of a few atheistical speculatists[67],
-and perhaps one or two more of better fame, of the least weight in
-deciding this matter; especially when it is plain, from the very passage
-referred to[68], that they saw through the imposture of the heathen
-miracles; and rejected them _merely_ on that account? Can his Ægyptian
-Gymnosophists, piqued, as they were, at the reputation of the Indian
-miracles[69], and yet, in effect, confessing their esteem of them by
-pretending to work such themselves, can these witnesses be thought
-deserving the least credit? Above all, is the wonder-working _Apollonius_
-brought in to disclaim miracles, and that too in a passage intended
-only to express his contempt of some fooleries in witchcraft[70]? But
-what the _philosophers_ could not do for him, the _law-givers_ he
-resolves shall, and therefore brings in a long list of sages[71], all
-of them, as he thinks, concurring to establish this point. But how?
-Why, in his _negative_ way of witnessing, _in their making no pretence
-to miracles_—that is, as every body sees, in their making no pretence
-to what they _durst not_ counterfeit, or _did not_ want; and when it
-is certain they _did pretend_ to them in the only safe way of a secret
-intercourse and communication[72]. But the cause is growing still more
-desperate. For, are the Christian Apologists to be charged with this
-_evil principle_[73]? and that only for maintaining, in their occasional
-disputes with the heathens; what the ablest Divines have ever done, and
-still continue to maintain, the insufficiency of miracles _alone_, and
-if taken _by themselves_, to establish the divinity of any revelation?
-an opinion founded, as it should seem, on the express testimony of Jesus
-Christ[74]; or, if _false_, which has not been made appear, excusable
-enough in their situation, when _real_ miracles were owned to be in the
-power of evil spirits, or when at least the general prevalency of this
-persuasion amongst their heathen adversaries might render it expedient
-for the Christian writers to argue on the concession of it. But, ill as
-this treatment is, the venerable Apologists have no cause of complaint.
-They share but the same fate, as ONE much their better. For, the
-_dignity_ of the writer’s witnesses, whatever becomes of their _evidence,
-is still increasing_[75]; and having made free with the _Fathers_ of the
-Church (for I say nothing of his _Jews_, not only because he confesses
-them nothing to his purpose[76], but because, if their evidence has
-any weight at all, it _determines_ the contrary way[77]), having, as I
-said, made free with the _Fathers_ of the Church, he next claims the
-sanction of an _Apostle_. Has then the Inquirer one _sure_ and _certain_
-retreat? And is his novelty at last, all spent and wearied as it is,
-to elude our hopes by finding refuge in the sacred writings[78]? So
-indeed he would persuade himself or his readers. And this, it must be
-owned, is _no novel practice_. It is ever the last expedient of a sinking
-cause, when forsaken of all human help, and fearing the just vengeance
-of indignant reason, to strive to support itself by laying hold on the
-altar. But the Scriptures are no _sanctuary_ for falshoods. We shall
-therefore esteem it no irreverence to approach the holy place, and, as
-we are instructed in a like case, to take the _fugitive_ from it. The
-case appears to have been this: In the Apostle’s design of breaking
-an unchristian faction in the Church of Corinth, which had arose, it
-seems, from a vain ostentation of human science, his business was to
-discredit their misapplied learning with the people, and to check the
-arrogance of these _perverse disputers_ themselves. To this end, he sets
-himself to shew that it was not on account of any advantage of skill in
-human learning or eloquence that God was pleased to make choice of the
-preachers of the Gospel; but that, on the other hand, he rather chose
-the _foolish_, i. e. the illiterate and uneducated, the better to expose
-the weakness of human wisdom, and to display, with greater force, the
-power and excellency of the _Cross of Christ_[79]. And this, he proceeds
-to observe, is but agreeable to the general œconomy of God’s providence,
-which doth not conform itself to our views of fitness or expediency; but
-most commonly by the choice of such instruments and means as to us seem
-_unfit_ or _inexpedient_, _destroys the wisdom of the wise, and brings
-to nothing the understanding of the prudent_[80]. A remarkable example
-of which method of dealing with mankind, continues the Apostle[81], we
-have in the dispensation of the Gospel, _introduced_ in such a manner,
-and _established_ by such means, as both to _Jew_ and _Gentile_ appear
-absurd and unaccountable. _For the Jews ask after a sign_, i. e. look
-for an outward ostentatious display of worldly power and pre-eminence
-going along with, and attending on the Messiah; and, under the influence
-of such prepossession, make that a _sign_ or test of his coming, and
-even refuse to acknowledge his Divine mission without it[82]. Whilst the
-Greeks, on the contrary, seduced by the charms of a studied eloquence,
-or inslaved to the tenets of a conceited philosophy, require the Gospel
-to be preached in agreement to their notions and prejudices; and reject a
-Redeemer, whose method of salvation is not conformable to the conclusions
-of their schools, and whose doctrine is unadorned by the graces of their
-learning. Whereas, in fact, proceeds the Apostle, our commission is
-to publish, in all plainness, a religion to the world, fundamentally
-opposite to the prejudices of both. For its main doctrine, and on which
-hangs all the rest, is that of a _crucified Saviour_; which therefore,
-as being offensive to the fond hopes and expectations of the Jew, and
-not suited to his ideas of the _Divine power_ and greatness, is to him a
-_stumbling-block_: And being a method of salvation neither agreeing to
-their conceptions of the Divine _wisdom_, nor set off with the colours
-of heathen wit, is to the Greeks _foolishness_. Though yet it is to both
-these _Jews and Greeks_, when rightly instructed in the ways of God’s
-Providence, _both the power of God and the wisdom of God_[83]. Thus we
-see, at length, what the writer’s sacred authority is come to; which,
-having no foundation but in the groundless comment a mistaken passage is
-thus easily overturned and confuted. For from hence it appears, that the
-Apostle, far from attesting his whimsy of _the low opinion of miracles
-amongst the heathens_, does not so much as of Miracles at all: or, if he
-must be made an evidence in the cause, gives judgment against him; as
-plainly enough expressing his opinion, that it was not a _contempt of
-miracles_, but the _conceit of wisdom_, which made the great difficulty
-to converting the Pagan world.
-
-And now having dispersed his _cloud of witnesses_ (which, unlike the
-_sacred_ one it would seem to resemble, instead of illustrating and
-reflecting a fuller light on the _fact_ it surrounds, serves only to
-obscure and conceal it) having shewn, I say, if not the falshood of his
-_fact_, at least the insufficiency of his _evidence_ to support it, I
-might fairly dismiss the remainder of his book without any confutation;
-the following chapters, as he tells us, being intended to account for
-this fact, which he presumes to have fully established. But, as he
-appears unwilling to rest the whole of his cause on the merit of so
-slight an evidence, and has therefore engaged for a further confirmation
-of it in the following pages[84], it will be proper to collect in a few
-words, what additional evidence may arise from that quarter: And in doing
-this, I shall think it sufficient to examine, not his premises, but
-conclusion; and so, leaving him in full possession of his _facts_, to
-argue with him, in agreement to the design of these slight sheets, on the
-weight and force of his deductions. And here,
-
-1. Allowing him to have proved _the vanity of the heathen pretensions
-to miracles_, c. iv. v. vi. in the fullest sense he can wish; and
-that no _real wonder_ was ever wrought, or _oracle_ delivered, by any
-of the numerous pretenders to either, what will the author say is the
-proper inference from it?—That therefore the heathens _could_ not but
-have a low opinion of miracles? That, indeed, would be to his purpose;
-but nothing can be less supported. For were not such miracles and
-oracles at least generally believed? Or, if several impostures were
-detected, does the author imagine that such detection would utterly
-sink the credit of all future miracles[85]? A writer, so skilled in the
-workings of superstition, and who appears to have taken much pains to
-pry into the dark corners of humanity, ought to know, that the passion
-for wonder is a foible too _intimately_ connected with our nature to be
-thus easily driven out from it. And the history of mankind gives the
-strongest confirmation of this, in relating, as it does, notwithstanding
-the presumed effect of such discoveries, the very ready reception,
-which Miracles have ever met with. The truth is, the Inquirer might as
-well have set himself to prove _the vanity of the Popish pretension
-to miracles_, and then have inferred, from the frequent detection of
-impostures amongst them, that therefore the Papists cannot but have
-_a very low opinion of miracles_. This, I say, had been as logically
-inferred; and yet, I believe the first traveller from Rome, or next
-account he should look into of Italy, or Spain, would infallibly spoil
-the argument, and confute his conclusion. And, to do the author justice,
-he seems not unconscious of this, when, after all the learned pains he
-had taken to establish this point, he allows, _that though his argument
-had shewn, what little reason the heathens had to think, that miracles
-had ever been wrought amongst them at all, yet it does not of consequence
-follow, that they would certainly make use of the light, that was held
-out to them_; but observes, _that whether they did or not, their esteem
-of miracles will be but little increased; for if ever they were alarmed
-by an appearance, which they could not tell how to account for, or
-over-borne by the weight of such testimony, as they could not tell how to
-invalidate, the principle of magic was one general recourse_.
-
-2. His strong-hold, then, we see, at last, is Magic. We shall follow
-him therefore one step further, and try if we cannot dislodge him
-from it. The fact conceded to him is, _that the persuasion was pretty
-general in the heathen world, that by means of magic, that is, of certain
-superstitious rites, and sacrifices, and by certain words and invocations
-of dæmons, many things could be done exceeding the power of man; and that
-accordingly many seeming miracles, wrought amongst them, were imputed
-to this power of magic_. But then to infer from hence, as the Inquirer
-would have us, that therefore the heathens under the persuasion of these
-principles, must necessarily entertain a very low opinion of _all_
-miracles, is sure concluding too fast. For, though I could admit this
-to be a tolerable reason for the rejection of _some Pagan_ miracles,
-it does not, we see, at all affect the _Christian_; which _only_ are,
-or ought to be, the concern of his book. So that the argument, fairly
-stated, confutes itself. For it stands thus: The heathens conceived
-many miraculous appearances, produced for some _trifling_ or _noxious_
-purpose, to be in the power of certain persons, acting under the power of
-_bad dæmons_[86], and by the means of certain _magical, and superstitious
-rites_.—THEREFORE they of necessity entertained a low opinion of _all_
-miracles, though wrought by pawns, claiming their power and pretensions
-from _God_ himself, for purposes the most _momentous_ and _benevolent_,
-and without the interposition of _any_ sacrificial or superstitious
-rites[87]. But this is not all: We learn from the history of the
-propagation of Christianity, that in certain places (and who can doubt
-in all where the pretended powers of magic were opposed to the genuine
-workings of the Spirit of God?) such methods were used by Christ and his
-Apostles, as were sufficient to manifest the difference of their miracles
-from those of magicians, and to assert the divinity of their mission, in
-the very judgment of the magicians themselves[88]. And this, as it seems,
-always with such illustrious evidence, as to render it inexcusable in
-those, who had the opportunity of seeing and examining the difference, to
-remain unsatisfied of it. For I cannot but think it worthy the Inquirer’s
-regard, though no _novelty_, that the Heathen charge of _magic_, was
-but in other words the Jewish accusation of _Beelzebub_; either of them
-the genuine result of pure unallayed malice, and, concerning which, our
-Saviour’s determination is well known. And therefore when the learned
-writer contends, that the Heathens had a low opinion of miracles in
-general, on account of the supposed power and efficacy of charms, and
-magical incantations, he might with equal reason here have taken upon him
-to shew, that the Jews also had it low opinion of miracles in general on
-account of the supposed power of their diviners, and sorcerers, of which
-we likewise bear much amongst them, and from their ascribing, as we know
-they did, many miraculous effects and operations to them: an opinion,
-which, I presume, the learned writer will not find it to his purpose to
-maintain.
-
-3. As to the author’s argument from the _multiplication of the Heathen
-Gods_ (which is the only remaining part of his book I think myself
-concerned in[89]) if he means to conclude from it, that in consequence
-of the multitude of pretended miracles, flowing from such belief,
-miracles themselves must of necessity _lose their force, and sink in
-their esteem_[90], it is very frivolous, and admits an easy answer. For,
-besides its inherent weakness of bad logic, in concluding from a cause
-of possible efficiency to a _certain_ effect, it has the misfortune, in
-common with his other reasonings on this subject, to be confuted by plain
-matter of fact. And, for his satisfaction in this point, I refer him once
-more to the case of the Romanists; who, notwithstanding the multiplicity
-of their saints, all of them dealers in miracles, and swarming in such
-numbers as to equal, if not exceed, the rabble of Pagan divinities,
-do not yet appear to have contracted from thence and disrelish, or
-disesteem for miracles. The truth is, the whole additional evidence
-arising from the main of his book in confirmation of his pretended
-fact, _that the Heathens entertained a low opinion of miracles_, is so
-very inconsiderable, that, as we now see, it hardly amounts to a bare
-probability. For, after all, the reader will perhaps incline to think,
-contrary to what the learned writer directs him, that such prevalency
-of magic, and multiplicity of gods, is no bad proof of the esteem and
-credit, that miracles were in amongst them. At least, ’tis no unfair
-presumption, that a people could not be so averse to miracles, as the
-author pretends, nor generally be possessed by a thorough contempt of
-them, when, notwithstanding the frequent detection of _false_ miracles,
-and more than one degrading solution at hand for the _true_, they
-should yet be able to maintain their ground, and take such footing in
-the popular belief, as to be continually affording fresh occasion to
-imposture, and fresh encouragement to the dealers in this traffic to
-practise on the wonder and credulity of mankind.
-
-2. And whoever sets out with this surmise, (which is apparently not
-ill-founded) will find it greatly strengthened in observing, that of all
-the reproaches cast upon the Heathen world, and of all the prejudices
-objected to them by the first propagators of Christianity, this of the
-contempt of miracles was not so much as once mentioned, there not being
-the least hint, or remotest intimation in the sacred writings of their
-labouring under any peculiar prepossession of this kind. A circumstance
-perfectly unaccountable, if what the Inquirer contends for be true, since
-such prepossession could not but greatly obstruct the Apostolic labours,
-and make it necessary for them to bend their first care and application
-that way.
-
-3. And it raises the wonder still higher to observe, that whilst the
-Heathens escape uncensured in this respect, the Jews are severely rebuked
-for their incredulity and disregard miracles[91]; where too, by the very
-cast and turn of the reproof, the Heathens are to be understood as less
-chargeable on this head, than the Jews.
-
-4. But, what has still the worst aspect on the writer’s scheme, is, that
-whilst the Apostles are quite silent as to this charge upon the Gentile,
-nor appear once to rank it in the list of such impediments, as retarded
-the conversion of the Pagan world, they are at the same time very express
-in declaring to us, what the chief of those _impediments_ were. They
-in part have been already suggested[92], and were, if St. Paul may be
-credited, in reality, these: 1. _A conceit of superior wisdom_ amongst
-the men of letters and education[93]. And, 2. _The corruptions and gross
-idolatries_ of the people at _large_[94].
-
-5. But what! it will after all be asked, Is there then no truth in
-what the leaned writer has advanced concerning the Heathen contempt
-of miracles; and in particular, is his long detail of principles and
-circumstances, concurring, as it should seem, to produce such contempt,
-utterly without all force or meaning?
-
-This has no where been said; and the contrary is what I am now ready to
-affirm. For, to do the Inquirer justice, it was upon the basis of a good,
-old truth, that this wondrous novelty was erected. A fine writer[95]
-will tell us what it was. “We may observe,” (says he, in accounting for
-the silence of Pagan writers in respect of our Saviour’s history) “that
-the ordinary practice of MAGIC in those times, with the many pretended
-PRODIGIES, DIVINATIONS, APPARITIONS, and LOCAL MIRACLES amongst the
-Heathens, made them less attentive to such news from Judæa, till they had
-time to consider the NATURE, the OCCASION, and the END of our Saviour’s
-Miracles, and were awakened by many surprizing events to allow them
-any consideration at all.” We see here the ground-work of our author’s
-performance, and have determined to our hands with great accuracy, how
-far his general position is true, and to what extent the particular
-circumstances and situation of the Heathens would in _reality_ affect
-their opinion of miracles. Had the learned writer confined himself within
-these limits, he would, I conceive, have had reason and history on his
-side, and, whatever alarm he may be in _from the froward and contentious
-spirit of party in religion_, no _enemies_ to oppose him. But then this,
-it must be owned, had been saying nothing _new_: The world had lost the
-benefit of a discovery, and the author, what of all things he would most
-regret, the glory of INVENTION.
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- OPINION
-
- OF AN
-
- EMINENT LAWYER, &c.
-
- FIRST PRINTED IN 1751.
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- OPINION
-
- OF AN
-
- EMINENT LAWYER,
-
- CONCERNING
-
- THE RIGHT OF APPEAL
-
- FROM THE VICE-CHANCELLOR OF CAMBRIDGE,
- TO THE SENATE;
-
- Supported by a short historical Account of
- the JURISDICTION of the UNIVERSITY.
-
- In Answer to a late Pamphlet, intitled,
-
- “_An Inquiry into the Right of Appeal from
- the Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor of the
- University of Cambridge_,” &c.
-
- _Is ne erret, moneo, et desinat lacessere._
- _Habeo alia multa, nunc quæ condonabitur;_
- _Quæ proferentur post, si perget lædere._
-
- BY A FELLOW OF A COLLEGE.
-
-
-
-
-THE OPINION OF AN EMINENT LAWYER[96], &c.
-
-
-The dispute _concerning Appeals_, which at present engages the attention
-of the University of _Cambridge_, is apparently of such importance to the
-peace and welfare of that great body; that it could not but be expected
-from any one, who proposed to deliver his thoughts upon it to the world,
-that he should at least have taken care to inform himself perfectly of
-the merits of the question, before he presumed, in so public a manner, to
-concern himself in it.
-
-It must, therefore, surprize the reader of a late _Inquiry into the Right
-of Appeal, &c._ to find, that the writer of it, whoever he be (for as
-he chuses to conceal name, I shall not take the liberty to conjecture of
-it) should adventure to treat a matter of this consequence, without any
-distinct knowledge of the state of the case itself, or indeed without
-appearing to possess one single qualification, which is required to do
-justice to it. For the question, discussed, is of such a nature, that it
-cannot be determined, nor indeed tolerably treated by any one, who hath
-not a pretty exact knowledge of the _History_, _Customs_, and _Statutes_,
-of the University; and who is not, besides, at least competently skilled
-in the _Civil and Ecclesiastical Laws_. And yet this writer, as though
-nothing else was required of him, besides a confident face, and willing
-mind, boldly undertakes to decide upon it, under a perfect incapacity in
-all these respects. Instead of an accurate acquaintance with the Practice
-and Usages of the University, it appears he had no further knowledge
-of them, than what a few hasty and ill-considered extracts from the
-Register had supplied him with. So far is he from being conversant in the
-Statutes of the University, that he blunders in every attempt to explain
-the very easiest of them. And, as to his _Law_, he has only skimmed the
-surface of it for a few frothy terms, without giving the least proof of
-his being possessed, in any degree, of the sense and substance of it.
-This utter inability to discuss a point, he had voluntarily undertaken,
-must be thought the more extraordinary in a person, who, throughout the
-whole, assumes an air of authority; and though he professes modestly in
-his title page to _enquire_, yet, in effect, _prescribes and dictates_
-from one end of his _pamphlet_ to the other. The tone of this disputer,
-whatever becomes of his reasoning, is all along decisive; and he _does
-and must insist_, as if he thought his very word of force enough to bear
-down all the reason and argument, that could be opposed to him.
-
-Indeed the superior airs he gives himself, on all occasions, are not
-without their use. For persons unacquainted, as the generality of his
-readers must needs be, with the question itself, are readily enough
-inclined to believe, that a person so _assured_, cannot be so entirely
-_ignorant_ of the merits of it, as in fact he is. And they who know
-better, cannot but apprehend somewhat from the assumed authority of a
-writer, who talks so big; however his total insufficiency might, in other
-respects, provoke their contempt. For my own part, I could not help
-considering him as a person of eminent dignity in the University; whose
-rank in it might give him a right to dictate to the school-boys of the
-place; for so he gives us to understand, he conceives of _the Members
-of the University Senate_[97]. In pursuing my conjectures further about
-him, I was sometimes inclined to think, from the very reverend regard he
-every where professeth for the Heads of colleges, that he must, himself,
-be one of that illustrious body and was led to excuse the superiority
-of his manner from reflecting, that a habit of governing absolutely in
-his own college (for so he thinks Heads of colleges have a right to
-govern[98]) had insensibly inspired that despotic style and language,
-which were so disgustful, and had looked so ungracefully, in any other.
-But then, again, my profound respect and esteem of that venerable order,
-and my actual knowledge of the great talents, with which these reverend
-personages so worthily preside in their high places, would not suffer me
-to imagine, that any of their number could be _so_ unqualified to treat
-a matter of a merely academical nature, as this writer had shewn himself
-to be; and especially, as it immediately concerned their own authority,
-which they so assiduously study, and so perfectly understand. On the
-whole, I was forced to dismiss this conjecture, as having no reasonable
-foundation to rest upon, and, in perfect civility and good manners
-towards a set of men, for whom I have so sincere an honour, could only
-conclude him, at last, to be some weak and shallow pedant; unknown and
-uncountenanced by _them_; whose vanity had done him an ill turn; and
-thrust him unadvisedly on a weighty office, which he had no warrant, as
-he had no abilities, to discharge.
-
-Under this opinion, both of the writer and his performance, which, as
-the reader sees, I took not up upon slight grounds, it was not likely I
-should ever think of giving myself the least trouble about either; much
-less that I should believe it worth the while to undertake in form, the
-examination of a foolish pamphlet, which indeed, I had hardly patience
-enough to peruse. The truth is, it had lain for ever unnoticed by me
-among the rubbish, which of late hath so oppressed the publick, on the
-subject of our academical disputes; or, at least, had been left for
-some future ACADEMIC to discourse of, at his leisure; had it not been
-for the _Opinions_ of two truly learned and respectable Lawyers; which
-the _Inquirer_ had thought fit to intersperse, as a little needful
-seasoning, in his insipid performance; and which, indeed, give it all the
-real weight and authority, it can possibly carry with it to men of sense.
-
-The _Inquirer_, as supposing these gentlemen to afford some countenance
-to the good cause, he is maintaining, thinks fit, on the mention of
-their names, to drop his crest a little; and, in a lower tone of voice
-than usual, affects to treat them even with some appearance of respect.
-Yet this he does in so aukward a manner, as shews it was not usual or
-familiar to him, to descend to such submissions; for, as the height of
-that civility, which he was willing to express towards them, he chuses
-to distinguish them only by the title of the _Gentlemen of the_ LONG
-ROBE. What impression the idea of a sweeping train may possibly make on
-the phantasy of this writer, I know not; but I, who am more concerned
-about the _heads_ than the _tails_ of these learned gentlemen, should
-have thought it an apter compliment to have turned our attention the
-other way. Unless, perhaps, he was secretly conscious, that by a little
-unfair dealing in the proposal of the _Queries_, in relation to which
-their opinions were asked, their Answers themselves did no real honour
-to the more essential part of a great lawyer, and so far willing to pin
-the credit of them intirely on their _gowns_. In plain truth this was
-the very case, as will appear from the _Queries_ themselves, and the
-_Answers_; together with a few observations, which I shall beg leave to
-subjoin to them.
-
-“After stating the _42d_ and _48th_ of Queen _Elizabeth’s_ Statues, some
-circumstances of Mr. _A—’s_ behaviour, and that an appeal of the same
-nature with his was not quite unprecedented, the two following Queries
-were put, [_Inq. p. 28._]
-
- “Qu. I. Whether, in this case, the Vice-Chancellor and his
- assessors have not acted solely under the _42d_ Statute; _de
- Cancellarii Officio_; and whether any appeal can lie against
- the suspension of _A._ by virtue of that Statute? or whether
- this case must be deemed one of the _causæ forenses_, and
- of consequence subject to an appeal by virtue of the _48th_
- Statute, _de Causis Forensibus_?
-
- “Qu. II. Whether, if in the case above stated, the said _A—_
- hath a right to appeal from his suspension; the same right
- of appeal will not follow to every delinquent scholar, who
- shall be punished a trifling mulct or piece of exercise by the
- Vice-Chancellor?”
-
-_After stating_, says he, _the 42d_ and _48th Statutes_, &c. Whence it
-appears, that no other evidence was laid before the Lawyers, with regard
-to the right of appeals, than certain extracts from Q. _Elizabeth’s_
-Statutes: Which was not the most certain method of obtaining an accurate
-decision. For, though the Queen’s Statutes alone, as we apprehend, afford
-_sufficient_ evidence of our right, yet they are by no means, as will
-presently be seen, the _whole_ evidence.
-
-But, waving this consideration, let us come directly to the _Queries_
-themselves. The _first_ is a master-piece in its kind, and may be of use
-to instruct future querists, how to propose their doubts in the most
-convenient manner.
-
-For instead of asking the Lawyers, whether the powers, given in the _42d_
-Statute, are subject to appeal, the question is put to them, whether in
-suspending Mr. _A—_ they had acted under that Statute? Again; instead
-of inquiring whether the _jurisdiction_ given in the _two Statutes_ be
-the same or different, the Query is (on supposition of a difference) to
-which class of tryals Mr. _A—’s_ case belonged? In short, the Lawyers
-were made to believe, that this was the main point in dispute, whether
-the case before them was of a _criminal_ or (as the _Inquirer_ expresses
-it) of a _forensic_ nature.
-
-It would have been hard indeed if a design so well laid, and so artfully
-conducted, had failed of success. Accordingly, we find both the Lawyers
-expressly declaring, that the case in question belonged to the 42d
-_Statute_, and from thence seeming to infer, that an appeal is not to be
-allowed.
-
-Answers to the Queries.
-
- “To Q. I. I am of opinion, the Vice-chancellor’s authority in
- the case above stated is well founded by the 42d Statute, _de
- Cancellarii Officio_, and that the Vice-chancellor and his
- assessors acted under that Statute; and that this case does not
- fall under the 48th Statute. And I am of opinion that an appeal
- does not lie in the present case.
-
- “To Q. II. This in effect is answered by what I have said upon
- the first Question. And if an appeal might be allowed in the
- present case, it would be of most fatal consequence to all
- discipline in the University; since it would take away all
- distinction between the two Statutes; and every scholar, who
- should fall under any censure or punishment inflicted by the
- Vice-chancellor, might have his appeal; and the 42d Statute
- would be entirely of no effect.
-
- “_Dec. the 12th, 1750. W. N—._”
-
- “To Q. I. Upon consideration of the two Statutes above recited,
- it seems to me that the first was calculated to give a
- jurisdiction and power to the Chancellor, or, in his absence,
- to the Vice-chancellor, to interpose in criminal matters, _i.
- e._ in matters relating to discipline: the latter gives a
- jurisdiction or cognizance in civil matters, _i. e._ matters of
- controversy concerning civil rights: and therefore the first
- gives power, _contumaces, &c. suspensione graduum, carcere, aut
- alio leviori supplicio judicio suo castigare_: by the latter,
- power is given to determine _causas et lites_, _viz._ _causas
- forenses_, for that is the title of the Statute. As to the
- first, I think that the jurisdiction is final in the first
- instance: for his power is _judicio suo castigare_; and it must
- necessarily be so, for immediate imprisonment seems to be one
- of the punishments which he may inflict against which there
- can be no appeal, for it may be executed before there can be
- any appeal. As to the other, _viz._ the civil jurisdiction,
- there the statute requires speedy determinations; but gives an
- appeal from his sentences in _foro_, and prescribes the manner
- of appealing. Upon these principles, I think that no appeal can
- lie, the suspension of _A—_ being grounded, I think, on the
- Statute _de Cancellarii Officio_; and that this is not _causa
- forensis_ within the latter Statute.
-
- “To Q. II. If all offences against the Statutes are punishable
- by this Statute, the punishments for the _minora_, as well as
- the _majora delicta_, would be appealable; which I think would
- be absurd.
-
- _Linc. Inn, Dec. the 13th, 1750. R. W—._”
-
-It is seen that both these opinions rest on one common foundation, _viz._
-that the 42d _Statute_ gives authority in none but _criminal_, the 48th
-in none but _civil_ causes. Now if this support shall appear to be
-wholly imaginary, all that is built upon it must fall to the ground. Let
-us proceed then to examine the Statutes themselves; or rather simply
-to represent what is contained in them. We shall have no occasion for
-nice distinctions, or remote inferences; the plain literal sense of
-the passages to be cited will overthrow at once the principle we are
-opposing; will afford such an evidence as cannot be resisted, until a
-method of interpreting shall be found out, wholly independent on the
-received rules of Criticism and Grammar.
-
-The 42d Statute is entitled _De Cancellarii Officio_, and contains
-an enumeration of the various powers conferred on him by the
-University. It gives him a right _to hear and decide controversies_;
-_to call congregations_; _to give and refuse degrees_; _to punish the
-transgressors of the Statutes_; _to see that the University officers do
-their duty_; _to inflict censures on some particular sorts of offenders
-therein named, in some cases with, in others without, the consent of
-the Heads_; _to give or refuse leave to Members of the Senate to go out
-of a Congregation before it is ended, and to impose a mulct on those
-who depart without leave_; _to require the presence of regents and
-non-regents at Congregations and_ Conciones ad clerum, _and to punish
-the absent_; and, lastly, _to make new Statutes, with the consent of the
-University_.
-
-Now I think I may safely refer it to any reader, whether the single
-design of this Statute was to convey authority in _criminal causes_? or,
-whether it be not manifestly an enumeration of the various branches of
-the Chancellor’s power, intended to give, at once, a general view of the
-whole?
-
-If any one shall think that the administration of _civil_ justice is not
-here included, I must desire him to read again the very _first_ clause.
-_Cancellarius potestatem habebit ad_ OMNES—_controversias—tum audiendas
-tum dirimendas_. Nothing sure but the most outrageous zeal for a
-desperate cause can make any one affirm that the word _controversias_ is
-necessarily confined to the _trials of offenders_. But, if not, then the
-Statute gives jurisdiction of both sorts, in civil as well as criminal
-causes.
-
-With as little foundation has it been asserted that the jurisdiction
-given in the 48th Statute relates only to _civil causes_. The single
-ground of this assertion is the title of the Statute, _viz. De Causis
-Forensibus_. It happens that a certain set of men, by endeavouring for a
-long time to deceive others, have in the end deceived themselves. For I
-would, in charity, suppose them to be sincere, when they translate _causæ
-forenses_, _causes between party and party_. It is true, no such use of
-the words can be found in ancient authors, or, in what might have been
-more convincing to them, modern Dictionaries. But what then? Admitting
-that a school-boy would have construed these words _trials in court_,
-or _public trials_, yet this sure cannot be alledged as a precedent to
-grave and wise men: much less can it be expected they should reverence
-quotations drawn from heathen writers, who had no idea at all of the ways
-of supporting discipline in an University.
-
-But if the _title_ of the 48th _Statute_ will not confine the
-jurisdiction it gives, what shall we say to the Statute itself? It
-begins with these plain words, never afterwards restrained or limited,
-OMNES _causæ et lites, quæ ad Universitatis notionem pertinent, tam
-Procancellarii quam Commissarii judicio subjiciantur_. If this clause
-be not general, I should be glad to know whether a general clause be
-possible? whether any words can be invented of sufficient extent to
-include trials of every sort? But it is not indeed to be thought strange
-that the same profound critics, who would confine _omnes controversiæ_
-to _criminal_ causes, should confine _omnes causæ et lites_ to _civil_
-causes only.
-
-After all, I have a good mind to give up this point, for the sake only
-of trying the experiment, what advantage can be made of it: Let it,
-then, be supposed that the jurisdiction given in the 48th _Statute_, and
-the appeals allowed in it, belong only to _civil_ causes; and let it
-be further supposed that the 42d Statute relates merely to _criminal_
-causes. What will follow? That the Queen’s _Statutes_ allow no appeals,
-for _that the omission in this Statute amounts to a prohibition_? Nothing
-can be wider from the truth than this conclusion. For, 1st, the powers
-given to the Chancellor may not be exercised in an arbitrary manner, but
-in strict conformity to the customs and privileges of the University:
-If this restriction were not always to be understood, the Chancellor
-might confer _degrees_ by his _sole_ power; for no mention is made in
-the Statute of the consent of the University. The powers, then, here
-given to the Chancellor are to be _limited_ by the known rights of the
-_Senate_; and among these rights no possible reason can be given why that
-of _appeals_ should not be included: a right (as will presently appear)
-of very great antiquity, perhaps not less ancient than the University
-itself. 2dly. The very same clause which impowers the Chancellor to
-judge _omnes controversias Scholasticorum_, that is (as we are now to
-render the words) _all offences committed by Scholars_, requires him to
-judge _secundum jus civile et eorum privilegia et consuetudines_; and
-consequently to judge not finally, but under an obligation of having his
-sentence _re-examined_ on an appeal made to the University.
-
-There is another argument in Mr. _W—’s_ opinion, which seems indeed at
-first sight, to be more specious. He observes that the Chancellor is
-to punish _contumacy_ and some other _offences judicio suo_, and seems
-to think these words might be intended to prevent _appeals_. But the
-learned person must excuse my differing from him also upon this head. The
-Queen’s Statute _De Off. Cancell._ is copied, with some alterations, from
-a Statute upon the same subject in the _first_ collection, she gave the
-University; as that was _verbatim_ from one of King _Edward’s_. In this
-Statute the Chancellor was empowered to punish _judicio suo et assensu
-majoris partis præfectorum collegiorum_; that is, he was appointed
-_judge_, they _assessors_. But the latter Statute of Queen _Elizabeth
-distinguished_ these punishments into two sorts, regard being had to the
-importance of the punishments themselves, and to the rank and condition
-of the offender. In causes of less moment, and towards offenders of
-inferior rank, the Chancellor was to proceed _judicio suo_; in others,
-_non sine consensu præfectorum collegiorum_. These _two_ clauses being
-so manifestly _opposed_, we cannot surely mistake, if we interpret the
-former _by his sole judgment_, or _by his single authority_; and suppose
-that nothing further was intended than to enable him to pass sentence,
-_without_[99] the concurrence of the Heads; a circumstance which will
-never shew that his decision ought to be _final_.
-
-There is one point more in which I cannot help dissenting from the
-gentleman last named. He seems to think there can be no appeal from
-a sentence of imprisonment; because such sentence is to be executed
-_immediately_. But I need not observe to so good a judge, that an appeal
-_apud acta_ may suspend this execution; and he has not favoured us with
-his reasons why this manner of appealing may not be allowed (as it always
-has been allowed) in the University.
-
-As to the _second Query_, it is a doubt altogether superfluous; and
-seems to have been proposed for no other reason than to obtain opinions
-concerning the _expediency_ of appeals; which is not surely a point of
-_law_. The learned gentleman, who has declared his sentiments on the
-question, must therefore pardon us if we do not receive them with the
-same deference, as if the subject had fallen within the proper limits of
-his profession.
-
-But I think it unnecessary to dwell any longer on these _Queries_, or
-the _Answers_ to them; since it is clear that the learned persons were
-abused by a partial and unfair representation of the case; of which had
-they been fully informed, as they should have been, by laying before
-them a just view of the question in debate, and by furnishing them with
-the proper materials for decide upon it; there is no reason to doubt
-that persons, so eminently qualified to judge of all disputes of this
-nature, would have given much more satisfactory opinions about it, and
-such as the University might safely admit, as decisive in the present
-case. And I think myself authorized to say this the more confidently, as
-it luckily happens that the _proper_ Queries concerning this very point
-were, some years ago, put more honestly by a very excellent person, at
-that time Vice-chancellor of the University; and therefore answered very
-_differently_ by the greatest Lawyer[100] of this or any age; from whose
-decision though there lies an appeal, yet his sentence never _was_, as
-indeed no good man had ever cause to wish it _should_ be, reversed.
-
-These Queries, together with the Answer of this great person to them,
-I purpose laying before the Reader, as a full and perfect confutation
-of all that has been yet advanced against the _right of appeal to the
-University_; and carrying with it more authority than any thing which
-the most knowing academical advocate could possibly say for it. But, that
-the reader may come the better prepared to judge of the merits of his
-determination, and as some further support to it, for the satisfaction of
-such as are unacquainted with the state of the case itself, I have judged
-it not improper, in the first place, to draw together _a brief historical
-account of the jurisdiction of the University_; collected from authentic
-monuments, which are well known to such as are versed in academical
-matters; and which, if there shall be occasion, will be produced at large
-in a more proper place.
-
-The University of _Cambridge_ was possessed of a jurisdiction over its
-own members, as _clerici_, many years before _any_ was granted to it by
-charter from the Crown. This jurisdiction, being ecclesiastical, seems to
-have been originally derived from the Bishop of the diocese. The causes
-cognisable by the University were chiefly causes of correction; the rule
-of proceeding in the Court was the ecclesiastical law, and Statutes
-of their own making, consonant to that law. The censures inflicted
-upon offenders were either ecclesiastical, _viz._ _excommunication_,
-_suspension_, &c.[101] or such as were appointed by the Statues for
-particular crimes; and the names of _places_, _offices_, _pleaders_, the
-same as are used in Ecclesiastical Courts to this day.
-
-This jurisdiction was not usually exercised by the University in its
-_collective_ capacity. But a particular officer was empowered to exercise
-it, under the name of _Chancellor_; who as _official_[102], acted by
-an authority derived to him from the University, was accountable to
-them for the use of it, and liable to have his acts annulled at their
-discretion; every person who thought himself aggrieved by the Chancellor
-being at liberty to apply to the Body for redress.
-
-When an _Appeal_ was brought before the University, they usually
-authorized Delegates to hear and judge it, as was agreeable to the
-practice in other Ecclesiastical Courts.
-
-The jurisdiction here described was not originally independent; for no
-academical decision appears to have been _final_. An Appeal always lay
-from the judgement of the University by their Delegates to the Bishop of
-the diocese, till the University was exempted from his authority, and
-their jurisdiction made _final_ by Royal Charters, confirmed by Act of
-Parliament.
-
-In the reign of _Henry_ III. attempts were made to carry Appeals
-_directly_ from the Chancellor to the Bishop, and so to pass over the
-Appeal to the University, which ought to have been an intermediate step.
-But _Hugh de Balsam_, Bishop of _Ely_ (the founder of _Peter-House_), by
-a rescript, dated Dec. 1264, entirely frustrated all such attempts.
-
-Hitherto, the Appeals to the University had been from _causes of
-correction and censure_. The University was not as yet possessed of
-jurisdiction in civil causes. Scholars were first allowed to implead
-the burgesses and other laics of the town of _Cambridge_, in all kinds
-of personal actions, before the Chancellor of the University, _anno_
-33 _Ed._ I. From that time, the University began to acquire a civil
-jurisdiction, which, by degrees, was inlarged and established by grants
-from the Crown in succeeding reigns. And now, in consequence of this
-jurisdictions, Appeals were extended from criminal to civil causes.
-Accordingly, in a rescript of _Simon de Montacute_, Bishop of _Ely_,
-which bears date _16 cal. April, anno 1341_, there is express mention of
-Appeals to the University in causes of _both_ kinds. For the design of
-this _rescript_ is to commission the University to determine _finally_ in
-all _civil_ causes, without a further Appeal to his Court; and to prevent
-frivolous and vexatious Appeals from the University to him in _criminal_
-causes, by laying the Appellant under the obligation of an oath.
-
-This addition of _civil_ power did by no means abrogate or lessen the
-_spiritual_. We find, in the reign of _Hen._ VI. that all sorts of
-ecclesiastical authority were adjudged to belong to the University,
-by the Prior of _Barnwell_, the Pope’s delegate; and it was then made
-appear, that all these branches of power had both been claimed and
-exercised time out of mind. It is certain, the _probate of wills_ hath
-at all times belonged, and still belongs, to the University. The power
-of _excommunication_ was exercised as late as the reign of _Hen._ VIII.
-and the power of _absolution_ is exercised at this day. This ceremony is
-constantly performed on the concluding day of each term. And here, to
-observe it by the way, gentle Reader, a goodly and reverend spectacle it
-is, to behold the spiritual Head of our University spreading his paternal
-hands, like another Pope, over his erring and misguided flock, who, in
-all humility, receive his ghostly absolution on their knees.
-
-It is true, the new objects of litigation, introduced by the royal
-charters, occasioned an alteration in the _Law_ of the University. For
-the ecclesiastical laws did not suffice for the decision of controversies
-about civil rights, particularly contracts between scholars and townsmen,
-and breaches of the peace. From the time, therefore, that these new
-causes came before the Chancellor, to the reign of _Edward_ VI. his Court
-was directed, as our Spiritual Courts are now, by a mixed kind of law,
-made up of canon and civil law[103]. Yet this must not be understood
-without restriction. For the University, like other corporations, had all
-along a power of making _local Statutes_; and not unfrequently particular
-_usages_ acquired the force of Statutes, from long continuance.
-
-But whatever changes were made, either by express Statute, or in
-consequence of a more extended jurisdiction, the practice of appealing
-from the Chancellor to the University still continued; only, as was
-observed, with this difference, that it now was allowed in civil, as
-before it had been in criminal causes.
-
-The right of appeal which then subsisted received a fresh confirmation
-from the Statutes made by the University itself. In these Statutes the
-right is not only referred to and presupposed, but directions are given
-in regard to the manner of exercising it[104]; which directions, till
-cancelled by succeeding Statutes, established the right as effectually
-as if it had been originally introduced by Statute. The times when many
-of these Statutes were made cannot be fixed; but it is certain they were
-collected and transcribed into the Proctors’ books between the year 1490
-and 1500.
-
-In the reign of _Edward_ VI. a body of new Statutes was given in a
-Visitation under an ecclesiastical commission; which enjoined, among
-other things, that the jurisdiction of the University should be directed
-by the _Civil Law_; that is, as every one understands, a mixture of the
-Civil and Canon Law; or what _Oughten_ calls _Jus Ecclesiastico-Civile_;
-the same which prevails in all Ecclesiastical Courts to this day. And,
-in the first year of Queen _Elizabeth_, Statutes were again given to the
-University in a Visitation under a like commission; which were almost
-an exact transcript of those before given in the reign of _Edward_ VI.
-The right of appealing from the Chancellor to the University received no
-alteration from these Statutes. For there is no change in either of them
-by which such Appeals are forbidden or even restrained. Accordingly, the
-practice appears to have continued to the time when Queen _Elizabeth_
-gave her _second_ body of Statutes (under the broad seal indeed, but not
-by Visitors under ecclesiastical commission), which was in the year 1570.
-What alterations have been made by these, or by the practice of later
-times, remains to be considered.
-
-It is plain from several passages in Queen _Elizabeth’s_ new Statutes,
-that many of the ancient Statutes and customs of the University were
-designed to be continued; and in Stat. 50 we have a direction given, by
-which we may understand what Statutes and customs were to be preserved,
-and what not. Those only she declares to be taken away, _quæ Scripturis
-Sacris, institutis nostris, istis Statutis adversari videbuntur_; of
-which number the practice of appealing from the Chancellor to the
-University was not one.
-
-There is, besides, the less reason to imagine this practice was
-abolished, because, in Stat. 42, the Queen requires all causes to
-be heared and determined _secundum jus civile_; and in her Charter
-to the University, confirmed by act of Parliament, _secundum leges
-et consuetudines suas, ante tunc usitatas_, which, as appears, were
-agreeable to the _Civil Law_. This _law_ allows Appeals in cases of
-correction and censure; and therefore it is _certain_ that Appeals were
-allowed by Queen _Elizabeth_.
-
-Indeed, nothing but a clear and express prohibition could make us
-imagine, that the right of appealing, a right of particular importance,
-was designed to be either wholly abolished, or restrained only to civil
-causes. And such prohibition, had it been the Queen’s intention to
-forbid Appeals in any case, might the rather have been expected, as, in
-the 48th Stat. where several directions are given concerning Appeals,
-_one_ ancient usage of the University[105] in relation to them is
-expressly forbidden: _nec secunda provocatio omnino admittatur_. Yet
-she gives not the least hint of restraining Appeals to any particular
-sorts of causes; which surely were an unaccountable omission in this
-place, had she actually intended to lay them under any such restriction.
-And, indeed, it is evident from a _MS._ of unquestioned authority, that
-neither the Body of the University, nor the Heads themselves (some of
-them supposed to have been concerned in compiling the Statutes), had
-the least imagination of such restraint. What I mean is, a _MS._ in _C.
-C. C. Library_, containing _some Complaints of several of the Body of
-the University, in the year 1572, against Queen_ Elizabeth’s _second
-edition of Statutes, and the Answers of the Heads, &c._ One of their
-complaints is _the frustrating_ Appellations, by transferring the power
-of nominating Delegates from the _Proctors_, in whose hands it was before
-lodged, to the _Caput_; and by encreasing _the forfeit of Appeals_, from
-a very inconsiderable sum to 20_s._ with an addition of 2_s._ to be paid
-to the Proctor; an expence which, as was then urged by the Body, would
-prevent _poor scholars injured from the benefit of appealing, having not
-so much money_. What, now, is the answer of the Heads to this complaint?
-Why, that, _for the stay of the quietness of the University_, it was
-necessary to lay Appeals under these restrictions. Not a syllable is said
-against the right of appeal itself in any case; though the complainants
-had expressly set forth the importance of having Appeals unincumbered
-by these limitations, for the _redress of wrongs_ in _general_. Nay,
-the wrongs they apprehended are even specified; such as punishments _of
-a regent in the regent-house, for modestly asking a question; or of a
-disputer, for modestly disputing_; which, if we are to call them _causes_
-at all, are surely _causes of correction_.
-
-Nay, so far are these Statutes from _prohibiting_ Appeals, that they have
-actually given the strongest sanction to this practice, by admitting the
-right in very general terms, and prescribing rules for the exercise of
-it. _Stat._ 48.
-
-The subsequent practice till of late years cannot now be known, either
-from the neglect or corruption of the University _Registers_, who have
-not taken care to record the proceedings before Courts of Delegates.
-Only a few loose papers have been accidentally preserved, from which it
-appears that Appeals were allowed in _civil_ causes, and there is no
-reason to imagine they were discontinued in causes of _correction_,
-as no distinction was made by the Statutes on trials between civil and
-criminal causes.
-
-But if it were true in fact, that no Appeals had been heared between
-1570 and 1725, in causes of correction and censure, yet this would not
-affect the right, any more than the want of Appeals from a censure of a
-_peculiar_ sort would render that single kind of censure unappealable.
-For, a right extending to various particulars will not surely be lessened
-from want of opportunity or inclination to exercise it in _every one_ of
-them. And such disuse would be the less strange in the instance before
-us, because the discipline of the University hath been chiefly supported
-by censures inflicted in particular Colleges. Little of this business is
-left to the Vice-chancellor; and they who know the University, and wish
-well to it, will not, perhaps, desire to see more of it in his hands.
-
-If the supposed disuse of Appeals in criminal causes shall yet be thought
-to have abolished the _right_, the opinion now to be produced will at
-once remove such suspicion; even though it should not be insisted, as it
-may, that this pretended prescription itself is already destroyed, by
-_three_ instances of Appeals in _causes of correction_, the first of them
-in the year 1725.
-
-But, before I proceed any further, I would beg leave to make one
-_general_ observation on what hath been now advanced. It is this: A great
-Civilian had expressly affirmed, “_that Appeals are always admitted in
-those Courts where the civil and ecclesiastical Laws are in force, where
-penance, suspension, deprivation, or any censure is inflicted as the
-punishment of a fault_[106].”
-
-To all which the writer of _the Inquiry_ gives his entire assent: _The
-observation_, says he, _is undoubtedly just_. Now the capable and
-impartial reader is left to judge, whether it be not most evident, from
-the _facts_ here offered to his consideration, that the jurisdiction of
-the University is, in the properest sense of the word, _Ecclesiastical_;
-and further, whether the _Civil_ and _Ecclesiastical Laws_ be not _of
-force_ in the University Court. The dispute then is brought to a short
-issue. _Appeals are_, by the full consent Of the Inquirer himself, _to be
-admitted_.
-
-I come now to the OPINION itself; of which I will only say, further,
-that it was not given by the great person hastily or negligently, but
-with all the care and deliberation which so important a matter deserved:
-as is clear, not only from his diligence in calling for and inspecting
-the _Commissary’s Patent_, which, he clearly saw, was of moment to
-the determination, but from the time he took to consider it. For the
-_Queries_ appear to have been put some time before _Christmas_; and this
-Opinion bears date the 18th of _March_ following.
-
- _Qu._ I. “Whether Appeals to Delegates by the Statute _de
- causis forensibus_ are restrained to _civil causes_, in which
- two parties are litigant?”
-
- _Ans._ The Statute _de causis forensibus_ is penned in such
- general terms, that I think the Appeal to Delegates thereby
- allowed cannot be restrained to civil causes only, wherein two
- parties are litigant, but doth extend to causes of correction
- and censure; the rather because the Appeal from the Commissary
- to the Vice-chancellor is given in the same clause, and in
- the same manner, with the Appeal from the Vice-chancellor to
- Delegates; and the words of the Commissary’s Patent extend
- as well to causes of correction and censure as to civil
- causes. Now there can be no doubt but that an Appeal lies
- from the Commissary to the Vice-chancellor in all cases.
- The entry in Mr. _Tabor’s_ Register imports that, even in
- causes of correction, an Appeal lies from the sentence of the
- Vice-chancellor, when he doth not act jointly with the major
- part of the Heads of houses.
-
- _Qu._ II. “Whether by the Statute _de Cancellarii officio_,
- which binds the Vice-chancellor to proceed _secundum jus
- civile_, an Appeal to Delegates can now lie in a criminal cause
- against a prescription of 200 years to the contrary, excepting
- only the case of _Campbell_, _anno_ 1725?”
-
- _Answ._ There can be no prescription in this case, because the
- question depends on Statutes, given within such a space of
- time, as the Law calls, _time of memory_.
-
- _Qu._ III. “In case the Delegates should receive an Appeal,
- from the Vice-chancellor’s court in a cause of this kind,
- and cite the Vice-chancellor to appear before them, what the
- Vice-chancellor should do? Whether appear before them, and
- appeal from the sentence of the Delegates to his Majesty in
- council; or not appear, but apply immediately to his Majesty
- by petition; praying a prohibition, to stop the proceedings of
- the Delegates?”
-
- _Answ._ Supposing that there is a right of appealing to
- Delegates, from the sentence of the Vice-chancellor, in a cause
- of correction or censure, no authority can be interposed to
- stay the Delegates from proceeding. But if the Delegates should
- not have a jurisdiction, his Majesty in council cannot grant
- a prohibition to them: and if upon an incident of this kind,
- the Vice-chancellor should think fit to bring the point to a
- judicial determination; the only proper method, is by applying
- to some of the courts at _Westminster_, for a prohibition to
- the Delegates proceeding.
-
- _18 March 1730._
-
-The reader sees, by this determination, that the question turns entirely
-upon this point; whether, supposing there had been no Appeals in cases of
-discipline from the year 1570 to 1725, as is asserted, but without proof,
-the intermission of the exercise of this right for so long a space, could
-amount to a legal abolition of it. To which the great Lawyer, whose
-Opinion has been recited, replies expressly, NO. If any should then
-ask, what evidence there is of such a _right_ subsisting at that time?
-Besides the Statutes themselves, insisted on in the Opinion, I can now
-refer him to the brief hints which compose the preceding account of the
-jurisdiction of the University; and which the reader may be assured, are
-advanced on the best grounds. Much more might, indeed, have been said;
-for what I have thought fit to deliver at present on the subject, is but
-a small part of that evidence, which can and will be produced, if it be
-found expedient to do it. In the mean while, I may well excuse myself
-from this trouble. For to talk further on these matters to a person,
-who appears so wholly ignorant of the History of the University, as the
-_Inquirer_, were a vain waste of time; and to take the pains of confuting
-particular objections, founded on that ignorance, a still vainer. Only
-I will condescend to put him in mind of one essential defect in his
-argument which runs through his whole pamphlet. It is, that he all along
-goes on the supposition, that the _express_ authority of Statute, is
-required to make good the claim to Appeals. And he therefore very idly
-lays out his whole strength, in attempting to prove, that no such express
-authority is to be found, either in the _old_ or _new_ Statutes. I own,
-I could not but smile, at first, to observe the Inquirer addressing
-himself, with so much importance, to this task. But, when afterwards I
-came to consider, the labour and difficulty, with which he was forced to
-make his way, for this wise purpose, through the _discouraging_ δυσνόητα
-(for so I presently saw, he found them to be) of the _old Statutes_, I
-could not, upon second thoughts, but pity his unnecessary sufferings
-about them; and was even tempted in my own mind, to blame the waggery
-of _the Fellow of a College_, whose request had drawn him into all this
-trouble, and who, to divert himself with him, had plainly put him on
-so wrong a scent. The truth is, I could not think this usage fair in
-his _good friend, to request him to draw out his sentiments, on such a
-point_; especially, as he tells us, his time was _so precious_, and that
-he had so little of it to spare, amidst _the variety of his necessary
-avocations_[107]. It had, surely, been more kind to inform him at
-once, as I shall have the goodness to do, that no body, who understood
-the matter in debate, ever pretended to found the right of Appeal on
-_express_ Statute; it being well known, that the _right_ stands entirely
-on the nature of our _jurisdiction_; in consequence of which, there has
-been a continued immemorial practice of appealing in the University;
-supposed indeed, and admitted in both the _old_ and _new_ Statutes, and
-authorized by the prescription of various rules, for the exercise of it;
-but neither expressly commanded, nor prohibited in either.
-
-And now, having done this act of charity towards the _Inquirer_, which
-may prevent his future pains, in puzzling and perplexing himself with the
-study of the old Statutes; I shall have reason to expect, in return, his
-good leave to expostulate with him pretty freely on the use, he proceeds
-to make of this unhappy blunder. For, plumed with the vain conceit of
-the University’s resting their claim on the sole express authority of
-Statute, he goes on, to insult so considerable a body of men, in the
-most opprobrious manner; as guilty of the most absurd and irreverent
-behaviour, as well towards our illustrious Chancellor himself, as the
-Vice-Chancellor, and his brethren, the Heads of Colleges. What I mean, is
-in relation to the _Grace_, which the assertors of the right of appeal
-thought fit to propose, in order to refer the decision of this point to
-the arbitration of the Senate. He harangues, for several pages, on what
-he calls, the irregularity and indecency of this proceeding; and affects
-besides, to cavil at the substance of what was proposed in it. But, good
-Sir, where was the _irregularity_ of the Senate’s presuming to confirm,
-by their own authority, a _right_, essential to their constitution,
-authorized by immemorial prescription; and which no single Statute, they
-act under, in any degree contradicts? Or, where was the _indecency_ of
-opposing the exercise of that power in the Vice-Chancellor, which is
-inconsistent with the very nature of our jurisdiction; for which, he can
-plead the sanction of _no_ Statute; and of which he was never rightfully
-possessed?
-
-As to the _Grace_ itself, the substance of what it proposed, was to
-this effect: “That the right of appeal, from the sentence of the
-Vice-Chancellor to the University in all cases, should be confirmed to
-every member of the _University_; but that this _right_, with regard
-to persons in _statu pupillari_, should be exercised only by the
-tutor of each person, interposing in his name.” This, it seems, gives
-great offence to the _Inquirer_; who, in his tender concern for the
-authority of the supreme magistrate, is perfectly shocked, to think of
-the consequences of such a right being acknowledged; and is prophet
-enough to foresee, that it would bring the lowest disgrace upon his
-office, by _warranting the arraignment of him_, as he puts it, _before
-Delegates, upon no very important occasions_[108]. But his fears are
-as groundless, as the insinuation, which he labours to convey under
-them, is impudent and unjust. For, though an appeal be claimed _ab omni
-gravamine utcunque illato_ (which sure is nothing but reasonable, as the
-Statutes make no distinction, and the practice, as well as _Law_ of the
-University, equally authorizes Appeals in every case) yet, why should
-he throw himself into this unseasonable panic, when all _frivolous and
-vexatious Appeals_ are expressly provided against, by a considerable
-pecuniary caution, and when the Delegates themselves are, in effect, of
-the supreme magistrate’s own appointment[109]? Would the members of the
-Senate, does he think, appeal from any judicial sentence, though ever
-so just and statutable, _on no very important occasion_, when a certain
-expence is necessarily incurred, and when there could not be the least
-hopes of redress? Or, would any tutor can he imagine, who has a character
-to maintain, and who is not less concerned to support good order and
-discipline, than the supreme magistrate himself, interpose his claim of
-Appeal for his pupil, without, at least, some fair and reasonable grounds?
-
-But the insinuation, as I observed, is still more impudent, than his
-apprehensions are groundless. For what he would covertly signify under
-this impertinent sollicitude for the honour of the supreme magistrate,
-is, that the Delegates, who are the representatives of the collective
-body of the University, are unworthy to take cognizance in any case of
-the acts of their _officer_[110]: Nay, that the members of the Senate
-itself are a company of factious, disorderly, licentious boys; who are
-impatient of any authority themselves, and would be sure to concur in
-all cases to countenance the irregularities of one another, or of the
-youth of the place; by setting them loose from all restraint, which
-the Statutes and discipline of the University have provided against
-them. There is something so outrageously insolent in this abuse of the
-body of the University; a body consisting of _three or four hundred
-persons_; the youngest of which is of the degree of _Master of Arts_;
-almost all of them _clergymen_; and the greater part of _equal age_,
-and it may therefore be presumed of _equal prudence_, as many of the
-Heads themselves; that I should be cautious of charging it upon him, if
-he had not expressed himself in terms too clear to be mistaken. For he
-has the assurance to advance in so many words, that “_if the person who
-apprehends himself to be aggrieved_, may happen to be a member of the
-Senate, and, _as such_, may possibly _bear with indignation the thought
-of having any part of his conduct judicially animadverted upon_; if it
-be further considered, that his _particular friends and acquaintance_
-may possibly think the same in his case, and that _all the advocates
-for, and the warm assertors of independency_ will be sure to think so in
-every case, I do and must say, _&c._” And, again, in the words of the
-very provident Mr. _Tabor_, a little doting registrary of the University,
-a century or two ago; whose mumpings this writer has the confidence
-to oppose, to the united sense of the University, at this day: “What
-dangerous cure does that state hazard, when for the sullen distemperature
-of one active member, the ruling head must bleed, that suffereth enough
-otherwise; and all the discontented parts of the body must sit in
-judgment on it; nay when _Sense_ must disapprove or disallow the _acts
-of Reason_? If this Appeal be suffered and countenanced to pass current,
-farewell the power of Chancellor and Vice-chancellor; _my young masters
-of the regent house_ will and must judge, examine, and rule all; yea,
-_their_ censures or judgments must stand or be disallowed at their will
-and pleasure. Good Sir! by all means labour to smother this _Hydra_; it
-will have more heads than we shall overcome, and breed a greater mischief
-than we are aware, in these times of liberty and discontent[111].”
-
-Such are the sentiments of this forward Inquirer of the Senate of the
-University of _Cambridge_: sentiments, which must needs create in the
-breast of any man of sense, who is a mere stranger to us, the strongest
-resentment; and for his public declaration of which, were the author
-known and considerable enough, he would judge him to deserve the severest
-censure, the University has it in its power to inflict. But what must
-those think, who have an opportunity of knowing the _characters_ of
-the men, whom he thus vilely traduces? Almost all of them fellows of
-colleges, many of them tutors, whose sobriety and good behaviour have
-recommended them to places of trust and profit in their respective
-colleges: Men, who are under the obligation of oaths, to maintain and
-promote statutable discipline, and regularity; who are trained in the
-habit of restraining and correcting academical disorders of all kinds;
-and whose situations and interests require them to be as watchful
-to support just authority and good order, at least, as the Heads of
-Colleges, or the officers of the University themselves. And the censure
-is the more grievous at this time of day, when, by the confession of the
-partizans of the Heads themselves[112], extorted by the very evidence of
-fact and truth, there never was a time in which the elder part of the
-University were more sober, temperate, and regular; when fewer excesses
-of any kind were chargeable on the fellows of colleges; or, indeed,
-when they were more prudent and exemplary, in their behaviour, in all
-respects. But the charge is not only unjust, but has a direct tendency to
-discredit and destroy that reasonable authority in the University, which
-this prater, if he means any thing by his talk, would seem ambitious to
-support. For how is the great affair of education and good government
-in this place to be carried on, but by means of those very persons,
-whom he would represent in so ignominious a light? For, certainly, how
-much soever the University may owe to the Heads of Colleges, in their
-capacity of _legislators_, yet, for the _execution_ of those laws which
-it seemeth good to their wisdoms to enact, they must still depend on
-the concurrence, I had almost said, on the sole authority of their
-_inferiors_. And how shall such authority be kept up, when they are
-thus upbraided, as abettors of every act of licence; and represented to
-the younger part of the University, as patronizers of that ungoverned
-independent spirit, which it is their office to restrain? Nor can I think
-so ill of the policy of these great lawgivers, as to believe that they
-will chuse to concur with this officious _Inquirer_, in representing them
-in such a light. For what will become of that balmy ease and quiet, in
-which these sovereign guides of youth so delight to wrap themselves, if
-the care of government must, after all, devolve on their shoulders; when
-a course of injurious calumnies shall have disabled their subordinate
-ministers from taking their place, and bearing, as at present they most
-commonly do, the full weight of it?
-
-But to return to the _Grace_ itself, from which this reviler’s treatment
-of the whole body of the University has a little diverted me. He labours
-much, as I observed, to impress on the reader’s mind the opinion of
-the frightful consequences with which a right of Appeal in all cases
-would be attended; and to give a sanction to these fears, he alledges
-the authority of _the learned gentlemen of the long robe_, who, it
-seems, have pointed out the absurdity of such a practice, and the
-pernicious effects of it[113]. But what is all this tragical declamation
-to the purpose? Where is the sense, as I before asked, in supposing
-the University Senate would concur in every attempt of its idle and
-disorderly members to get themselves relieved from a deserved and
-statutable censure? Or, how should those _learned gentlemen_, whose robe
-he still hangs upon, be better able to judge of the expediency of this
-practice than the Senate of the University itself? Indeed he thinks the
-absurdity of this right of calling the supreme officer of the University
-to account for his judicial determinations the more glaring, in as
-much as, even in private colleges, _no act of discipline of the Head_,
-he fancies, _was ever liable to be reversed by any of the subordinate
-members_: nay, he is persuaded that his good friend, the Fellow of a
-College, for whose instruction all this is designed, _were he even
-authorized to new model the Statutes of his own College, would not chuse
-to vest in his brethren the Fellows such a power of controuling the acts
-of the Master_[114]. What the Colleges are which are here glanced at, and
-which leave the Master full power to exercise every act of discipline
-without controul, the _Inquirer_ himself best knows. For my part, I have
-always understood that _acts of censure_ in all private societies, such
-acts I mean as are of consequence to the reputation and interests of
-their members, are not left to the caprice of the Master, but are passed
-by the joint authority and concurrence of the Society itself; unless,
-perhaps, I am to except one _little_ College, in which, it is said, the
-Master claims to himself this sovereign and uncontroulable authority.
-But, then, this is no fair precedent. For the members of the College have
-nothing to apprehend from a licentious and wanton abuse of _such power_;
-as well on account of the known candour, equity, and moderation of the
-worthy president of that society, as for that a few exertions of it would
-leave him no subjects to preside over.
-
-But, whatever may be the case of this _one_ foundation, the despotic
-form is not, I believe, statutable in any other. Nay, the authority of
-the fellows to controul the acts of their Head in some Colleges, I have
-been told, goes so far, that they are even impowered, in case of an
-_utter inability_ (such as may arise from extreme folly, dotage, or the
-like) _to govern prudently_, to remove him forthwith from his place. And
-surely this must be deemed a wise and sober institution; at least, were I
-_authorized to new model the Statutes of any College which wanted it, it
-is such an one as I should certainly chuse to vest in it_.
-
-But there is one circumstance in the _Grace_ which, it seems, provokes
-his more _especial dislike_. And, unluckily, it is one which any other,
-who considered the tenor of it, would be likely enough more especially
-to approve; as shewing the singular moderation and good temper of the
-persons who proposed the _Grace_, and as studiously contrived to prevent
-all imaginable abuses of it. It is, that _the right of undergraduates
-to appeal should be exercised no otherwise than by the interposition
-of their tutors_[115]. A provision of great prudence; and which the
-proposers of the _Grace_, in their concern to support authority and
-just government, purposely made to obviate the only abuses that could
-be possibly apprehended from it. For, if the wanton exercise of the
-_right to appeal_ were to be feared from any quarter, it certainly must
-be from the inferior members; whose youth and inexperience might make
-them forward to appeal from any censure, however reasonable, and of
-which, therefore, the _tutor_ of the person censured, who is under all
-the ties of interest and duty to act discreetly and warily, is left to
-judge. Yet this provision, wise and moderate as it is, _appears to the
-Inquirer extremely strange; because, by means of such a limitation, a
-tutor might prevent his pupil from appealing in any case, though the
-supreme Magistrate of the University would be empowered to prevent it
-in none_. As if the judge who passed the sentence, and was therefore
-concerned to support it, were as fit to determine, whether the party
-aggrieved should have the liberty to appeal from it, as an indifferent
-person who had no concern at all in it. Nay, the tutor, as was observed,
-would be obliged, by a regard to his own authority and character, and
-(I would add, but that the _Inquirer_ is pleased to make no account of
-that _obligation_[116]) by the _religion of an oath_, to proceed with all
-imaginable caution in advising him to such a step.
-
-In every view, then, this objection to the _Grace_ must appear very
-unaccountable. And the rather, when the reader understands that this
-clause was, with the greater readiness and pleasure, inserted into it,
-as this Vice-chancellor himself, whose goodness and candour require no
-encomiums of mine, had intimated, and even declared, that a provision
-of this kind was all the restriction upon _the liberty of appealing_
-which he wished to see made to it. For this excellent person was so much
-convinced of the propriety and expediency of this claim in general, that
-he very frankly professed his approbation of it, and only wanted to
-secure his authority, where indeed the only danger lay, from a _torrent
-of Appeals, which, as he apprehended, might pour in upon him from the
-younger sort_. So that, I think, we shall hear no more of this objection;
-and I am even not without the fond hopes, that, after this information,
-the _Inquirer_ himself, whatever _displeasure_ he might conceive at this
-part of the _Grace_ before, will now grow into good humour with it.
-
-After all, one cannot but suspect, that the _Inquirer_ must have some
-better reason for his strong antipathy to this _Grace_ than any that has
-yet appeared. The violent heat it puts him into, whenever he touches upon
-it, demonstrates, there must still be something at the bottom of this
-matter, which is the object of just offence. In looking narrowly for
-it, I found it at last, half smothered under a very shrewd and indirect
-insinuation, which I shall bring to light, after having presented the
-reader with his own words:
-
- “I see not how a Grace of this kind could be offered,
- consistently with the Resolution said to have been taken at one
- of your first meetings, to assert the right of Appeal in such
- a manner as was warranted by the Statutes of the University:
- Nor am I less able to reconcile it with those professions of
- deference and respect, which at the same time were thought
- proper to be made for our great and illustrious Chancellor. No
- person would receive a greater pleasure than myself from seeing
- all the members of the University, however divided in other
- points, agreed in entertaining the highest sentiments of regard
- and veneration for him; but I confess, that this is a pleasure
- I am not very likely to have; till one set of men shall be
- pleased to give clearer and less questionable testimonies of
- this, than by opposing every useful regulation he recommended,
- and endeavouring to lessen and curtail an authority, which is
- only vested in the Vice-chancellor as his representative and
- locum-tenens[117].”
-
-Here, then, we have all the venom of his heart injected into one
-malignant paragraph; which, under the gilding of a compliment, is to do
-its office without offence. And yet, it is plain enough what he would
-insinuate. It is neither more nor less than that the advocates for this
-right of Appeal are an unquiet, factious set of persons, bent on opposing
-all measures that tend to promote the good of the University; and, to say
-all in one word, listed in a vile cabal to dishonour, revile, and abuse
-their Chancellor himself. The gentlemen against whom all this is levelled
-must, I am persuaded, hold such senseless and licentious calumnies in
-such contempt, that I should not merit their thanks for attempting
-seriously to confute them. And yet I cannot help saying for them, that
-the _Resolution_ hinted at in this place was drawn up with so respectful
-a regard to the authority of the Statues, and to the honour and dignity
-of our great Chancellor, as, one should think, might stop the mouth of
-Malice itself. Yet all this can be overlooked by our candid Inquirer. And
-on what pretence? Why, because some of those persons, who came to such
-a _Resolution_, had different sentiments, it seems, of the expediency
-of the late regulations from this writer; and because this claim of
-Appeals tends to lessen the authority of the Vice-chancellor. For this he
-modestly calls _opposing the Chancellor, and curtailing his power_.
-
-Well, then, the crime is now out; and, to say the truth, if it be a
-crime, the University is deeply involved in it. For, when the late
-_regulations_ were first proposed to the consideration of the Senate, a
-considerable majority were clearly of the same opinion as these culprits:
-and, with regard to the present claim, the University may be almost said
-to be _unanimous_ in supporting it. But what in the mean time must be
-this scribbler’s sentiments of that most noble and illustrious person,
-for whose honour he here professes himself concerned; and of whom, it
-seems, he can think so unworthily, as to believe, that a liberty in
-judging concerning the expediency of some academical laws, which he had
-the goodness to propose to them, should give offence to one who has no
-other aim than to serve the University in a manner the most agreeable
-to their best judgments; and which, I am satisfied, they used the
-more freely, on a full persuasion that such liberty could not be taken
-as an instance of disrespect to him. This I should not doubt to call,
-of itself, a sufficient confutation of the idle calumny. But it comes
-with the worst grace imaginable from a declared enemy to _the right of
-Appeals_; who must know, if he be at all acquainted with what passed at
-that time, that the principal reason, which induced the University to
-oppose the _regulations_, was the just apprehension they were under, of
-an encroachment on this _very right_; not indeed from the Chancellor,
-who had no such intention, nor even any knowledge of it, but from
-certain forward directors in that affair, who gave the _clearest and
-least questionable_ proofs of their designing to make the _new laws_ the
-instruments of their own tyranny in this respect. So that, if any offence
-_was_ given by the University on that occasion, the blame of it should
-fall elsewhere, and not on those on whom it is here so invidiously cast;
-persons, who on every occasion have testified the sincerest honour for
-their Chancellor, who venerate him as the protector and patron of the
-University, and would humbly co-operate with him to the attainment of
-those good ends, which it is his sole endeavour to promote.
-
-But what follows, if possible, is still worse. A _second charge_
-against the University is, that they are _endeavouring to lessen and
-curtail an authority, which is only vested in the Vice-chancellor, as
-his representative and locum tenens_. What the collective body would
-return to this accusation, I pretend not to say; I have no commission to
-answer in their name. But, for myself, and those whose thoughts I have
-the opportunity of knowing on this matter, I answer boldly thus: That
-we are not in the least apprehensive of giving offence to this great
-person, who is more solicitous for the maintenance of the just rights
-of the University than any other member of it, by any respectful and
-moderate endeavours to assert our own reasonable privileges; that we are
-well assured, he approves, and is ready to countenance, all such honest
-endeavours; and that, lastly and _chiefly_, we are _therefore_ earnest in
-our endeavours to lessen an authority (if that must be called _lessening_
-which is but preventing its being usurped), because it _is_ vested in,
-and must be constantly exercised _by his representative_. For, whatever
-liberties he may presume to take with the assertors of this claim, I
-will venture to assure him, that, were unappealable power itself to
-be exercised only by our Chancellor, who is too high in rank, and too
-noble in nature, to be under any temptations of abusing it, though we
-might still think the authority unreasonable and dangerous in itself, we
-should esteem ourselves in perfect security under him, and could safely
-trust the administration of it to his care. But, as the person who by
-our Constitution is vested with it, is and must be a very imperfect
-_representative_ of the Chancellor, in this as well as other respects, we
-hope to be forgiven by every equitable judge, if we are not forward to
-_compliment_ ourselves out of our privileges; and have little inclination
-to lodge our liberties in less worthy hands.
-
-After all, one would be glad to know a little more explicitly of this
-writer, since he professes himself so little satisfied with the conduct
-of the University, what those _clearer and less questionable testimonies_
-of their regard for the Chancellor are which he so loudly calls for,
-and the want of which, it seems, hath made his life so distasteful and
-uneasy to him. And, I think, I durst almost take upon me to guess at
-them. No doubt, they are such as these: “That the University Senate
-would be pleased to make no distinction in any case between the supreme
-Magistrate and his representative, nay, and his representative’s
-_representatives_”—“That they would courteously give that honour to his
-_locum tenens_ or _locum tenentes_, without perhaps one single merit to
-justify such a claim, which the illustrious rank and dignity of their
-Chancellor himself, his eminent virtues, and services to the University,
-all conspire to challenge and demand from them:”—In a word, “that the
-University would offer themselves as willing instruments to carry into
-execution every paltry project, every low and selfish design, which
-little men in office are apt to form for themselves; and all this under
-the notion of its being a tribute of respect to the supreme Magistrate,
-and an instance of their veneration for him.”
-
-Such as these, I can readily believe, are the _testimonies_ of respect
-the _Inquirer_ wishes to see paid to the Chancellor, and which, no doubt,
-would administer that sincere pleasure, which at present he divines
-(and, I trust, truly) _he is not very likely to have_. But does he think
-the Chancellor is to be abused by this thin pretence of respect? that
-true greatness is to be taken by this mere outside of an officious and
-false compliment? On the other hand, I dare be confident that nothing is
-more disgusting to him than such sycophancy; and that he is so far from
-allowing this conduct in the _Inquirer_, that he even disdains to have
-his cause and dignity so defended. “For, though (to use my Lord _Bacon’s_
-words on a like occasion) I observe in his book many glosses, whereby
-the man would insinuate himself into his favour, yet I find it to be
-ordinary, that many pressing and fawning persons do misconjecture of the
-humour of men in authority; and many times seek to gratify them with that
-which they most dislike.”
-
-But the virulence of these malignant calumnies hath held me on a very
-unnecessary argument too long: I return again to the _Inquirer_, to whom
-I have but one word or two more to say, and shall then take my final
-leave of him.
-
-You have talked, Sir, very importantly of the pernicious consequences
-of a right of Appeal in the University. The reasons on which you would
-ground these so anxious fears have been examined, and exposed, as they
-deserve. But, granting that some slight, nay, that some considerable
-inconveniencies might arise from it; were this any good argument, think
-you, against the subsistence of such a right? What would become of all
-the liberties which just government leaves us, nay, of the blessings and
-privileges which indulgent nature bestows upon us, if the accidental and
-occasional abuse of them were thought a reason sufficient to extort them
-out of our hands? Should you not have considered that a _right of Appeal_
-is one of the most important and valuable rights which mankind enjoy in
-society, and which, indeed, is almost essential to the very being of
-it? And would you have this sacred claim, _patronam illam et vindicem
-libertatis_, as a great ancient calls it, rudely and inhumanly wrested
-from us, on the frivolous pretence of some possible or even probable
-abuse? Had you been as conversant in the civil law as an _Inquirer_
-into such a question should have been, you might have found cause to
-entertain very different opinions of it. For the great masters in that
-science were as well aware as you can be, that such a right was liable to
-some abuse; but which of them ever thought this consideration of force
-enough to decry or abolish it? On the other hand, they _acknowledge the
-inconvenience_, yet assert and vindicate the _use_. Give me leave to
-refer you to one passage (you will find _L._ 1. _D. De Appell._), very
-express to this purpose. “Appellandi usus quam sit frequens quamque
-NECESSARIUS, nemo est qui nesciat: quippe cum iniquitatem judicantium
-vel imperitiam re corrigat; _licet nonnunquam bene latas sententias in
-pejus reformet_, neque enim utique melius pronuntiat, qui novissimus
-sententiam laturus est.” What will you say, now, to this? That _Ulpian_,
-who affirmed it, was a factious, turbulent boy? one of those whom you
-disgrace under the name of the _warm, assertors of independency_, and
-_who bear with indignation the thought of having any part of their
-conduct judicially animadverted upon_? I presume to think you would
-hardly venture on this assertion. Nay, I please myself with hoping, that,
-when you have well considered this so sage and venerable sentence of an
-ancient Lawyer, you will even be disposed to abate of your vehemence in
-declaiming against such as go on _his_ principles at this day.
-
-Seriously, Sir, it is a bad cause you have engaged in; and, in mere
-kindness to you, I would wish you to relinquish it with all speed. The
-claim itself of _Appeals_, as I have had the honour to shew you, is of
-long and ancient date; indeed as _ancient_ as the Constitution of the
-_English_ government itself. Of what consequence you may chance to be
-in your political capacity, it is impossible for me to say; if you are
-of any, and should proceed in these _Inquiries_, I should go near to
-apprehend that the _House of Commons_ itself might take umbrage at them;
-for the rise of that great part of our Constitution is not usually,
-I think, carried higher than the point from which the right of Appeal
-hath here been deduced. Or, do you think you may safely make free with
-the Constitution of an University, though it were dangerous meddling
-with that of the State itself? This may be true, indeed; but where is
-your generosity in the mean time? Why should the thoughts of impunity
-encourage you to such an attack on the rights and privileges of a body
-of men, who, though unable to punish such offences against themselves as
-they deserve, have yet been generally secured from all outrage, by the
-very regard and reverence which the public hath ever paid to them? In a
-word (for I would not hold you longer from your _necessary avocations_),
-it may be worth your _inquiry_, when you shall think fit to sally forth
-on another adventure, what the Learned of _Great Britain_ have done,
-that they should have their liberties written and inveighed against in
-so outrageous a manner; and, amidst the securest enjoyment of every
-civil right, under the justest and most equal Government in the world,
-what peculiar circumstances of offence have so inflamed the guilt of the
-scholars of this land, that they, of _all_ his Majesty’s good subjects,
-should deserve to be the only slaves.
-
-
-FINIS.
-
-
-
-
- ON THE
-
- DELICACY
-
- OF
-
- FRIENDSHIP
-
- FIRST PRINTED IN 1755.
-
-
-
-
- ON THE
-
- DELICACY
-
- OF
-
- FRIENDSHIP.
-
- A SEVENTH DISSERTATION.
-
- ADDRESSED
-
- TO THE AUTHOR OF THE SIXTH.
-
- Si bene te novi, metues, liberrime Lolli,
- Scurrantis speciem præbere, professus Amicum.
- HOR.
-
- Nunc te _marmoreum_ pro tempore fecimus: at tu,
- Si fœtura gregem suppleverit, AUREUS esto.
- VIRG.
-
-
-
-
-AN ADDRESS TO THE REV. DR. JORTIN.
-
-
-REV. SIR,
-
-As great an admirer as I must profess myself of your writings, I little
-expected that any of them would give me the pleasure that I have just now
-received from the last of your SIX DISSERTATIONS ON DIFFERENT SUBJECTS.
-
-The other FIVE have doubtless their distinct merits. But in this,
-methinks, I see an assemblage, a very constellation, as it were, of all
-your virtues, all that can recommend the scholar or endear the friend.
-This last, give me leave to say, is so unusual a part of a learned mind’s
-character, and appears with so peculiar a lustre in this discourse,
-that the public will not be displeased to have it set before them in
-full view, and recommended to general imitation, with a frankness,
-which though it may somewhat disgust your own delicacy, seems but very
-necessary on such an occasion and in such times.
-
-I leave it to others therefore to celebrate the happiness of your
-invention, the urbanity of your wit, the regularity of your plan, the
-address with which you conceal the point you aim at in this Dissertation,
-and yet the pains you take in seeming obliquely to make your way to it.
-These and many other beauties which your long study of the ancients hath
-enabled you to bring into modern composition, have been generally taken
-notice of in your other writings, and will find encomiasts enough among
-the common herd of your readers. The honour I propose to do you by this
-address is of another kind; and as it lies a little remote from vulgar
-apprehension, I shall have some merit with you for displaying it as it
-deserves.
-
-To come to a point then, next to the total _want_ of FRIENDSHIP which
-one has too much reason to observe and lament in the great scholars of
-every age, nothing hath at any time disgusted me so much as the gross
-indelicacy with which they are usually seen to conduct themselves in
-their _expression_ of this virtue.
-
-I have by me a large collection of the civil things which these lettered
-friends have been pleased to say of one another, and it would amaze you
-to see with what an energy and force of language they are delivered. One
-thing I thought very remarkable, that the greater the parts and the more
-unquestioned the learning and abilities of the encomiast, just so much
-the stronger, that is to say, according to the usual acceptation, just so
-much the more _friendly_ are his encomiums.
-
-I have a great example in my eye. A man, for instance, hath a bosom
-FRIEND, whom he takes for a person of the purest and most benevolent
-virtue, presently he sets him down for such, and publisheth him to all
-the world.—Or he hath an intimacy with an eminent POET: and no regard
-to decency restrains him from calling him a great genius, as Horace,
-you know, did his friend Virgil, almost to his face.—Or, he is loved
-and honoured by a great LAWYER or two; and then be sure all the fine
-things that have been said of your CICEROS, your SCÆVOLAS on your
-HYDES, are squandered away upon them.—Or, he hath perchance the honour
-of being well with a great CHURCHMAN, much famed for his political and
-religious services; down he goes at once for a lover of his country, and
-the scourge of infidels and freethinkers, with as little reserve as if
-he had a JEROM or a father PAUL to celebrate.—Or, once or twice in his
-life it hath been his fortune to be distinguished by great MINISTERS.
-Such occasions are rare. And therefore a little gratitude, we will
-say, is allowable. But can any thing be said for abominable formal
-_dedications_?—Or, lastly, he thinks he sees some sparks of virtue even
-in his ordinary acquaintance, and these, as fast as he observes them he
-gathers up, and sticks, on the first occasion, in some or other of his
-immortal volumes.
-
-O Doctor Jortin! if you did but see half the extravagancies I have
-collected of this sort in the single instance of one man, you would stand
-aghast at this degree of corruption in the learned world, and would begin
-to apprehend something of your great merit in this seasonable endeavour
-to put a stop to its progress.
-
-And what above all grieves me is that this is no _novel_ invention; for
-then it might well have ranked with the other arguments of degeneracy so
-justly chargeable on the present times; but the all-accomplished ancients
-themselves have, to own the truth, set the example.
-
-I took notice just now of the INGENIUM INGENS of Horace. The other poets
-of that time abound in these fulsome encomiums. But I am even shocked to
-think that such men as CICERO and PLINY, men so perfect, as they were, in
-the commerce of the world, and from their rank and station, so practised
-in all the decencies of conversation, were far gone in the folly. And yet
-there are, in truth, more instances of this weakness in their writings
-than in those of any modern I can readily call to mind.
-
-Something I know hath been said in excuse of this _illiberal manner_,
-from the VIEWS and CHARACTERS and NECESSITIES of those that use it. And
-my unfeigned regard for the professors of learning makes me willing that
-any thing they have to offer for themselves should be fairly heard.
-
-They say then, and with some appearance of truth, that as all the benefit
-they propose to themselves by their labours is for the most part nothing
-more than a little _fame_ (which whether good or bad, as the poet
-observes,
-
- ——begins and ends
- In the small circle of our foes or friends.)
-
-they think it hard to be denied this slender recompence, which each
-expects in his turn, and should therefore be not unwilling to pay to
-others.
-
-They, further, alledge, that as they are generally _plain men_, much
-given to speak their mind, and quite unpractised in the arts of that
-chaste reserve and delicate self-denial, to which some few of their order
-have happily habituated themselves, they hope to be forgiven so natural
-an infirmity, to which the circumstances of their situation and character
-fatally expose them.
-
-But, lastly, they say, this practice is in a manner forced upon them by
-the _malignity of the times_. Let a learned man deserve ever so well of
-the public, none but those who are known to be of his acquaintance think
-themselves at all concerned to take notice of his services. Especially
-this is observed to be the constant humour of our countrymen, who rarely
-speak well of any but their friends, as our polite neighbours rarely
-speak ill of any but their enemies. Now this malevolent disposition
-of the learned makes it necessary, they pretend, that such of them as
-are connected by any bond of friendship should be indulged the greater
-liberty of commending one another. Unless you will utterly exclude all
-intercourse of praise and panegyric from human society, which they humbly
-conceive may be attended with some few inconveniencies. To strengthen
-this last observation they even add, that the public is usually more shy
-in bestowing its praises on writers of eminent and superior merit than on
-others. As well knowing, I suppose, that posterity will make them ample
-amends for any mortification they may meet with at present; and that in
-the mean time they are more than sufficiently honoured by the constant
-railings and invectives of the dunces. Lastly, they observe, that in
-the more frivolous and easy kinds of learning, such for instance as are
-conversant about the collation of MSS, the rectification of POINTS, and
-the correction of LETTERS, the general and approved custom is for all
-professors of this class, whether friends or enemies, to cry up each
-other as much as they please, and that it is even reckoned a piece of
-incivility not to preface a citation from ever so insignificant a dealer
-in verbal criticism with some superlative appellation. And why, say they,
-should these nibblers of old books, “_These word-catchers that live on
-syllables_,” be indulged in this amplitude of expression to one another,
-when they who furnish the materials on which the spawn of these vermin
-are to feed in after-ages, are denied the little satisfaction of a more
-sizeable, as well as a more deserved praise?
-
-I have not been afraid, you see, to set the arguments of these unhappy
-advocates for themselves in as strong a light as they will well bear,
-because I can easily trust your sagacity to find out a full and decisive
-answer to them.
-
-In the _first_ place, you will refer these idolaters of FAME, for their
-better information, to that curious discourse on this subject, which
-makes the _fourth_ in the present collection. Next you will tell them
-that you by no means intend to deprive them of their just praise, but
-that they must not set up for judges in their own case, and presume to
-think how much of it they have reason to look for from their friends.
-You will further signify to them that the truest office of friendship is
-to be sparing of commendation, lest it awaken the envy of a malicious
-world; that there is a kind of fascination in praise which wise men have
-been justly suspicious of in all ages; and that a grain or two from those
-who are not used to be prodigal of this incense, is an offering of no
-small value. But chiefly and lastly, you will give them to understand
-that true honour is seated not in the mouths but in hearts of men; and
-that, for any thing they know, one may be forced to entertain the highest
-possible esteem of their virtues, though, for their sakes, and for other
-wise reasons, one has that virtuous command of one’s tongue and pen as
-not to acquaint them with it.
-
-Then, as to the _plainness_ and _openness of mind_ which is said to make
-a part in the composition of a man of letters, you will tell them that
-this is the very foible you most lament, and most wish them to correct:
-that it exposes them to much censure and many other inconveniencies; that
-this frankness of disposition makes them bestow their praises on those
-whom the world has no such esteem for, or whom it would rather see left
-in obscurity and oblivion; that they often disgust their betters by this
-proceeding, who have their reasons for desiring that a cloud may remain
-on the characters of certain obnoxious and dangerous writers; that by
-such warm and unmanaged commendations they become partners, as it were,
-of their ill deserts; that they even make themselves answerable for their
-future conduct; which is a matter of so very nice a consideration, that
-the great master of life, though he had not the virtue always to act
-up to his own maxim, delivers it for a precept of special use in the
-commerce of the world,
-
- QUALEM COMMENDES ETIAM ATQUE ETIAM ADSPICE.
-
-For it signifies nothing in the case before us, whether the
-recommendation be to a patron or the public.
-
-For all these reasons you will assure them that this ill habit of
-speaking their mind on all occasions, just as nature and blind friendship
-dictate, is that which more than any thing else exposes them to the
-contempt of knowing and considerate men.
-
-_Lastly_, with regard to that other frivolous plea taken from the
-_malignity of mankind_ and even those of their own family and profession,
-you will convince them that this is totally a mistake, that the world
-is ready enough to take notice of superior eminence in letters, that
-it is even apt to grow extravagant in its admiration, and that this
-humour of the public is itself a reason for that reserve with which their
-friends, if they truly merit that name, ought to conduct themselves
-towards them: that this splendour of reputation, which is so generally
-the consequence of distinguished learning, requires to be allayed and
-softened by the discrete management of those who wish them well, lest it
-not only grow offensive to weak eyes, but dazzle their own with too fond
-an imagination of their own importance, and so relax the ardour of their
-pursuits, or betray them into some unseemly ostentation of their just
-merits. You will farther suggest, that great atchievements in letters
-are sufficiently recompenced by the silent complacency of self-esteem
-and of a good conscience; while lesser services demand to be brought out
-and magnified to public eye, for the due encouragement and consolation
-of those who would otherwise have but small reason to be satisfied with
-themselves. You might even observe, that silence itself is often a full
-acknowledgment of superior desert, especially when personal obligations,
-as well as other reasons, might provoke them to break through it. In such
-cases it is to be understood, that, if a friend be sparing of his good
-word, it is in violence to his inclination, and that nothing but the
-tender apprehension of pushing an acknowledged merit too far, withholds
-him from giving a public testimony to it. But, in conclusion, you will
-not omit to set them right with regard to one material mistake in this
-matter; that whereas they complain of the superior estimation in which
-the professors of verbal criticism are held amongst us, whom with a
-strange malignity they affect to represent as the very lowest retainers
-to science, you, and all true scholars, on the other hand, maintain that
-the _study_ of words is the most useful and creditable of all others; and
-that this genuine class of learned men have reason to pride themselves in
-their objected, but truly glorious character of VERBAL CRITICS.
-
-And now, Sir, having seen how little can be said in justification of that
-offensive custom which the learned have somehow taken up, of directly
-applauding one another, I come to the more immediate purpose of this
-address, which was to shew how singularly happy you have been in avoiding
-this great vice, and to take occasion from the example you have now set
-us to recommend the contrary virtue to the imitation of others.
-
-I am sensible there are some difficulties to be encountered at setting
-out. A generous mind will probably feel some reluctance, at first, to the
-scheme of suppressing his natural feelings, and of withholding from his
-friend that just tribute of praise which many others perhaps are but too
-willing should be withheld from him. But all scruples of this sort will
-be got over when the full merit of your example hath been considered; I
-mean, when the inducements you had to give into the common weakness on
-this occasion come to be fairly drawn out; by which it will be clearly
-seen that you have the glory of setting a precedent of the most heroic
-magnanimity and self-denial, and that nothing can possibly be urged in
-the _case_ of any other, which you have not triumphantly gotten the
-better of in your own.
-
-I observe it to your honour, Sir, you have ventured on the same ground
-in this famous Dissertation, which hath been trodden by the most noted,
-at least, of our present writers. But this is not enough. It will be
-of moment to consider a little more particularly the _character_ of
-the person whom you chuse to follow, or rather nobly emulate, in this
-route. And lest you should think I have any design to lessen the merit
-of your conduct towards him by giving it in my cool way, take it from
-one of those _warm_ friends who never balk their humour in this sort of
-commendations. Upon asking him what he thought of the learned person’s
-character, and telling him the use I might perhaps make of his opinion in
-this address to you, he began in a very solemn way.
-
-“The author of the D. L.” says he, “is a writer whose genius and learning
-have so far subdued envy itself (though it never rose fiercer against any
-man, or in more various and grotesque shapes), that every man of sense
-now esteems him the ornament, and every good man the blessing, of these
-times.”
-
-Hold, said I, my good friend, I did not mean to put your eloquence to
-the stretch for this panegyric on his _intellectual_ endowments, which
-I am very ready to take upon trust, and, to say the truth, have never
-heard violently run down by any but very prejudiced or very dull men. His
-_moral_ qualities are those I am most concerned for.
-
-“His _moral_,” resumed he hastily, “shine forth as strongly from all
-his _writings_ as the other, and are those which I have ever reverenced
-most. Of these, his love of letters and of virtue, his veneration of
-great and good men, his delicacy of honour in not assuming to himself, or
-depressing, the merit of others, his readiness to give their due to all
-men of real desert whose principles he opposes, even to the fastidious,
-scoffing Lord SHAFTESBURY and the licentious BAYLE, but above all, his
-zeal for religion and for truth, these are qualities which, as often as
-I look into his volumes, attract my admiration and esteem. Nor is this
-enumeration, though it be far from complete, made at random. I could
-illustrate each of these virtues by various instances, taken from his
-works, were it not that the person you mean to address is more conversant
-in them, and more ready, I may presume, to do him justice on any fitting
-occasion than myself. The liberty indeed he takes of dissenting from many
-great names is considerable, as well as of speaking his free thoughts of
-the writers for whom he hath no esteem. But the _one_ he doth with that
-respect and deference, and the _other_ with that reason and justice, and
-_both_ with that ingenuous openness and candour, the characteristics of a
-truly great mind, that they, whom he opposes, cannot be angry, and they
-whom he censures are not misused. I mention this the rather on account of
-the clamour which has so frequently been raised against the freedom and
-severity of his pen. But there is no mystery in the case. No dead writer
-is so bad but he has some advocates, and no living one so contemptible
-but he has some friends. And the misfortune is, that, while the present
-generation is too much prejudiced to do him right, posterity, to whom
-the appeal of course lies, are not likely to have it in their power to
-re-judge the cause: the names and writings, he most undervalues, being
-such as are hastening, it seems, to that oblivion which is prepared for
-such things.
-
-“These,” continued he, “are some of the obvious qualities of the WRITER;
-and for the personal virtues of the MAN—But here I may well refer you
-to Dr. JORTIN himself, who will take a pleasure to assure you, that his
-private character is not less respectable than his public; or, rather,
-if the one demands our veneration, that the other must secure our love.
-And, yet, why rest the credit of ONE, when ALL of his acquaintance agree
-in this, that he is the easiest in his conversation, the frankest and
-most communicative, the readiest to do all good offices, in short the
-friendliest and most generous of men.”
-
-Thus far our zealous friend. And, though I know how much you agree with
-him in your sentiments, I dare say you cannot but smile at so egregious
-a specimen of the high _complimentary manner_. But, though one is not
-to expect an encomiast of this class will be very sensible of any
-defects in the person he celebrates, yet it cannot be disowned that this
-magnified man hath his foibles as well as another. I will be so fair as
-to enumerate some of them.
-
-As he is conscious of _intending_ well, and even greatly, in his learned
-labours, he is rather disposed to think himself injured by malicious
-slanders and gross misrepresentations. And then, as he hath abundantly
-too much wit, especially for a great divine, he is apt to say such things
-as, though dull men do not well comprehend, they see reason enough to
-take offence at. Besides, he doth not sufficiently consult his ease or
-his interest by the observance of those forms and practices which are in
-use amongst the prudent part of his own order. This, no doubt, begets a
-reasonable disgust. And even his friends, I observe, can hardly restrain
-their censure of so great a singularity. “He is so much in his study,
-they say, that he hardly allows himself time to make his appearance at
-a levee. Not considering that _illud unum ad laudem cum labore directum
-iter qui probaverunt prope jam soli in_ SCHOLIS _sunt relicti_.” These
-infirmities, it must be owned, are very notorious in him; to which it
-might be added, that he is very indiscreet, sometimes, in the topics and
-turn of his conversation. His zeal for his FRIEND is so immoderate, that
-he takes fire even at the most distant reflection he hears cast upon him.
-And I doubt no consideration could withhold him from contradicting any
-man, let his quality and station be what it would, that should hazard a
-joke or an argument, in his company, against RELIGION.
-
-I thought it but just to take notice of these weaknesses; and there may,
-perhaps, be some others, which I do not now recollect. Yet, on the whole,
-I will not deny that he may fairly pass for an able, a friendly, and even
-amiable man.
-
-This person then, such as he is, such, at least, as the zealots represent
-and you esteem him, you have the pleasure to call your FRIEND. Report
-says, too, that he has more than a common right to this _title_: that
-he has won it by many real services done to yourself. How doth the
-consciousness of all this fire you! and what pains do I see you take to
-restrain that impatient gratitude, which would relieve itself by breaking
-forth in the praises of such a friend!
-
-And yet—in spite of all these incitements from _esteem_, from
-_friendship_, and from _gratitude_, which might prompt you to some
-extravagance of commendation, such is the command you have of yourself,
-and so nicely do you understand what belongs to this intercourse of
-learned friends, that, in the instance before us, you do not, I think,
-appear to have exceeded the modest proportion even of a temperate and
-chaste praise.
-
-I assure you, Sir, I am so charmed with the beauty of this conduct, that,
-though it may give your modesty some pain, I cannot help uniting the
-several parts of it, and presenting the entire image to you in one piece.
-
-I meddle not with the argument of your elaborate dissertation. It is
-enough that your readers know it to be the same with that of another
-famous one in the D. L. They will know, then, that, among the various
-parts of that work, none was so likely as this to extort your applause.
-For it is universally, I suppose, agreed that, for a point in classical
-criticism, there is not the man living who hath a keener relish for it
-than yourself. And the general opinion is, that your honoured friend hath
-a sort of talent for this kind of writing. Some persons, I know, have
-talked at a strange rate. One or two I once met with were for setting
-him much above the modern, and on a level, at least, with the best of
-the old, critics. But this was going too far, as may appear to any that
-hath but attentively read and understood what the judicious Mr. UPTON and
-the learned Mr. EDWARDS have, in their various books and pamphlets, well
-and solidly, and with great delight to many discerning persons, written
-on this subject. Yet still I must needs think him considerably above
-MINELLIUS and FARNABY, and almost equal to old SERVIUS himself, except
-that, perhaps, one doth not find in him the singular _ingenuity_[118] you
-admire in the last of these critics.
-
-But be this as it will, it seems pretty well agreed, that the learned
-person, though so great a divine, is a very competent judge, and no mean
-proficient in classical criticism. There are many specimens of his
-talents in this way dispersed through the large and miscellaneous work of
-the D. L. But the greatest effort of his genius, they say, is seen in the
-explanation of the Sixth Book of the Ænëis. And, with all its defects,
-I can easily perceive you were so struck with it, that it was with
-the utmost reluctance you found yourself obliged, by the regard which
-every honest critic owes to truth, and by the superior delicacy of your
-purpose, to censure and expose it.
-
-Another man, I can easily imagine, would have said to himself before
-he had entered on this task, “This fine commentary, which sets the
-most finished part of the Ænëis, and indeed the whole poem, in so new
-and so advantageous a light, though not an essential in it, is yet a
-considerable ornament of a justly admired work. The author, too, is my
-particular friend; a man, the farthest of all others from any disposition
-to lessen the reputation of those he loves. The subject hath been well
-nigh exhausted by him; and the remarks I have to offer on his scheme are
-not, in truth, of that consequence as to make it a point of duty for
-me to lay aside the usual regards of friendship on their account: and,
-though HE hath greatness of mind enough not to resent this liberty, his
-impatient and ill-judging friends will be likely to take offence at it.
-The public itself, as little biassed as it seems to be in his favour, may
-be even scandalized at an attempt of this nature, to which no important
-interest of religion or learning seem to oblige me.”
-
-After this manner, I say, would a common man have been apt to reason with
-himself. But you, Sir, understand the _rights_ of literary freedom, and
-the _offices_ of sacred friendship, at another rate. The _one_ authorize
-us to deliver our sentiments on any point of literature without reserve.
-And the _other_ will not suffer you to dishonour the man you love, or
-require you to sully the purity of your own virtue, by a vicious and
-vulgar complaisance.
-
-Or, to give the account of the whole matter in your own memorable words:
-
-The Sixth Book of the Ænëis, you observe, though the most finished part
-of the twelve, is certainly obscure. “Here then is a field open for
-criticism, and all of us, who attempt to explain and illustrate Virgil,
-have reason to HOPE that we may make some _discoveries_, and to FEAR
-that we may fall into some _mistakes_; and this should induce us to
-conjecture with _freedom_, to propose with _diffidence_, and to dissent
-with _civility_. Ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις ἥδε βροτοῖσι, quoth old Hesiod[119].”
-
-Which shall I most admire, the dignity, the candour, or the prudence,
-that shine forth in this curious paragraph, which stands as a sort of
-preface to the refutation, as no doubt you designed it, of your friend’s
-work? “_You have reason to hope that_, after the unsuccessful efforts
-of the author of the D. L., _you may make some discoveries_.” In this
-declaration some may esteem you too sanguine. But I see nothing in it
-but a confidence very becoming a man of your talent at a _discovery_,
-and of your importance in the literary world. You add, indeed, as it
-were to temper this boldness, that “_you have reason to fear too that
-you may fall into some mistakes_.” This was rather too modest; only it
-would serve, at the same time, to intimate to your friend what he had to
-expect from the following detection of his errors. But you lead us to the
-consequence of these principles. “_They should induce us_, you say ”TO
-CONJECTURE WITH FREEDOM.” Doubtless. And the dignity of your character
-is seen in taking it. For, shall the authority or friendship of any man
-stand in the way of my conjectures?
-
- ——scilicet, ut non
- Sit mihi prima fides; et verè quod placet, ut non
- Acriter elatrem!
-
-—“TO PROPOSE WITH DIFFIDENCE.” Certainly very _prudent_, especially for
-one sort of _free-conjecturers_; and, by the way, no bad hint to the
-person you glance at, whose vice it is thought to be, above that of most
-other writers, never to trouble himself with composing a book on any
-question, of whose truth he is not previously and firmly convinced——“AND
-TO DISSENT WITH CIVILITY.” A _candid_ insinuation, which amounts to this,
-“That, when a writer hath done his best to shew his learning or his wit,
-the man at whose expence it is, especially if he be a friend, is, in
-consideration of such services, not to take it amiss.”
-
-I have been the freer to open the meaning of this introductory paragraph,
-because it lets us into the spirit with which you mean to carry yourself
-in this learned contention. For a _contention_ it is to be, and to good
-purpose too, if old Hesiod be any authority. Ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις ἥδε βροτοῖσι,
-quoth old Hesiod. Though to make the application quite pat the maxim
-should have run thus, Ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις ἥδε φιλοῖσι, which I do not find in
-old Hesiod.
-
-However the reason of the thing extends to both. And as _friends_ after
-all are but _men_, and sometimes none of the best neither, what need for
-standing on this distinction?
-
-Yet still the question returns, “Why so cool in the entrance of this
-friendly debate? Where had been the hurt of a little amicable parlying
-before daggers-drawing? If a man, in the true spirit of ancient chivalry,
-will needs break a lance with his friend, he might give him good words
-at least and shake hands with him before the onset. Something of this
-sort might have been expected, were it only to save the reputation of
-_dissenting with civility_.”
-
-Now in answer to this question, which comes indeed to the point, and
-which I hear asked in all companies, I reply with much confidence,
-_first_, that the very foundation of it is laid in certain high fantastic
-notions about the duties of friendship, and in that vicious habit of
-civility that hath so long been prevalent among learned friends; both
-which props and pillars of the cause I may presume with great modesty to
-have entirely overturned.
-
-But _secondly_ and chiefly I say that the whole is an arrant
-misrepresentation; for that you have indeed proceeded in this affair,
-with all that civility and even friendliness that could in reason be
-expected from you: I mean so far as the sobriety and _Retenuë_, as the
-French term it (it is plain the virtue hath not been very common amongst
-us from our having no name to call it by) of a true critical friendship
-will allow.
-
-Now there are several ways by which a writer’s civility to his friend may
-appear without giving into the formal way of _address_: just as there are
-several ways of expressing his devotion to his patron, without observing
-the ordinary forms of _dedication_; of which, to note it by the way,
-the latest and best instances I have met with, are, “A certain thing
-prefatory to a learned work, entitled, _The Elements of Civil Law_,” and
-“Those curious two little paragraphs prefixed to _The Six Dissertations
-on different Subjects_.”
-
-You see the delicacy of the learned is improving in our days in more
-respects than one. And take my word for it, you have contributed your
-share to this good work. For as you began, so you conclude your volume
-with a master stroke of address, which will deserve the acknowledgment
-and imitation of all your brethren, as I now proceed distinctly and with
-great exactness of method to unfold.
-
-THE FIRST way of distinguishing a learned friend, without incurring the
-guilt of downright compliment, is by _writing on the same subject with
-him_. This is an obvious method of paying one’s court to a great writer.
-For it is in effect telling him that the public attention is raised
-to the argument he hath been debating; and that his credit hath even
-brought it into such vogue that any prate on the same subject is sure
-of a favourable reception. This I can readily suppose to have been your
-first motive for engaging in this controversy. And the practice is very
-frequent. So when a certain edition of SHAKESPEAR appeared, though it had
-been but the amusement of the learned editor, every body went to work, in
-good earnest, on the great poet, and the public was presently over-run
-with editions and criticisms and illustrations of him. Thus too it fared
-with the several subjects treated in the D. L. Few were competent judges
-of the main argument, or disposed to give it a candid interpretation.
-But every smatterer had something to say to this or that occasional
-disquisition. Thus SYKES, and STEBBING grew immortal, and, as the poet
-says truly, _in their own despite_. And what but some faint glimmering
-of this _bright reversion_, which we will charitably hope may be still
-kept in reserve for them, could put it into the heads of such men as
-WORTHINGTON, H. G. C.[120] and PETERS, to turn critics and commentators
-on the book of JOB?
-
-SECONDLY, Though I acknowledge the full merit of this way of treating
-a learned friend, I am rather more taken with another, which is that
-_of writing against him_. For this demonstrates the esteem one hath of
-the author’s work, not only as it may seem to imply a little generous
-rivalry or indeed envy, from which infirmity a truly learned spirit is
-seldom quite free, but as it shews the answerer thought it worth _writing
-against_; which, let me assure you, is no vulgar compliment; as many
-living writers can testify, who to this hour are sadly lamenting that
-their ill fortune hath never permitted them to rise to this distinction.
-Now, in this view of the matter, I must take leave to think that
-you have done a very substantial honour to the author of the famous
-_Discourse on the_ VIth _book of Virgil_, in levelling so long and so
-elaborate a disputation against him. And HE, of all other men, ought to
-be of my mind, who to my certain knowledge hath never done thus much
-for one in a hundred of those learned persons whose principal end in
-commencing writers against him was to provoke him to this civility.
-
-But then, THIRDLY, this compliment of _writing against_ a great author
-may be conveyed with that address, that he shall not appear, I mean to
-any but the more sagacious and discerning, to be _written against_ at
-all. This curious feat of _leger-de-main_ is performed _by glancing
-at his arguments without so much as naming the person or referring to
-him_. This I account the most delicate and flattering of all the arts
-of literary address, as it expresseth all the respect, I have taken
-notice of under the preceding article, heightened with a certain awe
-and fear of offence, which to a liberal mind, I should think, must
-be perfectly irresistible. It is with much pleasure I observe many
-examples of this kind in your truly candid dissertation, where without
-the least reference, or under the slight cover of—_some friends of
-Virgil say_[121]—_some commentators have thought_[122]—_Virgil’s friends
-suppose_[123]—and the like, you have dexterously and happily slid in
-a censure of some of your friend’s principal reasonings. But, to be
-impartial, though you manage this matter with admirable grace, the secret
-is in many hands. And whatever be the cause, hath been more frequently
-employed in the case of the author of the D. L. than any other. I could
-mention, at least, a dozen famous writers, who, like the flatterers of
-Augustus, don’t chuse to look him full in the face, but artfully intimate
-their reverence of him by indirect glances. If I single out one of
-these from all the rest it is only to gratify the admirers of a certain
-eminent PROFESSOR[124] who, as an Oxford friend writes me word, hath many
-delightful instances of this sort in his very edifying discourses on the
-HEBREW POETRY.
-
-FOURTHLY, Another contrivance of near affinity to this, is, when you
-oppose his principles indeed, _but let his arguments quite alone_. Of
-this management a wary reader will discover many traces in your obliging
-discourse. And can any thing be more generous than to ease a man of the
-shame of seeing his own reasonings confuted, or even produced when the
-writer’s purpose requires him to pay no regard to them? Such tenderness,
-I think, though it is pretended to by others, can, of right, belong only
-to the true friend. But your kindness knows no bounds. For,
-
-FIFTHLY, Though you find yourself sometimes obliged to produce and
-confute his reasonings, _you take care to furnish him with better of
-your own_. The delicacy of this conduct lies in the good opinion, which
-is insinuated of the writer’s conclusion, and in the readiness which you
-shew to support it even in spite of himself. There is a choice instance
-in that part of your discourse, where agreeing with your friend that the
-punishments of _Tartarus_ are properly _eternal_, you reject his reason
-for that conclusion, but supply him with many others in its stead.
-
-“This alone will not prove the eternity of punishments for, _&c._—BUT
-if to this you add the Platonic doctrine, that very wicked spirits were
-never released from _Tartarus_, AND the silence of _Virgil_ as to any
-dismission from that jail, AND the censure of the _Epicureans_, who
-objected to religious systems the eternity of punishments,
-
- _Æternas quoniam pœnas in morte timendum_;
-
-AND the general doctrine of the mythologists, AND the opinion of SERVIUS,
-that VIRGIL was to be taken in this sense, we may conclude that the
-punishments in his Tartarus were probably eternal[125].”
-
-Never let men talk after this of the niggardliness of your friendship,
-when, though you take from him with one hand, you restore him five-fold
-with the other.
-
-After such an overflow of goodness, nothing I can now advance will seem
-incredible. I take upon me to affirm therefore,
-
-SIXTHLY, That it is a mere calumny to say that you have contented
-yourself, though you very well might, with mere _negative_ encomiums.
-You can venture on occasion to _quote from your friend in form_, and,
-as it should seem, with some _apparent approbation_. An instance is
-now before me. You cite what the author of the D. L. says of “_the
-transformation of the ships into sea deities_, by which, says he, VIRGIL
-would insinuate, I suppose, the great advantage of cultivating a naval
-power, such as extended commerce and the dominion of the ocean: which in
-poetical language is becoming _deities of the sea_.”
-
-To which you add, “In _favour_ of this opinion it may be further
-observed, that AUGUSTUS owed his empire in a great measure to his naval
-victories[126].”
-
-Now can any thing be civiler than this, or more expressive of that
-amiable turn of mind, which disposes a man to help forward a lame
-argument of his friend, and give it the needful support of his authority?
-For it hath been delivered as a maxim by the nice observers of decorum,
-that wherever you would compliment another on his opinion, you should
-always endeavour to add something of your own that may insinuate at
-least some little defect in it. This management takes of the appearance
-of _flattery_, a vice which the Latin writers, alluding to this
-frequency of unqualified assent, have properly enough expressed by the
-word ASSENTATIO. But catch you tripping in this way if one can. It is
-plain you went on this just principle in the instance before us, which
-otherwise, let me tell you, I should have taken for something like an
-attempt towards downright adulation. As here qualified, I set it down for
-another instance of just compliment, more direct indeed than the other
-_five_, yet still with that graceful obliquity which they who know the
-world, expect in this sort of commerce. And I may further observe, that
-you are not singular in the use of this mode of celebration. Many even of
-the enemies of this author have obligingly enough employed it when they
-wanted to confirm their own notions by his, or rather to shew their parts
-in first catching a hint from him, and then, as they believe, improving
-upon it—Still I have greater things in view. For,
-
-SEVENTHLY, You not only with the highest address insinuate a compliment
-in the way of citation, but you once or twice _express it in full
-form_, and with all the circumstance of panegyrical approbation. Having
-mentioned the case of the infants in Virgil’s purgatory, which hath
-so much perplexed his learned commentators, you rise at once into the
-following encomium. “It is an _ingenious_ conjecture proposed in the D.
-L. that the poet might design to discountenance the cursed practice of
-exposing and murdering infants.”
-
-This was very liberal, and I began to think you had forgotten yourself
-a little in so explicit a declaration. But the next paragraph relieved
-me. “It might be added, that Virgil had perhaps _also_ in view to please
-Augustus, who was desirous of encouraging matrimony and the education
-of children, and extremely intent upon repeopling Italy which had been
-exhausted by the civil wars[127].” It is plain you have still in your eye
-that sage rule which the men of manners lay down, of _qualifying_ your
-civilities. So that I let this pass without farther observation. Only I
-take leave to warn you against the too frequent use of this artifice,
-which but barely satisfies for calling your friend’s notion “_an
-ingenious conjecture_.”
-
-Not but are there others who see this contrivance in another light, and
-treat it as an art of _damning with faint praise_; a censure which one
-of the zealot friends presumes to cast, with much injustice and little
-knowledge of the world, on the very leader and pride of our party.
-Whereas I deliver it for a most certain truth, that the fainter and
-feebler our praise of any man is, just so much the better will it be
-received by all companies, even by the generality of those who call
-themselves his best friends. And so apprehensive indeed am I of this nice
-humour in mankind, that I am not sure if the very slight things I am
-forced to say of yourself, though merely to carry on the purpose of this
-address, will not by certain persons, inwardly at least, be ill taken.
-And with this needful apology for myself I proceed to celebrate,
-
-EIGHTHLY, The last and highest instance of your civilities to your
-admired friend, which yet I hope to vindicate from any reasonable
-suspicion of flattery; I presumed to say in the foregoing article that
-you had _once or twice_ hazarded even a direct compliment on the person
-whose system you oppose. I expressed myself with accuracy. There is
-_one other_ place in your dissertation, where you make this sacrifice
-to friendship or to custom. The passage is even wrought up into a
-resemblance of that unqualified adulation, which I condemn so much, and
-from which, in general, your writings are perfectly free. I could almost
-wish for your credit to suppress this one obnoxious paragraph. But it
-runs thus,
-
-“That the subterraneous adventures of Æneas were intended by Virgil to
-represent the _initiation_ of his heroe, is an _elegant_ conjecture,
-which hath been laid before the public, and set forth to the best
-advantage _by a learned friend_[128].”
-
-I confess to you I did not know at first sight what to do with the
-two high-flown epithets, _elegant_ and _learned_, which stand so near
-together in one sentence. Such accumulated praises had well-nigh overset
-my system. And I began with much solicitude to consider how I should be
-able to reconcile this escape of your pen with your general practice.
-But taking a little time to look about me, I presently spied a way of
-extricating both of us from this difficulty. For hang it, thought I,
-if this notion of the heroe’s adventures in the infernal regions be
-_elegant_, it is but a conjecture; and so poor a matter as this were
-hardly worth pursuing, as the author of the D. L. hath done, through
-almost a fourth part of a very sizeable volume.
-
-And then as to the term _elegant_, to be sure it hath a good sound; but
-more than a _third_ part of this choice volume of yours, I observed,
-is employed in making appear that the conjecture, whatever it be, hath
-not the least feature of _truth_ in it. And _elegance_, altogether
-devoid of truth, was, I concluded, a very pitiful thing, and indeed no
-very intelligible encomium. Well, but let there be as little truth as
-you will, in this conjecture, still it _hath been set forth to the best
-advantage_, and to crown all _by a learned friend_. Here a swarm of fresh
-difficulties attacked me. _Sed nil desperandum te duce._ For why talk of
-_advantage_, when the conjecture after all would not bear the handling?
-It was but mighty little (your friendship would not let you do more)
-which you had brought against it. And the conjecture I saw, was shrunk to
-nothing, and is never likely to rise again into any shape or substance.
-So that when you added _by a learned friend_, I could not for my life,
-help laughing. Surely, thought I, the reverend person tends on this
-occasion to be pleasant.——Indeed you often are so with a very good grace,
-but I happened not to expect it just at this moment.—For what _learning_
-worth speaking of could there be in the support of a notion, which was so
-easily overturned without any?
-
-You may be sure I mean no reflection in these words. Nobody questions
-your erudition. But it was not your fortune or your choice to make a shew
-of it in this discourse. The propriety of the epithet _learned_, then,
-did not evidently and immediately appear.
-
-However, as I knew there was in truth no small quantity of learning in
-the piece referred to, and that the author of the D. L. whatever BATE,
-and PETERS, and JACKSON, may say or insinuate, is unquestionably, and to
-a very competent degree, learned, I began to take the matter a little
-more seriously. And, upon looking attentively at the words a second
-time, I thought a very natural account might be given of them upon other
-principles. For, as to the substantive _friend_, why might not that
-for once be put in for your own sake as well as his? The advantages of
-friendship are reciprocal. And though it be very clear to other people
-which is the gainer by this intercourse, who knows but Dr. JORTIN, in his
-great modesty, might suppose the odds to lie on his own side?
-
-And then for _learned_, which had embarrassed me so much, I bethought
-myself at last there was not much in that, this attribute having been
-long prostituted on every man who pretends, in any degree, to the
-profession of letters.
-
-So that, on the whole, though I must still reckon this for an instance,
-amongst others, of that due measure of respect with which your politeness
-teaches you to treat your friends, yet I see no reason for charging it
-with any excess of civility.
-
-And now, Sir, having been at all this pains to justify you from the two
-contrary censures of having done _too little_ and _too much_, let us see
-how the account stands. Malice itself, I think, must confess that you
-have not been lavish of your encomiums. You have even dispensed them
-with a reserve, which, though I admire extremely, will almost expose you
-to the imputation of _parsimony_. And yet, on the other hand, when we
-compute the number and estimate the value of your applauses, we shalt
-see cause to correct this censure. For, from the EIGHT articles I have
-so carefully set down, and considered, it appears at length that you
-have done all due honour to your friend, and in ways the most adapted
-to do him honour. That is to say, _You have adopted his subject—You
-have written against him—You have glanced at him—You have spared his
-arguments—You have lent him some of your own—You have quoted him—You have
-called his conjecture ingenious—Nay elegant—And you have called himself
-learned_, and, what is more, _your friend_.
-
-And if all this will not satisfy him, or rather his friends (for I hope,
-and partly believe, he himself thinks nothing of this whole matter),
-I know not for my part what will. I am sure (and that should be your
-satisfaction, as it is mine) that you have gone as far as was consistent
-with the _delicacy_ of friendship (which may reasonably imply in it a
-little jealousy), and with the virtuous consciousness of that importance
-which writers of your class ought to be of to themselves. And I hope
-never to see the day when you shall be induced by any considerations to
-compliment any man breathing at the expence of these two virtues.
-
-And here, on a view of this whole matter, let me profess the pleasure
-I take in observing that you (and I have remarked it in some others),
-who have so constantly those soft words of _candour_, _goodness_, and
-_charity_ in your mouth, and whose soul, one would think, was ready to
-melt itself into all the weaknesses of this character, should yet have
-force enough not to relent at the warmest influences of _friendship_.
-Men may see by this instance that _charity_ is not that unmanly
-enfeebling virtue which some would represent it, when, though ready on
-fit occasions to resolve and open itself to a _general_ candour, it shuts
-up the heart close and compact, and impregnable to any _particular_ and
-personal attachment.
-
-I take much delight in this pleasing contemplation. Yet, as our best
-virtues, when pushed to a certain degree, are on the very point of
-becoming vices, you are not to wonder that every one hath not the
-discernment or the justice to do you right. And to see, in truth, the
-malignity of human nature, and the necessity there was for you to
-inculcate in your _third_ Discourse, _The duty of judging candidly and
-favourably of others_, I will not conceal from you, at parting, what
-hath been suggested to me by many persons to whom I communicated the
-design of this address. “They said,” besides other things which I have
-occasionally obviated in the course of this letter, “that the excellent
-person whom you have allowed yourself to treat with so much indignity
-and disrespect (I need not take notice that I use the very terms of the
-objectors), in this poor and disingenuous criticism upon him, had set
-you an example of a very different sort, which you ought in common
-equity, and even decency, to have followed.” They observe that his own
-pen never expatiates more freely, and with more pleasure, than when it
-finds or takes an occasion to celebrate the virtues of some deserving
-friend. They own the natural warmth and benevolence of his temper is even
-liable to some excess on these inviting occasions. And for an instance
-they referred me to a paragraph in the notes on _Julian_, which, though
-I know you do not forget, I shall here set down as it stands in the last
-edition. He had just been touching a piece of ecclesiastical history.
-“But this,” says he, “I leave with Julian’s adventures to my learned
-friend Mr. JORTIN, who, I hope, will soon oblige the public with his
-curious Dissertations on Ecclesiastical Antiquity, composed like his
-Life, not in the spirit of _controversy_, nor, what is worse, of _party_,
-but of _truth_ and _candour_[129].”
-
-Here, said they insultingly, is a specimen of that truly liberal spirit
-with which one learned friend should exert himself when he would do
-honour to another. Will all the volumes which the profound ecclesiastical
-remarker hath published, or ever will publish, do him half the credit
-with posterity as this single stroke, by which his name and virtues are
-here adorned and ushered into the acquaintance of the public? And will
-you still pretend to vindicate him from the scorn which every honest man
-must have for him, after seeing how unworthily he requites this service
-by his famous SIXTH DISSERTATION in this new volume?
-
-This, and a great deal more to the same purpose, was said by them in
-their tragical way. I need not hint to you, after the clear exposition
-I have given of my own sentiments, how little weight their rhetoric had
-on me, and how easily I turned aside this impotent, though invenomed,
-invective from falling on your fame and memory. For the _compliment_
-they affect to magnify so much, let every candid reader judge of it for
-himself. But, as much had been said in this debate concerning FRIENDSHIP,
-and the persons with whom it was most proper to contract it, I found
-myself something struck with the concluding observation of one of these
-rhetorical declaimers. As it was delivered in a language you love, and
-is, besides, a passage not much blown upon by the dealers in such scraps,
-I have thought it might, perhaps, afford you some amusement. He did not
-say where he found it, and you would not like it the better if he had,
-but, as I remember, it was delivered in these words: Ἐμοὶ πρὸς φιλοσόφους
-ἐστὶ φιλία· πρὸς μέν τοι ΣΟΦΙΣΤΑΣ, ἢ ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΙΣΤΑΣ, ἢ τοιοῦτο γένος ἕτερον
-ΑΝΘΡΩΠΩΝ ΚΑΚΟΔΑΙΜΟΝΩΝ, ὄυτε ΝΥΝ ΕΣΤΙ ΦΙΛΙΑ ΜΗΤΕ ΥΣΤΕΡΟΝ ΠΟΤΕ ΓΕΝΟΙΤΟ.
-
-_Lincoln’s-Inn, Nov. 25, 1755._
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- LETTER
-
- TO
-
- THE REV. DR. LELAND.
-
- FIRST PRINTED IN 1764.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- LETTER
-
- TO THE
-
- REV. DR. THOMAS LELAND,
-
- FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN:
-
- IN WHICH
-
- HIS LATE DISSERTATION
-
- ON THE PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN ELOQUENCE
-
- IS CRITICISED;
-
- AND
-
- THE BISHOP OF GLOUCESTER’S
-
- _Idea of the Nature and Character of an
- inspired Language_, as delivered in his
- Lordship’s _Doctrine of Grace_,
-
- IS VINDICATED
-
- From ALL the Objections of the learned Author
- of the DISSERTATION.
-
-
-
-
-A LETTER TO THE REV. DR. LELAND.
-
-
-REV. SIR,
-
-I have read your DISSERTATION _on the principles of human Eloquence_, and
-shall very readily, I dare say, be indulged in the liberty, I am going
-to take, of giving you my free thoughts upon it. I shall do it, with all
-the regard that is due from one scholar to another; and even with all the
-civility which may be required ONE, who hath his reasons for addressing
-you, in this public manner, without a name.
-
-You entitle your work _A Dissertation on the principles of Eloquence_:
-but the real subject of it, is an _Opinion_, or _Paradox_, as you
-chuse to term it, delivered by the Bishop of _Gloucester_ in his late
-discourse _on Grace_. This opinion, indeed, concerns, or rather, in
-your ideas, subverts, _the very principles_ of Eloquence, which your
-office, it seems, in a learned society obliged you to maintain: so
-that you cannot be blamed for giving some attention to the ingenious
-Prelate’s paradox, which so incommodiously came in your way. Only the
-more intelligent of your hearers might possibly think it strange that,
-in a set of rhetorical lectures, addressed to them, the _Controversial_
-part should so much take the lead of the _Didactic_: or rather, that the
-_Didactic_ part should stand quite still, while the _Controversial_ keeps
-pacing it, with much alacrity, from one end of your Dissertation to the
-other.
-
-Yet neither, on second thoughts, can you be blamed for this conduct,
-which one way or other might serve to the instruction of your young
-auditory; if not in _the principles of Rhetoric_, yet in a better thing,
-_the principles of Logic_. It might, further, serve to another purpose,
-not unworthy the regard of a rhetoric lecturer. The subject of Eloquence
-has been so exhausted in the fine writings of antiquity, and, what is
-worse, has been so hackneyed in modern compilations from them, that your
-discourse wanted to be enlivened by the poignant controversial air, you
-have given to it, and to be made important, by bringing an illustrious
-character into the scene.
-
-All this I am ready to say in your vindication, if your conduct may be
-thought to require any. Having, therefore, nothing to object to the
-_general design_, or _mode_ of your dissertation, I shall confine myself
-entirely to the MATTER of it, after acquainting the reader, in few words,
-with the occasion and subject Of this debate.
-
-The Bishop of _Gloucester_, in late theological treatise on _the
-doctrine of Grace_, which required him to speak fully to the subject of
-_inspiration_, found it necessary to obviate an objection to what he
-conceived to be the right notion of _inspired scripture_, which had been
-supported by some ingenious men, and very lately by Dr. MIDDLETON. The
-objection is delivered by the learned Doctor, in these words.
-
-“If we allow the gift [of inspired languages] to be lasting, we must
-conclude that some at least of the books of scripture were in this
-inspired Greek. But we should naturally expect to find an inspired
-language to be such as is worthy of God; that is, pure, clear, noble and
-affecting, even beyond the force of common speech; since nothing can come
-from God but what is perfect in its kind. In short, the purity of PLATO,
-and the eloquence of CICERO. Now, if we try the apostolic language by
-this rule, we shall be so far from ascribing it to God, that we shall
-scarcely think it worthy of man, that is, of the liberal and polite; it
-being utterly rude and barbarous, and abounding with every fault that can
-possibly deform a language. And though some writers, prompted by a false
-zeal, have attempted to defend the purity of the Scripture-Greek, their
-labour has been idly employed[130].” Thus far the learned DOCTOR.
-
-‘These triumphant observations,’ says the Bishop, ‘are founded on two
-propositions, both of which he takes for granted, and yet neither of them
-is true:
-
-‘The one, That an inspired language must needs be a language of perfect
-eloquence;
-
-‘The other, That eloquence is something congenial and essential to human
-speech[131].’
-
-The BISHOP then undertakes to shew the falshood of these two
-propositions. YOU, Sir, contend for the truth of the _latter_: and
-controvert the principles on which the Bishop would confute the _former_.
-That the reader may be enabled to judge for himself between you, I shall
-quote his Lordship’s own words, paragraph by paragraph, so far as any
-thing said by him is controverted by you; and shall then endeavour,
-with all care, to pick up the loose ends of your argument, as I find
-them any where _come up_ in the several chapters of your Dissertation;
-intermixing, as I go along, such reflexions of my own, as the occasion
-may suggest.
-
-‘With regard to the FIRST proposition (resumes the Bishop) I will be bold
-to affirm, that were the STYLE of the New Testament exactly such as his
-[Dr. MIDDLETON’S] very exaggerated account of if would persuade us to
-believe, namely that it is _utterly rude and barbarous, and abounding
-with every fault that can possibly deform a language_, this is so far
-from proving such language not divinely inspired, that it is one certain
-mark of this original[132].’
-
-By the manner, in which the learned Bishop introduces this _affirmation_,
-one sees that he foresaw very clearly it would be esteemed a _bold_
-one. Nay, in another place[133], he even takes to himself the shame,
-with which some readers, he well knew, would be forward enough to cover
-him, and in one word confesses his general notion of eloquence to be a
-PARADOX: _which yet_, says he, _like so many others, I have had the odd
-fortune to advance, will be seen to be only another name, for_ TRUTH.
-After this concession, it had been more generous in you to have omitted
-some invidious passages; such as that where you say, _the Bishop in his
-reply to this objection_ [of Dr. MIDDLETON] _seems to have displayed
-that_ BOLD OPPOSITION TO THE GENERAL OPINIONS OF MANKIND, _by which his
-learned labours are distinguished_; Intr. p. ii. And again in p. vii.
-where you speak of his principles as _paradoxical_, and implying AN HARDY
-OPPOSITION TO THE GENERAL SENSE OF MANKIND.
-
-But let the _boldness_ of the Bishop’s principles be what it will, there
-is small hurt done, provided they turn out, what he seems persuaded they
-will, only _truths_. Let us attend his Lordship, then, in the proof of
-his FIRST Paradox.
-
-‘I will not pretend, says he, to point out which books of the N. T. were,
-or were not, composed by those who had the Greek tongue thus miraculously
-infused into them; but this I will venture to say, that the style of a
-writer so inspired, who had not (as these writers had not) afterwards
-cultivated his knowledge of the language on the principles of Grecian
-eloquence, would be precisely such as we find it in the books of the New
-Testament.
-
-‘For, if this only be allowed, which no one, I think, will contest with
-me, that a strange language acquired by illiterate men, in the ordinary
-way, would be full of the idioms of their native tongue, just as the
-Scripture-Greek is observed to be full of Syriasms, and Hebraisms;
-how can it be pretended, by those who reflect upon the nature of
-language, that a strange tongue divinely infused into illiterate men,
-like that at the day of Pentecost, could have any other properties and
-conditions[134]?’
-
-Here, the features of this bold paradox begin to soften a little. We are
-something reconciled to it, 1. by being told, what the _rudeness and
-barbarity_ is, which is affirmed to be _one certain mark_ of an inspired
-language, namely, _its being full of the idioms of the native tongue_ of
-the inspired writer: And 2. by being told, that these idioms are equally
-to be expected whether the new language be infused by divine inspiration,
-or acquired by illiterate men in the ordinary way. In the _latter_
-case, it is presumed, and surely with reason enough (because experience
-uniformly attests the fact), that a strange language, so learnt, would
-abound in the native idioms of the learner: All that remains is to shew,
-that the event would be the same, in the _former_. The Bishop then
-applies himself, in order, to this task.
-
-‘Let us weigh these cases impartially. Every language consists of two
-distinct parts; the single terms, and the phrases and idioms. The
-first, as far as concerns appellatives especially, is of mere arbitrary
-imposition, though on artificial principles common to all men: The second
-arises insensibly, but constantly, from the manners, customs, and tempers
-of those to whom the language is vernacular; and so becomes, though
-much less arbitrary (as what the Grammarians call _congruity_ is more
-concerned in this part than in the other), yet various and different
-as the several tribes and nations of mankind. The first therefore is
-unrelated to every thing but to the genius of language in general;
-the second hath an intimate connexion with the fashions, notions, and
-opinions of that people only, to whom the language is native.
-
-‘Let us consider then the constant way which illiterate men take to
-acquire the knowledge of a foreign tongue. Do they not make it their
-principal, and, at first, their only study, to treasure up in their
-memory the signification of the terms? Hence, when they come to talk or
-write in the speech thus acquired, their language is found to be full of
-their own native idioms. And thus it will continue, till by long use of
-the strange tongue, and especially by long acquaintance with the owners
-of it, they have imbibed the particular genius of the language.
-
-‘Suppose then this foreign tongue, instead of being thus gradually
-introduced into the minds of these illiterate men, was instantaneously
-infused into them; the operation (though not the very mode of operating)
-being the same, must not the effect be the same, let the cause be never
-so different? Without question. The divine impression must be made
-either by fixing the terms or single words only and their signification
-in the memory; as for instance, Greek terms corresponding to the Syriac
-or Hebrew; or else, together with that simple impression, another must
-be made, to inrich the mind with all the ideas which go towards the
-composing the phrases and idioms of the language so inspired: But this
-latter impression seems to require, or rather indeed implies, a previous
-one, of the tempers, fashions, and opinions of the people to whom the
-language is native, upon the minds of them to whom the language is thus
-imparted; because the phrase and idiom arises from, and is dependent on,
-those manners: and therefore the force of expression can be understood
-only in proportion to the knowledge of the manners: and understood they
-were to be; the Recipients of this spiritual gift being not organical
-canals, but rational Dispensers. So that this would be a waste of
-miracles without a sufficient cause; the Syriac or Hebrew idiom, to
-which the Disciples were enabled of themselves to adapt the words of the
-Greek, or any other language, abundantly serving every useful purpose,
-all which centered in giving CLEAR INTELLIGENCE. We conclude, therefore,
-that what was thus inspired was the TERMS, together with that grammatic
-congruity, which is dependant thereon. In a word, to suppose such kind
-of inspired knowledge of _strange tongues_ as includes all the native
-peculiarities, which, if you will, you may call their _elegancies_; (for
-the more a language is coloured by the character and manners of the
-native users, the more elegant it is esteemed) to suppose this, is, as I
-have said, an ignorant fancy, and repugnant to reason and experience.
-
-‘Now, from what has been observed, it follows, that if the style of the
-N. T. were indeed derived from a language divinely infused as on the
-day of Pentecost, it must be just such, with regard to its style, as,
-in fact, we find it to be; that is to say, Greek words very frequently
-delivered in Syriac and Hebrew idiom.
-
-‘The conclusion from the whole is this, that _nominal_ or _local_
-barbarity of style (for that this attribute, when applied to style, is no
-more than nominal or local, will be clearly shewn under our next head) is
-so far from being an objection to its miraculous acquisition, that it is
-one mark of such extraordinary original[135].’
-
-I have given this long quotation together, that the reader may comprehend
-at one view the drift and coherence of the Bishop’s argument: which is so
-clearly explained that what force it hath, can receive no addition from
-any comment of mine upon it.
-
-It is true, this force appears to you no mighty matter—“We are told, you
-say, that, in order to convey clear intelligence to a foreigner, nothing
-more is necessary, than to use the _words_ of his language adapted to the
-_idiom_ of our own. But shall we always find correspondent words in his
-language[136]?”
-
-Shall _we always find correspondent words_?—Not always, _perfectly_
-correspondent. Where does the Bishop say, we shall? Or, how was it to
-his purpose to say it? He does indeed speak of _such a correspondency of
-terms_, and chiefly _of such an adaption of the terms of one language
-to the idiom of another_, as shall abundantly serve to give _clear
-intelligence_. And this is all he had occasion to say.
-
-Well, but an exact correspondency of terms is material. To what? To give
-_clear intelligence_? But if this be true, no clear intelligence can
-possibly be given in any translation from one language into another;
-for, in all translations whatever, it is necessary to render some words
-by others, that are not perfectly correspondent. You will scarcely deny
-that our English translation of the Gospels conveys, in general, _clear
-intelligence_ to the English reader, though many terms are used in it,
-and were of necessity to be used, that do not perfectly and adequately
-correspond to the Greek terms, employed by the sacred writers. Without
-doubt it was your purpose to convey _clear intelligence_ to your
-English reader in the elegant translations, they say, you have made of
-DEMOSTHENES: and yet doubtless you will acknowledge that many words of
-the Athenian orator are not perfectly correspondent to those employed by
-you in your version of them.
-
-What follows from this? Why, either that all translations must be
-exploded and set aside as insufficient to give clear intelligence, or
-that we must accept them, with all their unavoidable imperfections, as,
-in general, sufficiently representative of the sense of their originals,
-though in some particulars that sense be inadequately conveyed to us.
-
-But how then, you will say, shall we gain a clear and perfect
-intelligence of such particulars? Why in the way, which common sense
-suggests; by inquiring, if we are able, what the precise meaning is of
-those terms of the original language, to which the translated terms are
-thus imperfectly correspondent. And if this be an inconvenience, ’tis an
-inconvenience necessarily attending every translation in the world, in
-which a writer would express the mixed modes denoted by the words of any
-other. For supposing the Greek tongue, infused by divine inspiration into
-the sacred writers, to have been that of PLATO or DEMOSTHENES himself,
-you will hardly pretend that it could have furnished them with Greek
-terms perfectly expressive of such compound ideas as certain Syriac or
-Hebrew terms expressed, and of which their subject obliged them to give,
-as far as the nature of the case would permit, _clear intelligence_. So
-that I cannot for my life comprehend the drift of that short question,
-_Shall we always find correspondent terms in a foreign language?_ or,
-the pertinence of your learned comment on the text of CICERO’S letter to
-SERVIUS.
-
-I am sensible indeed, that, if the _terms_ only of the new language
-were divinely infused, _these_, whether perfectly correspondent or not,
-would be insufficient of themselves to give clear intelligence. But the
-Bishop supposes more than this to be infused; for, _what was inspired,
-he tells us, was the terms_, TOGETHER _with that grammatic congruity
-which is dependent thereon_. Now this knowledge of the _grammatic
-congruity_ of any tongue, superadded to a knowledge of its _terms_, would
-methinks enable a writer to express himself in it, for the most part,
-_intelligibly_.
-
-I confess, the Bishop speaks—_of fixing the terms or single words_ ONLY,
-_and their signification, in the memory_—But then he does not mean to
-exclude the _grammatic congruity_ in the use of them, which, as we have
-seen, he expressly requires in the very same paragraph, but merely to
-expose the notion of the _phrases and idioms_ being required, too. His
-Lordship speaks of the _terms, or single words_ ONLY, in opposition to
-_phrases and idioms_: you seem to speak of _terms, or single words_ ONLY,
-in opposition to _systematic congruity_.
-
-I say, you _seem_ so to speak: for, otherwise, I know not what to make
-of all you say concerning the insufficiency of the _terms only_ of any
-language to give intelligence. And yet, in what follows, you _seem_ to
-do justice to the Bishop, and to admit that, besides the _terms_, a
-_grammatic congruity in the use of them_ was divinely inspired. For you
-go on to observe, “That the real purport of almost every sentence, in
-every language, is not to be learned from the signification of detached
-words, _and their grammatical congruity_, even where their signification
-may be expressed by correspondent words in another language[137].”
-
-And here, Sir, your learning expatiates through several pages: the
-purpose of all which is to shew, that, if the _terms_ of one language,
-though _congruously used_, be strictly adapted to the _idiom_ of another,
-still they would give no intelligence, or at least a very obscure
-one; as you endeavour to prove by a _decent_ instance taken from your
-countryman, SWIFT, in his dotages; and another, given by yourself in a
-literal version of a long passage of a sacred writer. It is true, in this
-last instance, you do not confine yourself to the strict observance of
-_grammatic congruity_. If you had done this, it would have appeared, from
-your own instance, that _intelligence_ might have been given, and with
-tolerable _clearness_ too, even in a literal version.
-
-But be it allowed, that, if the terms of one language, even though a
-congruous construction be observed, be constantly and strictly adapted
-to the _idioms_ of another, the expression will still, many times, be
-very dark and obscure: how is this _obscurity_ to be prevented? Take what
-language you will for the conveyance instruction, it will be necessary
-for the reader or hearer to gain a competent knowledge of its idioms
-and phraseology, before he can receive the full benefit of it. So that,
-unless there had been a language in the world, native to all nations, and
-in the strictest sense of the word _universal_, I see not how inspiration
-itself could remedy this inconvenience. Suppose, as I said before, that
-the inspired language in which the Apostles wrote had been the purest
-Greek, still its _idiomatic phraseology_ had been as strange and obscure
-to all such to whom that language was not native, as the Syriac or Hebrew
-idioms, by which the Apostolic Greek is now supposed to be so much
-darkened.
-
-I conclude upon the whole, that nothing you have said overturns, or so
-much as affects, the learned Prelate’s notion of divine inspiration, _as
-conveying only the terms and single words of one language, corresponding
-to those of another, together with that grammatic congruity in the use
-of them which is dependant thereon_. This _first and grand principle_,
-as you call it, of the Bishop’s new theory, _is such_, you say, _as no
-critic or grammarian can admit_[138]. On the contrary, I must presume
-to think, because I have now shewn, that no critic or grammarian, who
-deserves the name, can reasonably object to this _principle_, as it
-allows all that is necessary to be supposed of an inspired language, its
-sufficiency to give clear intelligence: so _clear_, that, had the idioms
-of the new language been inspired too, it could not, in the general view
-of Providence, who intended this intelligence for the use of all people
-and languages, have been clearer.
-
-But your unfavourable sentiment of the Bishop’s principle arises
-from your misconception of the _circumstances_, _abilities_, and
-_qualifications_ of the Apostles, when they addressed themselves to the
-work of their ministry, and especially to the work of composing books
-for the instruction of the faithful in this originally inspired language.
-
-When the Greek language was first infused, it would, no doubt, be full of
-their native phrases, or rather it would be wholly and entirely adapted
-to the Hebrew or Syriac idioms. This would render their expression
-somewhat dark and obscure to their Grecian hearers. But then it would be
-intelligible enough to those to whom they first and principally addressed
-themselves, the _Hellenistic Jews_, who, though they understood Greek
-best, were generally no strangers to the Hebrew idiom.
-
-Further still, though this Hebrew-Greek language was all that was
-originally infused into the Apostles, nothing hinders but that they
-might, in the ordinary way, improve themselves in the Greek tongue,
-and superadd to their inspired knowledge whatever they could acquire,
-besides, by their conversation with the native Greeks, and the study of
-their language. For, though it can hardly be imagined, as the Bishop
-says, _that the inspired writers had cultivated their knowledge of the
-language on the principles of the Grecian eloquence_[139], that is, had
-formed and perfected their style by an anxious and critical attention to
-the rules and practice of the Greek rhetors, yet we need not conclude
-that they wholly neglected to improve themselves in the knowledge and use
-of this new language. So that, by the time they turned themselves to the
-Gentiles, and still more by the time they applied themselves to pen the
-books of the N. T. they might be tolerable masters even of the peculiar
-phraseology of the Greek tongue, and might be able to adapt it, in good
-measure, to the Greek idioms.
-
-All this, I say, is very _supposeable_; because their turning to the
-Gentiles was not till near TEN years after the descent of the Holy Ghost
-upon the Apostles and the date of their earliest writings, penned for
-the edification of the Church, was not till near TWENTY years after that
-period: In all which time, they had full leisure and opportunity to
-acquire a competent knowledge of the native idiomatic Greek, abundantly
-sufficient to answer all ends of clearness and instruction.
-
-But I go further, and say, It is not only very _supposeable_, and
-perfectly consistent with all the Bishop has advanced on the subject of
-inspiration, that the sacred writers _might_ thus improve themselves,
-but it is, likewise, very _clear_ and _certain_ that they DID. How else
-are we to account for that difference of style observable in the sacred
-writers, whose expression is more or less coloured by their native Hebrew
-idioms, according as their acquaintance with the Greek tongue was more or
-less perfect? There were still, no doubt, very many of their own native
-idioms interspersed in their most improved Greek: As must ever be the
-case of writers who compose in a foreign tongue, whether acquired in the
-ordinary way, or supernaturally infused into them: But these barbarisms,
-as they are called, I mean these Syriasms or Hebraisms, are not so
-constant and perpetual as to prevent their writings from giving _clear
-intelligence_. In short, the style of the inspired writers is JUST that
-which we should naturally expect it to be, on this supposition of its
-being somewhat improved by use and exercise, and which the learned Bishop
-_accurately_ (and in perfect _consistency_ with his main principle, _of
-the terms only being inspired, with the congruous use of them_) defines
-it to be, “_Greek words_ VERY FREQUENTLY _delivered in Syriac and Hebrew
-idiom_[140].”
-
-Thus, in every view, the Bishop’s _grand_ principle may be safely
-admitted. All that we _need_ suppose, and therefore all that is
-_reasonable_ to be supposed, is, _That the terms of the Greek language,
-and a grammatical congruity in the use of them_, was miraculously
-infused: The rest would be competently and sufficiently obtained by the
-application of ordinary means, without a miracle.
-
-After saying so little, or rather after saying indeed _nothing_,
-that affects the Bishop’s principle, I cannot but think it is with
-an ill grace you turn yourself to cavil at the _following incidental
-observation_ of his Lordship, which yet will be found as true and as just
-as any other he has made on this subject.
-
-To those who might expect _that, besides the simple impression of the
-Greek terms only, and their signification_ on the minds of the inspired
-linguists, _another should have been made to inrich the mind with all
-the ideas which go towards the composing the phrases and idioms of the
-language so inspired_ (all which had been necessary, if the inspired
-language had been intended for a perfect model of Grecian eloquence),
-the Bishop replies—‘This latter impression seems to require, or rather
-indeed implies, a previous one of the tempers, fashions, and opinions, of
-the people to whom the language is native, upon the minds of them to whom
-the language is thus imparted; because the phrase and idiom arises from,
-and is dependent on those manners[141].’ But such an impression as this,
-he goes on to shew, was not to be expected.
-
-It is clear from this passage, that the Bishop is speaking of _an
-impression_ necessary to be made on the minds of the Apostles, if the
-inspired language had been so complete as to extend to all its native
-phrases and idioms. If the Apostles were instantly to possess the
-inspired Greek in this perfection, it is necessary to suppose that this
-_last_ impression must, as well as that of the terms, be made upon them.
-Can any thing, be more certain and undeniable than this _affirmation?_
-Yet, in p. 86. of your book, you have this strange passage.
-
-After having shewn, as you suppose, that the Bishop’s grand principle, of
-the inspiration of the TERMS only, stands on a very insecure foundation,
-“Perhaps,” you say, “it is no less HAZARDOUS to affirm, that a knowledge
-of the idiom or phraseology of any language, _always_ implies a previous
-knowledge of the customs and manners of those to whom it is vernacular.”
-
-You intended, no doubt, in your censure of this hazardous position, to
-oppose something which the Bishop had affirmed. Be pleased now to cast
-your eye on the passage you criticize, and tell me where the Bishop
-asserts, _that a_ KNOWLEDGE _of the idiom or phraseology of any language_
-ALWAYS _implies a previous knowledge of the customs and manners of
-those to whom it is vernacular_. What the Bishop asserts is, _That an_
-IMPRESSION _of the phrases and idioms of an inspired language implies
-a previous_ IMPRESSION _of the tempers, fashions, and opinions of the
-people to whom the language is native, upon the minds of them to who
-the language is_ THUS _imparted_: that is, if a knowledge of the idioms
-had been _impressed_, a knowledge of the customs and manners from which
-those idioms arise, and without a knowledge of which they could not be
-understood (as they were to be, by the recipients of this spiritual
-gift), must have been _impressed_ likewise. No, you say: a _knowledge_ of
-the idiom of a language does not _always_ imply a previous _knowledge_
-of the manners. Who says, it does? We may come to _know_ the idioms of
-languages, without a _divine impression_: and without such impression,
-for any thing appears to the contrary, the Bishop might suppose the
-sacred writers came by their knowledge, so far as they possessed it,
-of the Greek idioms. But the _impression_ of such idioms could only
-come from another and _previous impression_ of the customs and manners:
-because in this case, without a previous impression of the _customs and
-manners_, the _idioms_ themselves, when impressed, could not have been
-understood, nor consequently put to use, by the persons on whom this
-impression was made. They had no time to recur to Lexicons, Grammars, and
-Commentaries to know the meaning of the impressed idioms. How then were
-they, on the instant, to know their meaning at all, but by a _previous
-impression_ of the manners, from which they arose, and which would put
-them into a capacity of understanding these impressed idioms?
-
-In a word, the Bishop is speaking of SUPERNATURAL IMPRESSION: you, of
-NATURAL KNOWLEDGE. No wonder, then, your reasoning and your learning,
-in the concluding pages of this chapter, should look entirely _beside_
-the matter in hand, or, at best, should look so _askew_ on the Bishop’s
-_hazardous_ position. It is certain, you are far enough out of all danger
-of encountering it, when you entrench yourself, at length, behind this
-distant and secure conclusion—“that the knowledge of idiom is so far from
-requiring, or implying a previous one of tempers, manners, _&c._ that the
-very CONVERSE of this seems to be the safer principle; and that tempers
-and manners are not to be learned, without some degree of previous
-acquaintance with the peculiarities of a language[142]:” a proposition,
-which though exceptionable enough, as you put it, and even suggesting
-some pleasant ideas, I am in no humour, at present, to contest with you.
-
-This, SIR, IS THE WHOLE of what I find advanced by you, that hath any
-shew or appearance of being intended as a Confutation of the argument
-by which the Bishop supports his FIRST PARADOX; in opposition to Dr.
-MIDDLETON’S opinion, _That an inspired language must needs be a language
-of perfect eloquence_. The Bishop has told us in very accurate terms what
-he conceives the character of an inspired language must needs be: and I
-have at least shewn, that the character he gives of it may be a just
-one, notwithstanding any thing you have objected to it in your learned
-Dissertation.
-
-I now proceed to the Bishop’s SECOND PARADOX; which opposes Dr.
-MIDDLETON’S _second Proposition, That eloquence is something congenial
-and essential to human speech, and inherent in the constitution of
-things_.
-
-‘This supposes, says the Bishop, ‘that there is some certain ARCHETYPE
-in nature, to which that quality refers, and on which it is formed and
-modelled. And, indeed, admitting this to be the case, one should be
-apt enough to conclude, that when the Author of nature condescended to
-inspire one of these plastic performances of human art, he would make it
-by the exactest pattern of the _Archetype_.
-
-‘But the proposition is fanciful and false. Eloquence is not congenial
-or essential to human speech, nor is there any Archetype in nature to
-which that quality refers. It is accidental and arbitrary, and depends
-on custom and fashion: it is a mode of human communication which changes
-with the changing climates of the Earth; and is as various and unstable
-as the genius, temper, and manners of its diversified inhabitants.
-For what is PURITY but the use of such terms, with their multiplied
-combinations, as the interest, the complexion, or the caprice of a writer
-or speaker of authority hath preferred to its equals? What is ELEGANCE
-but such a turn of idiom as a fashionable fancy hath brought into repute?
-And what is SUBLIMITY but the application of such images, as arbitrary or
-casual connexions, rather than their own native grandeur, have dignified
-and ennobled? Now ELOQUENCE is a compound of these three qualities of
-speech, and consequently must be as nominal and unsubstantial as its
-constituent parts. So that, that mode of composition, which is a model of
-_perfect eloquence_ to one nation or people, must appear extravagant or
-mean to another. And thus in fact it was. Indian and Asiatic eloquence
-were esteemed hyperbolic, unnatural, abrupt and puerile to the more
-phlegmatic inhabitants of _Rome_ and _Athens_. And the Western eloquence,
-in its turn, appeared nerveless and effeminate, frigid or insipid, to
-the hardy and inflamed imaginations of the East. Nay, what is more,
-each species, even of the most approved genus, changed its nature with
-the change of clime and language; and the same expression, which, in
-one place, had the utmost _simplicity_, had, in another, the utmost
-_sublime_[143].’
-
-The Bishop then proceeds to illustrate this last observation by a
-famous instance, taken from the first chapter of _Genesis_, and then
-recapitulates and enforces his general argument in the following manner.
-
-‘Apply all this to the books of the N. T. an authorized collection,
-professedly designed for the rule and direction of mankind. Now such a
-rule demanded that it should be inspired of God. But inspired writing,
-the objectors say, implies the most _perfect eloquence_. What human
-model then was the Holy Ghost to follow? And a human model, of arbitrary
-construction, it must needs be, because there was no other: Or, if there
-were another, it would never suit the purpose, which was to make an
-impression on the minds and affections; and this impression, such an
-eloquence only as that which had gained the popular ear, could effect.
-Should therefore the _Eastern_ eloquence be employed? But this would be
-too inflated and gigantic for the _West_. Should it be the _Western_?
-But this would be too cold and torpid for the _East_. Or, suppose the
-_generic_ eloquence of the more polished nations was to be preferred,
-which _species_ of it was to be employed? The rich exuberance of the
-Asiatic Greeks, or the dry conciseness of the Spartans? The pure and
-poignant ease and flowing sweetness of the Attic modulation, or the
-strength and grave severity of the Roman tone? Or should all give way
-to that African torrent, which arose from the fermented mixture of the
-dregs of _Greece_ and _Italy_, and soon after overflowed the Church
-with theological conceits in a sparkling luxuriancy of thought, and a
-sombrous rankness of expression? Thus various were the species’s! all
-as much decried by a different genus, and each as much disliked by a
-different species, as the eloquence of the remotest East and West, by one
-another[144].’
-
-Thus far the learned Bishop, _with the spirit and energy_, as you well
-observe, _of an ancient orator_[145]; and, let me add, with a justness
-and force of reasoning, which would have done honour to the best
-ancient Philosopher. But here we separate again. You maintain, with Dr.
-MIDDLETON, _that eloquence is something congenial and essential to
-human speech_: While _I_, convinced by the Bishop’s reasoning in these
-paragraphs, maintain that it assuredly is not.
-
-The subject, indeed, affords great scope to your rhetorical faculties;
-and the cause, you maintain, being that, as you conceive, of the antient
-orators, and even of eloquence itself, you suffer your enthusiasm to bear
-you away, without controul; and, as is the natural effect of enthusiasm,
-with so little method and precision of argument, that a cool examiner of
-your work hardly knows how to follow you, or where to take aim at you,
-in your aery and uncertain flight. However, I shall do my best to reduce
-your Rhetoric to Reason; I mean, to represent the substance of what you
-seem to intend by way of argument against the Bishop’s principle, leaving
-your eloquence to make what impression on the gentle reader it may.
-
-And, FIRST, in opposition, as you suppose, to the Bishop’s tenet, “_That
-eloquence is_ NOT _something congenial and essential to human speech_,”
-you apply yourself to shew, through several chapters, that tropes,
-metaphors, allegories, and universally what are called by Rhetoricians
-_figures of speech_, are natural and necessary expressions of the
-passions, and have their birth in the very reason and constitution of
-things. To make out this important point is the sole drift of your I, II,
-III, and IVᵗʰ Chapters; in which you seem to me to be contending for that
-which nobody denies, and to be disputing without an opponent. At least,
-you can hardly believe that the Bishop of _Gloucester_ is to be told,
-that metaphors, allegories, and similitudes are the offspring of nature
-and necessity, HE, who has, _with the utmost justness and elegance of
-reasoning_, as you well observe[146], explained this very point, himself,
-in the DIVINE LEGATION.
-
-What then are we to conclude from these elaborate chapters? Why, that by
-some unlucky mistake or other, let us call it only by the softer name, of
-_inattention_, you have entirely misrepresented the scope and purpose of
-all the Bishop has said on the subject of eloquence. And that this is no
-hasty or groundless charge, but the very truth of the case, will clearly
-be seen from a brief examination of the Bishop’s theory, compared with
-your reasonings upon it.
-
-The position, _that eloquence is something congenial and essential to
-human speech, supposes_, says the Bishop, _that there is some certain
-Archetype in nature, to which that quality refers, and on which it is to
-be formed and modelled_.
-
-The Bishop, you see, requires an _Archetype_ to be pointed out to him of
-that consummate eloquence, which is said to be _congenial and essential
-to human speech_. The demand is surely reasonable; and not difficult
-to be complied with, if such an Archetype do, in fact, subsist. But do
-you know of any such? Do you refer him to any such? Do you specify that
-_composition_? or do you so much as delineate that _sort_ of composition,
-which will pass upon all men under the idea of an Archetype? Nothing of
-all this. Permit us then to attend to the Bishop’s reasoning, by which he
-undertakes to prove that no such Archetype does or can exist.
-
-‘The proposition [that asserts, there is such an Archetype] is fanciful
-and false. Eloquence is not congenial or essential to human speech, nor
-is there any Archetype in nature to which that quality refers. It is
-accidental and arbitrary, and depends on custom and fashion: It is a mode
-of human communication which changes with the changing climates of the
-earth; and is as various and unstable as the genius, temper, and manners
-of its diversified inhabitants[147].’
-
-The Bishop asserts _there is no Archetype_, because eloquence is a
-variable thing, depending on custom and fashion; is nothing absolute
-in itself; but relative to the fancies and prejudices of men, and
-changeable, as the different climes they inhabit. This _general_ reason
-seems convincing: it appeals to fact, to experience, to the evidence of
-sense. But the learned Prelate goes further. He analyzes the complex
-idea of eloquence: he examines the qualities of speech, of which it is
-made up; and he shews that they are nominal and unsubstantial. Hence
-it follows, again, That there is no Archetype in nature of perfect
-eloquence; its very constituent parts, as they are deemed, having no
-substance or reality in them.
-
-But why should the Bishop condescend to this analysis, when his _general
-argument_ seemed decisive of the question? For a good reason. When the
-Bishop asked for an ARCHETYPE, though you are shy of producing any, he
-well knew that the masters of Eloquence, those I mean who are accounted
-such in these parts of the world, had pretended to give one. He knew
-the authority of these masters of human speech with the sort of men, he
-had to deal with: he therefore takes the Archetype, they have given, and
-shews, upon their own ideas of eloquence, it is a mere phantom.
-
-It is not to be supposed that the Bishop, in touching incidentally the
-question of Eloquence in a theological treatise, should follow the Greek
-and Latin rhetors through all the niceties and distinctions of their Art,
-or should amuse himself or us with a minute detail of all the particulars
-which go to the making up of this mighty compound, their ARCHETYPAL IDEA
-of human eloquence. If he had been so pleased, and had had no better
-business on his hands, it is likely he could have told us _news_, as you
-have done, out of ARISTOTLE, LONGINUS, and CICERO. But his manner is
-to say no more on a subject, than the occasion makes necessary; which,
-in the present case, was no more than to acquaint his reader, in very
-general terms, with the constituent parts of eloquence; which he resolves
-into these three, PURITY, ELEGANCE, and SUBLIMITY.
-
-But this you call _a most illogical division of Eloquence; for that the
-Bishop hath not only enumerated the constituent parts imperfectly; but,
-of the three qualities which he hath exhibited, the first is included in
-the second, and the third is not necessarily and universally a part of
-eloquence_[148].
-
-The _enumeration_, you say, _is imperfect_. Yet _Purity_, I think,
-denotes whatever comes under the idea of PROPRIETY, that is, of approved
-custom, as well as grammatical use, in any language: _Elegance_,
-expresses all those embellishments of composition, which are the effect
-of ART: and I know no fitter term than _Sublimity_, to stand for those
-qualities of eloquence, which are derived from the efforts of Genius,
-or NATURAL PARTS. Now what else can be required to complete the idea of
-Eloquence, and what defect of logic can there be in comprehending the
-various properties of human speech under these three generic names? The
-division is surely so natural and so intelligible, that few readers, I
-believe, will be disposed to object with you, _that the first of the
-three qualities is included in the second, and that the third is not
-necessarily and universally a part of eloquence_.
-
-But let the Bishop’s enumeration be ever so _logical_, you further
-quarrel with his _idea_ of these three constituent parts of eloquence,
-and his reasoning upon them.
-
-‘What; says his Lordship, is PURITY but the use of such terms with their
-multiplied combinations, as the interest, the complexion, or the caprice
-of a writer or speaker of authority hath preferred to its equals?’
-
-This idea of purity in language you think strange; and yet in the very
-chapter in which you set yourself to contemplate and to reprobate this
-_strange idea_, you cannot help resolving _purity_, into _usage and
-custom_, that is, with QUINTILIAN, into _consensum_ (_eruditorum_); which
-surely is but saying in other words with the Bishop, that it consists
-_in the use of such terms, with their multiplied combinations, as the
-interest, the complexion, or the caprice of a writer or speaker of
-Authority hath preferred to its equals_—for _equals_ they undoubtedly
-were, till that usage or custom took place. When this _consent of the
-learned_ is once established, every writer or speaker, who pretends to
-_purity_ of expression, must doubtless conform to it: but previously
-to such consent, _purity_ is a thing arbitrary enough to justify the
-Bishop’s conclusion, that this quality _is not congenial and essential to
-human speech_.
-
-Next, the Bishop asks, ‘What is ELEGANCE but such a turn of idiom as a
-fashionable fancy hath brought into repute?’
-
-Here, again, you grow very nice in your inquiries into the idea of
-_fancy_, the idea of _fashion_, and I know not what of that sort. In
-a word, you go on _defining_, and _distinguishing_ to the end of the
-chapter, in a way that without doubt would be very edifying to your young
-scholars in _Trinity College_, but, as levelled against the Bishop, is
-certainly unseasonable and out of place. For define _elegance_ that you
-will, it finally resolves into something that _is not of the essence
-of human speech_, but factitious and arbitrary; as depending much on
-the taste, the fancy, the caprice (call it what you please) of such
-writers or speakers, as have obtained the popular vogue for this species
-of eloquence, and so had the fortune to bring the turn of idiom and
-expression, which they preferred and cultivated, into general repute.
-
-‘Lastly,’ the Bishop asks, ‘What is SUBLIMITY but the application of such
-images, as arbitrary or casual connexions, rather than their own native
-grandeur, have dignified and ennobled?’
-
-To this question you reply by asking another, _Whether sublimity doth
-necessarily consist in the application of images?_ But, _first_, if
-what is _called_ Sublimity, _generally_ consists in the application of
-images, it is abundantly sufficient to the Bishop’s purpose: _Next_,
-I presume to say, that the sublime of eloquence, or the impression
-which a genius makes upon us by his expression, consists necessarily
-and universally in the application of _images_, that is, of bright and
-vivid ideas, which is the true, that is, the received sense of the word,
-_images_, (however rhetoricians may have distinguished different kinds
-of them, and expressed them by different names) in all rhetorical and
-critical works. _Lastly_, I maintain that these bright and vivid ideas
-are rendered _interesting_ to the reader or hearer from the influence of
-ASSOCIATION, rather than _of their own native dignity and grandeur_: of
-which I could give so many instances, that, for this reason, I will only
-give your _own_, which you lay so much stress upon, of _the famous oath,
-by the souls of those who fought at_ Marathon _and_ Platæa[149]: where
-the peculiar ideas of _interest_, _glory_, and _veneration_, associated
-to the _image_ or idea of the battle of _Marathon_ and _Platæa_, gave a
-sublime and energy to this oath of DEMOSTHENES, _by the souls of those
-that fought there_, in the conceptions of his countrymen, which no other
-people could have felt from it, and of which you, Sir, with all your
-admiration of it, have certainly a very faint conception at this time.
-
-I should here have dispatched this article of _Sublimity_, but that you
-will expect me to take some notice of your objection to what the Bishop
-observes, ‘That this species of eloquence changed its nature, with
-the change of clime and language; and that the same expression, which
-in one place had the utmost _simplicity_, had, in another, the utmost
-_sublime_[150]:’ An observation, which he illustrates and confirms by the
-various fortune of the famous passage in _Genesis, God said, Let there be
-light, and there was light; so sublime_, in the apprehension of LONGINUS
-and BOILEAU, and so _simple_, in that of HUETIUS and LE CLERC.
-
-To this pertinent illustration, most ingeniously explained and enforced
-by the learned Prelate, you reply with much ease, “That this might well
-be, and even in the same place,” and then proceed to _inform_ him of I
-know not what union between _simplicity_ and _sublimity_; though you
-_civilly_ add, “That it is a point known to every SMATTERER in criticism,
-that these two qualities are so far from being inconsistent with each
-other, that they are frequently united by a natural and inseparable
-union[151].”
-
-“Simplicity and _sublimity_ may be found together.” I think the
-proposition false, in your sense of it, at least. But be it true, that
-these qualities in expression may be found together. What then? The
-question is of a passage, where these qualities, in the apprehension of
-great critics, are found separately; the one side maintaining that it is
-merely _simple_, the other, that it is merely _sublime_. _Simplicity_
-is, here, plainly opposed to _sublimity_, and implies the absence of
-it: BOILEAU, after LONGINUS, affirming that the expression _is_, and
-his adversaries affirming that it is _not_, _sublime_. Can any thing
-shew more clearly, that the _sublime_ of eloquent expression depends on
-_casual associations_, and not on the nature of things?
-
-But the Bishop goes further and tells us, what the _associations_ were
-that occasioned these different judgments of the passage in question.
-The ideas suggested in it were _familiar_, to the sacred writer: they
-were _new_ and admirable, to the Pagan Critic. Hence the expression would
-be of the greatest _simplicity_ in MOSES, though it would be naturally
-esteemed by LONGINUS, infinitely _sublime_.
-
-Here you cavil a little about the Effect of _familiarity_: but, as
-conscious of the weakness of this part of your answer, _Not to insist_,
-you say, _upon this, How comes it then that_ BOILEAU _and many other
-Christian readers, to whom the ideas of creation were as familiar as to_
-MOSES _himself, were yet affected by the sublime of this passage_? You
-ask, How this comes to pass? How? Why in the way, in which so many other
-strange things come to pass, by _the influence of authority_. LONGINUS
-had said, the expression of this passage was _sublime_. And when he had
-said this, the wonder is to find two men, such as HUETIUS and LE CLERC,
-who durst, after that, honestly declare their own feelings, and profess
-that, to them, the expression was _not_ sublime.
-
-But more on this head of _Authority_ presently.
-
-You see, Sir, I pass over these chapters _on the qualities of Eloquence_,
-though they make so large a part of your _Dissertation_, very rapidly:
-and I do it, not to escape from any force I apprehend there to be in your
-argument or observations, but because I am persuaded that every man,
-who knows what language is, and how it is formed, is so convinced that
-those qualities of it by which it comes to be denominated _pure_, and
-_elegant_, and _interesting_, are the effects of _custom_, _fashion_,
-and _association_, that he would not thank me for employing many words
-on so plain a point. Only, as you conclude this part of your work with
-_an appeal_, which you think sufficiently _warranted, against the most
-positive decisions of fashion, custom, or prejudice, to certain general
-and established principles of rational criticism_, subversive, as you
-think, of the Bishop’s whole theory, I shall be bold to tell you, as I
-just now promised, what my opinion is, _of these established rules of_
-RATIONAL CRITICISM: by which you will understand how little I conceive
-the Bishop’s system to be affected by this confident appeal to _such
-principles_.
-
-I hold then, that what you solemnly call _the established principles
-of rational criticism_ are only such principles as criticism hath seen
-good to establish _on the practice of the Greek and Roman speakers
-and writers_; the European eloquence being ultimately the mere product
-and result of such practice; and European criticism being no further
-_rational_ than as it accords to it. This is the way, in which ancient
-and modern critics have gone to work in forming their systems: and their
-systems deserve to be called _rational_, because they deliver such rules
-as experience has found most conducive to attain the ends of eloquence in
-these parts of the world. Had you attended to this obvious consideration,
-it is impossible you should have alarmed yourself so much, as you seem to
-have done, at the Bishop’s bold Paradox, as if it threatened the downfall
-of Eloquence itself: which, you now see, stands exactly as it did, and
-is just as secure in all its established rights and privileges on the
-Bishop’s system of _there being no Archetype of Eloquence in nature_, as
-upon your’s, _that there is one_. The rules of criticism are just the
-same on either supposition, and will continue the same so long as we take
-the Greek and Roman writers for our masters and models; nay, so long as
-the influence of their authority, now confirmed and strengthened by the
-practice of ages, and struck deep into the European notions and manners,
-shall subsist.
-
-You need, therefore, be in no pain for the interests of Eloquence, which
-are so dear to you; nor for the dignity of your _Rhetorical office_ in
-the University of _Dublin_; which is surely of importance enough, if you
-teach your _young hearers_ how to become eloquent in that scene where
-their employment of it is likely to fall; without pretending to engage
-them in certain chimerical projects how they may attain an essential
-universal eloquence, or such as will pass for eloquence in all ages and
-countries of the world.
-
-You see, Sir, if this opinion of mine be a truth, that it overturns
-at once the whole structure of your book. We, no doubt, who have been
-lectured in Greek and Roman eloquence, think it preferable to any
-other; and we think so, because it conforms to certain rules which our
-criticism has established, without considering that those rules are
-only established on the successful practice of European writers and
-speakers, and are therefore no rules at all in such times and places
-where a different, perhaps a contrary, practice is followed with the
-same success. Let a Spartan, an Asiatic, an African, a Chinese system
-of rhetoric be given: Each of these shall differ from other, yet each
-shall be best and most _rational_, as relative to the people for
-whom it is formed. Nay, to see how groundless all your fancies of
-a _rational essential eloquence are_, do but reflect that even the
-European eloquence, though founded on the same general principles, is
-yet different in different places in many respects. I could tell you of
-a country, and that at no great distance, where that which is thought
-supremely _elegant_ passes in another country, not less conversant in the
-_established principles of rational criticism_, for FINICAL; while what,
-in this country, is accepted under the idea of _sublimity_, is derided,
-in that other, as no better than BOMBAST.
-
-What follows, now, from this appeal to _experience_, against your
-appeal to the _established rules of criticism_? Plainly this: That all
-the rhetors of antiquity put together are no authority against what
-the Bishop of _Gloucester_ asserts concerning the nature of eloquence;
-since THEY only tell us (and we will take their word for it) what will
-_please or affect_ under _certain_ circumstances, while the BISHOP only
-questions whether the same rules, under ALL circumstances, will enable a
-writer or speaker to _please and affect_. Strange! that you should not
-see the inconsequence of your own reasoning. The Bishop says, The rules
-of eloquence are for the most part, local and arbitrary: No, you say,
-The rules are not local and arbitrary, FOR they were held reasonable
-ones at _Athens_ and _Rome_. Your very answer shews that they were local
-and arbitrary. You see, then, why I make so slight on this occasion
-of all your multiplied citations from the ancient writers, which, how
-respectable soever, are no decisive authority, indeed no authority at
-all, in the present case.
-
-Hitherto, the Bishop had been considering eloquence ONLY SO FAR as it
-is founded in arbitrary principles and local prejudices. For, though
-his expression had been general, he knew very well that his thesis
-admitted some limitation; having directly affirmed of _the various modes
-of eloquence_, not that they were altogether and in all respects, but
-MOSTLY, _fantastical_ (p. 67), which, though you are pleased to charge
-it upon him as an _inconsistency_[152], the reader sees is only a
-necessary qualification of his general thesis, such as might be expected
-in so exact a writer as the learned Bishop. He now then attends to this
-limitation, and considers what effect it would have on his main theory.
-
-‘It will be said, _Are there not some more substantial principles of
-eloquence, common to all_ the various species that have obtained in the
-world?—Without doubt, there are.—Why then should not these have been
-employed, to do credit to the Apostolic inspiration? For good reasons:
-respecting both the speaker and the hearers. For, what _is_ eloquence
-but a persuasive turn given to the elocution to supply that inward, that
-conscious persuasion of the speaker, so necessary to gain a fair hearing?
-But the first preachers of the Gospel did not need a succedaneum to that
-inward conscious persuasion. And what is the _end_ of eloquence, even
-when it extends no further than to those more general principles, but to
-stifle reason and inflame the passions? But the propagation of Christian
-truths indispensably requires the aid of reason, and requires no other
-human aid[153].’
-
-Here, again, you are quite scandalized at the Bishop’s paradoxical
-assertions concerning the _nature_ and _end_ of eloquence; and you differ
-as widely from him now he argues on the supposition of there being _some
-more substantial principles of eloquence_, as you did before, when he
-contended that _most_ of those we call principles were arbitrary and
-capricious things. You even go so far as to insult him with a string
-of questions, addressed _ad hominem_: for, having quoted some passages
-from his book, truly eloquent and rhetorical, you think you have him at
-advantage, and can now confute him out of his own mouth.
-
-“Can any thing,” you ask, “be more brilliant, more enlivened, more truly
-rhetorical, than these passages? What then are we to think of the writer
-and his intentions? Is he really sincere in his reasoning? or are these
-eloquent forms of speech so many marks of falshood? Were they assumed as
-_a succedaneum to conscious persuasion_? And is the end and design of
-them to _stifle reason and inflame the passions_[154]?”
-
-To blunt the edge of these sharp and pressing interrogatories, give
-me leave to observe that the main question agitated by the Bishop is,
-whether divine inspiration can be reasonably expected to extend so
-far as to infuse a perfect model of eloquence, and to over-rule the
-inspired Apostles in such sort, as that all they write or speak should be
-according to the rules of the most consummate rhetoric. He resolves this
-question in the _negative_: _first_, by shewing that there is no such
-thing as what would be deemed a perfect model of eloquence subsisting in
-nature; a great part of what is called eloquence in all nations being
-arbitrary and chimerical; and, _secondly_, by shewing that even those
-principles, which may be justly thought more substantial, were, for
-certain reasons, not deserving the solicitous and over-ruling care of a
-divine inspirer. His reasons are these: _First_, that eloquence, when
-most genuine, _is but a persuasive turn given to the elocution to supply
-that inward, that conscious persuasion of the speaker, so necessary to
-gain a fair hearing, and which the first preachers of the Gospel had
-already_, by the influence and impression of the holy Spirit upon their
-minds: And, _next, that the end of eloquence, even when it extends no
-further than to those more general principles, is but to stifle reason
-and inflame the passions_; an _end_ of a suspicious sort, and which
-the propagation of Christian truths, the proper business of the sacred
-writers or speakers, did not require.
-
-You see these _reasons_, in whatever defective, are both of them founded
-in _one common_ principle, which the Bishop every where goes upon, and
-the best philosophy warrants, That, when the Deity interposes in human
-affairs, he interposes no further than is _necessary_ to the end in
-view, and leaves every thing else to the intervention and operation of
-second causes. The Apostles wanted NO succedaneum to an inward conscious
-persuasion, which the observance of the general principles of eloquence
-supplies; they were not, therefore, supernaturally instructed in them.
-They wanted NO assistance from a power that tends _to stifle reason and
-inflame the passions_: it was not, therefore, miraculously imparted to
-them. Every thing here is rational, and closely argued. What was not
-necessary was not done. Not a word about the inconvenience and inutility,
-in all cases, of recurring to the rules and practice of a chaste
-eloquence: not a word to shew that, where eloquence is employed, there is
-nothing but fraud and _falshood_, no inward persuasion, no consciousness
-of truth: not a word to insinuate that either you or the Bishop should
-be restrained from being as eloquent on occasion as you might have it
-in your power to be, or might think fit: nay, not a word against the
-Apostles themselves having recourse to the aids of human eloquence, if
-they had access to them, and found them expedient; only these aids were
-not REQUIRED, that is, were not to be claimed or expected from divine
-inspiration.
-
-Thus stands the Bishop’s reasoning, perfectly clear and just. The only
-room for debate is, whether his ideas of the _nature_ and _end_ of
-eloquence be just, too. _Eloquence_, he says, _is but a persuasive turn
-given to the elocution, to supply that inward, that conscious persuasion
-of the speaker, so necessary to gain a fair hearing_. The general
-affirmation you do not, indeed cannot, reject or controvert; for, the
-great master of eloquence himself confirms it in express words—_Tum
-optimè dicit orator, cum_ VIDETUR _vera dicere_. QUINCTIL. l. iv. c. 2.
-And, again, _Semper ita dicat_, TANQUAM _de causâ optimè sentiat_. l.
-v. c. 13; that is, an inward conscious persuasion is to be supplied by
-the speaker’s art. The Bishop’s idea then of the _nature_ of eloquence
-is, as far as I can see, the very same idea which QUINCTILIAN had of it.
-Both agree, that eloquence is _such a turn of the elocution as supplies
-that inward conscious persuasion so necessary to the speaker’s success_.
-The Bishop adds, that this _supply_ the inspired writers did not want.
-But you will say, perhaps, that merely human writers may have this
-_inward conscious persuasion_, as well as the inspired. What then? if
-human writers can do without this succedaneum, which human eloquence
-supplies to inward persuasion, who obliges them to have recourse to
-it? Yes, but they cannot do _so well_ without it. Who then forbids
-them to have recourse to it? For, neither are the inspired writers
-barred of this privilege: only, as being simply UNNECESSARY, it was not
-præternaturally supplied. Your perplexity on this subject arises from
-not distinguishing between what is _absolutely necessary_, and what is
-_sometimes expedient_: Divine inspiration provides only for the _first_;
-the _latter_ consideration belongs to human prudence.
-
-But it would be, further, a mistake to say, _that merely human writers
-have their inward conscious persuasion as well as the divine_. They may
-have it, indeed, from the conclusions of their own reason, but have they
-it in the same degree of strength and vivacity, have they the same _full
-assurance of faith_, as those who have truth immediately impressed upon
-them by the hand of God? I suppose, not.
-
-But the Bishop’s idea of the END of eloquence revolts you as much as
-his idea of its _nature_. _What_, says he, _is the_ END _of eloquence,
-even when it extends no further than to those more general principles,
-but to stifle reason and inflame the passions_? And what other end, I
-pray you, can it have? You will say, To adorn, recommend, and enforce
-truth. It may be so, sometimes: this, we will say, is its more legitimate
-end. But even this end is not accomplished but by _stifling reason
-and inflaming the passions_: that is, eloquence prevents reason from
-adverting _simply_ to the truth of things, and to the force of evidence;
-and it does this by agitating and disturbing the natural and calm
-state of the mind with rhetorical _diminutions or amplifications_. VIS
-_oratoris_ OMNIS, says QUINCTILIAN, _in_ AUGENDO MINUENDOQUE _consistit_.
-[l. viii. c. 3. sub fin.] Now what is this but _stifling reason_? But
-it goes further: it _inflames the passions_, the ultimate end it has in
-view from _stifling reason_, or putting it of its guard. And for this,
-again, we have the authority of QUINCTILIAN, _affectibus perturbandus
-et ab intentione auferendus orator. Non enim solum oratoris est docere,
-sed plus eloquentia_ CIRCA MOVENDUM _valet_. l. iv. c. 5. Or, would
-you see a passage from the great master of rhetoric, where his _idea_
-of this double end of eloquence is given, at once; it follows in these
-words—_Ubi_ ANIMIS _judicum_ VIS _afferenda est, et_ AB IPSA VERI
-CONTEMPLATIONE _abducenda mens_, IBI PROPRIUM ORATORIS OPUS EST. l.
-vi. c. 2. That is, where the _passions are to be inflamed, and reason
-stifled, there is the proper use and employment of the rhetorical art_.
-So exactly has the Bishop traced the footsteps of the great master, when
-he gave us his idea of the END of eloquence!
-
-Well, but this _end_, you say, is IMMORAL. So much the worse for
-your system; for such is the undoubted end of eloquence, even by the
-confession of its greatest patrons and advocates themselves. But what?
-Is this end immoral in all cases? And have you never then heared, _that
-the passions_, as wicked things as they are, _may be set on the side of
-truth_? In short, Eloquence, like Ridicule, which is, indeed, no mean
-part of it, may be either well or ill employed; and though it cannot be
-truly said that the end of either is simply _immoral_, yet it cannot be
-denied that what these _modes of address_ propose to themselves in ALL
-cases is, _to stifle reason and inflame the passions_.
-
-The Bishop’s idea, then, of the end of eloquence, I presume, is fairly
-and fully justified. But your complaint now is, that the Bishop does not
-himself abide by this idea. For you find a contradiction between what his
-Lordship says here—_that the_ END _of eloquence, even when it extends
-no further than to those more general principles, is but to style
-reason and inflame the passions_, and what he says elsewhere—_that the_
-PRINCIPAL _end of eloquence_, AS IT IS EMPLOYED IN HUMAN AFFAIRS, _is to
-mislead reason and to cajole the fancy and affections_[155]. But these
-propositions are perfectly consistent; nor was the _latter_ introduced
-so much as for the purpose of _qualifying and palliating_ any thing
-that might be deemed offensive in the _former_. For though eloquence,
-chastely employed, goes no further than to _stifle reason and inflame the
-passions_ (and the chastest eloquence, if it deserves the name, goes thus
-far), yet _the principal end of eloquence, as it is employed in human
-affairs_, is to _mislead_ reason, which is something more than _stifling_
-it; and to _cajole_, which is much worse than to _inflame_, the passions.
-Reason may be STIFLED, and the passions INFLAMED, when the speaker’s
-purpose is to inculcate _right and truth_: Reason is only in danger of
-being MISLED, and the fancy and affections of being CAJOLED, when wrong
-and error are enforced by him. So very inaccurate was your conception of
-the Bishop’s expression! which I should not have explained so minutely,
-but to shew you that, when you undertook to expose such a writer, as
-the Bishop, you should have studied his expression with more care, and
-should have understood the force of words at another rate, than you seem
-to have done in this instance.
-
-Still you will ask, if the _end_ be so legitimate, why should not the
-inspired writers be trusted with this powerful engine of human eloquence?
-The Bishop gives several reasons: It is a _suspicious instrument_, p.
-57. It was an _improper_ instrument for heaven-directed men, whose
-strength was not to be derived from _the wisdom of men_, but from _the
-power of God_, p. 59. But the direct and immediate answer is contained,
-as I observed, in these words—_The propagation of Christian truths
-indispensably requires the aid of reason, and requires no other aid_.
-1. Christianity, which is _a reasonable service_, was of necessity to
-be propagated by force of reason; in the Bishop’s better expression, IT
-INDISPENSABLY REQUIRED THE AID OF REASON; but _Reason_, he tells us in
-the next words, _can never be fairly and vigorously exerted but in that
-favourable interval which precedes the appeal to the passions_. 2. The
-Propagation of Christianity, which indispensably required the aid of
-reason, REQUIRED NO OTHER HUMAN AID: that is, no other human means were
-simply REQUISITE or NECESSARY. God, therefore, was pleased to leave
-his inspired servants to the prudential use and exercise of their own
-natural or acquired talents; but would not supernaturally endow them with
-this _unnecessary_ power of eloquent words. The inspired writers, even
-the most learned and, by nature, the most eloquent of them, made a very
-sparing use of such talents, _proudly sacrificing them_, as the Bishop
-nobly and eloquently says, _to the glory of the everlasting Gospel_.
-But as the _end_ was not, so neither was the _use_ of eloquence, simply
-immoral or evil in itself. They were considerations of _propriety_,
-_prudence_, and _piety_, which restrained the Apostles generally, but not
-always, in the use of eloquence; which was less _decent_ in their case,
-and which they could very well do without. When the same considerations
-prompt other men, under other circumstances, to affect the way of
-eloquence, it may safely, and even commendably, for any thing the Bishop
-has said on this subject as it concerns divine inspiration, be employed.
-
-Admitting then the Bishop’s ideas both of the _nature_ and _end_ of
-eloquence, the _want_ of this character in the sacred writings is only
-vindicated, not _the thing itself_ interdicted or disgraced.
-
-The conclusion from the whole of what the Bishop has advanced on this
-argument, follows in these words:
-
-‘What, therefore, do our ideas of fit and right tell us is required in
-the _style_ of an universal law? Certainly no more than this—To employ
-those aids which are common to _all_ language as such; and to reject
-what is peculiar to _each_, as they are casually circumstanced. And
-what are these aids but CLEARNESS and PRECISION? By these, the mind and
-sentiments of the Composer are intelligibly conveyed to the reader. These
-qualities are essential to language, as it is distinguished from jargon:
-they are eternally the same, and independent on custom or fashion. To
-give a language _clearness_ was the office of Philosophy; to give it
-_precision_ was the office of Grammar. Definition performs the first
-service by a resolution of the ideas which make up the terms: Syntaxis
-performs the second by a combination of the several parts of speech into
-a systematic congruity: these are the very things in language which are
-least positive, as being conducted on the principles of metaphysics and
-logic. Whereas, all besides, from the very power of the elements, and
-signification of the terms, to the tropes and figures of composition,
-are arbitrary; and, what is more, as these are a deviation from those
-principles of metaphysics and logic, they are frequently vicious. This,
-the great master quoted above [QUINCTILIAN] freely confesseth, where
-speaking of that ornamented speech, which he calls σχήματα λέξεως,
-he makes the following confession and apology—esset enim omne schema
-VITIUM, si non peteretur, sed accideret. Verum auctoritate, vetustate,
-consuetudine, plerumque defenditur, sæpe etiam RATIONE QUADAM. Ideoque
-cum sit a simplici rectoque loquendi genere deflexa, _virtus_ est, si
-habet PROBABILE ALIQUID quod sequatur[156].’
-
-There is no part of your book in which you exult more than in the
-confutation of this obnoxious paragraph. It is to be hoped, you do it on
-good grounds—but let us see what those grounds are.
-
-The Bishop, in the paragraph you criticize in your vᵗʰ Chapter, had said
-_that tropes and figures of composition_, under certain circumstances,
-there expressed, are frequently _vicious_. You make a difficulty of
-understanding this term, and doubt whether his Lordship means _vice_ in
-a _critical_, or _moral_ sense. I take upon me to answer roundly for the
-Bishop, that he meant _vice_ in the _critical_ sense: for he pronounces
-such tropes and figures _vicious_, ONLY _as they are a deviation from
-the principles of_ METAPHYSICS AND LOGIC; and therefore I presume he
-could not mean _vice_ in the other sense, which is _a deviation from the
-principles of_ ETHICS. All you say on this subject, then, might have been
-well spared.
-
-This incidental question, or doubt of your’s, being cleared up, let us
-now attend to the _more substantial grounds_ you go upon, in your censure
-of the learned Bishop.
-
-He had been speaking of _clearness_ and _precision, as the things in
-language, which are least positive. Whereas, all besides, from the very
-power of the elements and signification of the terms, to the tropes and
-figures of composition, are arbitrary; and, what is more, as these are a
-deviation from the principles of metaphysics and logic, are frequently
-vicious._
-
-In _the first place_, you say, _it were to be wished that his Lordship
-had pleased to express himself with a little more precision_—_Want of
-precision_ is not, I think, a fault with which the Bishop’s writings
-are commonly charged; and I wish it may not appear in this instance,
-as it did lately in another, that your misapprehension of his argument
-arises from the very _precision_ of his expression. But in what does
-this supposed _want of precision_ consist? Why, in not qualifying this
-sentence, passed on _the tropes and figures of Composition_, which, from
-the general terms, in which it is delivered, falls indiscriminately upon
-ALL writers and speakers; for that “ALL men, who have ever written and
-spoken, have _frequently_ used this mode of elocution, which is said to
-be _frequently_ vicious[157].” Well, but from the word, _frequently_,
-which you make yourself so pleasant with, it appears that the Bishop
-_had_ qualified _this bold and dangerous position_.—Yes, but this makes
-the position _still more bold_. Indeed! The Bishop is then singularly
-unhappy, to have his position, _first_, declared bold for want of being
-qualified, and, _then_, bolder still, for being so. But your reason
-follows.
-
-“What makes this position still more hardy is, that, however the
-conclusion seems confined and restrained by the addition of that
-qualifying word [frequently], yet the premises are general and unlimited.
-It is asserted without any restriction, that figurative composition is
-a deviation from the principles of metaphysics and logic. If then it be
-vicious _as_ it is, i. e. _because_ [_quatenus_] it is such a deviation,
-it must be not only _frequently_ but _always_ vicious; a very severe
-censure denounced against almost every speaker, and every writer, both
-sacred and prophane, that ever appeared in the world[158].”
-
-Here your criticism grows very logical; and, notwithstanding the
-confidence I owned myself to have in the _precision_ of the Bishop’s
-style, I begin to be in pain how I shall disengage him from so exact and
-philosophical an objector. Yet, as the occasion calls upon me, I shall
-try what may be done. _As these_ [tropes and figures of composition]
-_are a deviation from the principles of metaphysics and logic, they are
-frequently_ VICIOUS. Since the _Attribute_ of this proposition is so
-peculiarly offensive to you, your first care, methinks, should have been
-to gain precise and exact ideas of the _subject_; without which it is not
-possible to judge, whether what is affirmed of it be exceptionable, or no.
-
-By _tropes and figures of composition_, you seem to understand
-_metaphors_, _allegories_, _similitudes_, and whatever else is vulgarly
-known under the name of _figures of speech_. For in p. 27, you speak
-of _Allegories, Metaphors and_ OTHER _tropes and figures, which, you
-say, are no more than comparisons and similitudes expressed in another
-form_: And your concern, throughout this whole chapter, is for the
-vindication of _such tropes and figures_ from the supposed charge of
-their being _a deviation from the principles of metaphysics and logic_.
-But now, on the other hand, I dare be confident that the Bishop meant
-these terms, not in this _specific_, but in their _generic_ sense, as
-expressing any kind of change, deflexion, or deviation from the plain and
-common forms of language. I say, I am _confident_ of this, 1. because
-the precise sense of the words _is_ such as I represent it to be; and
-I have observed, though, it seems, you have not, that the Bishop is of
-all others the most _precise_ in his expression. 2. Because QUINCTILIAN
-authorizes this use of those terms, who tells us that—_per tropos verti
-formas non verborum modo, sed et sensuum, et compositionis_, l. viii.
-c. 6. And as to _figuram_, he defines it to be (as the word itself, he
-says, imports) _conformatio quædam orationis, remota à communi et primum
-se offerente ratione_, l. ix. c. 1. _words_, large enough to take in
-every possible change and alteration of common language. So that _all
-manners and forms_ of language, different from the common ones, may,
-according to QUINCTILIAN, be fitly denominated _tropes and figures of
-composition_. 3. I conclude this to be the Bishop’s meaning, because the
-_specific sense_ of these words was not sufficient to his purpose, which
-was to speak of ALL kinds of tropical and figured speech. Now though
-_allegories, metaphors and other tropes and figures, which are no more
-than comparisons and similitudes, expressed in another form_, belong
-indeed to the _genus_ of figured language, they are by no means the whole
-of it, as so great a master of rhetoric, as yourself, very well knows.
-4. I conclude this, from the _peculiar mode_ of his expression: if the
-Bishop had said simply _tropes and figures of speech_, I might perhaps
-(if nothing else had hindered) have taken him to mean, as you seem to
-have done, only _metaphors, allegories, and other tropes and figures,
-expressing, in another form, comparisons and similitudes_, which, in
-vulgar use, come under the name of _tropes and figures of speech_: But
-when he departs from that common form of expression, and puts it, _tropes
-and figures of_ COMPOSITION, I infer that so exact a writer, as the
-Bishop, had his reasons for this change, and that he intended by it to
-express _more_ than _tropes and figures of speech_ usually convey, indeed
-ALL that can any way relate to the tropical and figurative use of words
-in _literary composition_.
-
-It is now seen what the SUBJECT of this bold proposition is: namely,
-_tropical or figured language, in general_. This figured language,
-as it is a deviation from the principles of metaphysics and logic,
-is frequently _vicious_; i. e. is an acknowledged vice or fault in
-composition, as such. We now then see the force of the PREDICATE.
-
-Well; but if this figured language “be vicious _as_ it is, _i. e._
-_because_, _quatenus_, it is such a deviation, it must not only be
-_frequently_, but _always_ vicious.” The premises are general and
-unlimited: so must, likewise, be the conclusion. What sense, then, is
-there in the word, _frequently_? or what room, for that qualification?
-
-See, what it is to be a great proficient in logic, before one has well
-learnt one’s Grammar! As, i. e. _because_, _quatenus_, say you. How
-exactly and critically the English language may be studied in _Dublin_,
-I pretend not to say: But we in _England_ understand the particle as,
-not only in the sense of _because_, _quatenus_, but also, and, I think,
-more frequently, in the sense of _in proportion as_, _according as_,
-or, if you will needs have a Latin term to explain an English term,
-_prout, perinde ac_. So that the proposition stands thus: _These tropes
-and figures_, ACCORDING AS _they are a deviation from the principles of
-metaphysics and logic, are frequently vicious_. The premises, you now
-see, are qualified, as well as the conclusion. Figured language, WHEN it
-deviates from the principles of metaphysics and logic, is—what? _always_
-vicious? But the Bishop did not say, that figured language is _always_
-a deviation from those principles. He only says, _when_ it so deviates,
-it is vicious. It is implied in the expression that figured language
-at least _sometimes_ deviates from those principles, and the Bishop,
-as appears, is of opinion that it _frequently_ deviates: He therefore
-says, consistently with his premises, and with his usual accuracy, It is
-_frequently_ vicious.
-
-In short, the Bishop’s argument, about which you make so much noise, if
-drawn out in mood and figure, would, I suppose, stand thus—“Tropical and
-figured language, WHEN it deviates from the principles of metaphysics
-and logic, is vicious—Tropical and figured language FREQUENTLY deviates
-from those principles—Therefore tropical and figured language is
-FREQUENTLY vicious.” And where is the defect of sense or logic, I want
-to know, in this argumentation? But you impatiently ask, Are _metaphors,
-allegories, and comparisons_ then included in this _figured language_,
-which is pronounced _vicious_? To this question I can only reply, That I
-know not whether _metaphors, allegories, and comparisons_, are, in the
-Bishop’s opinion, _deviations_ from the principles of metaphysics and
-logic; for I cannot find that he says any thing, in _particular_, of
-this kind of tropes and figures. But if you, or any one for you, will
-shew clearly, that _metaphors, allegories, and comparisons_ are such
-_deviations_, the Bishop, for any thing I know, might affirm, and might
-be justified in affirming, that they were in themselves _vicious_. But
-be not too much alarmed for your favourites, if he should: They would
-certainly keep their ground, though convicted of such _vice_; at least
-unless the Rhetoricians of our time should be so dull as not to be able
-to find out what QUINCTILIAN calls _probabile aliquid_, some probable
-pretext to justify or excuse them.
-
-But, instead of troubling ourselves to guess what the Bishop _might_
-say on a subject on which he has said nothing, it is to better purpose
-to attend to what he _has_ said, on the subject in question. The Bishop
-_has_ said, _That tropical and figured language is frequently vicious_.
-You ask when? He replies, _When it deviates from the principles of
-metaphysics and logic_. But in what particular instances does this
-appear? He tells you this too. He gives you instances enough, to justify
-his affirmation, that tropical and figured language is _frequently_
-vicious; for he exemplifies his affirmation in ONE WHOLE class of
-such figured speech, as deviates from the principles of metaphysics
-and logic, and is therefore vicious, namely, _in the class of verbal
-figures_. ‘This, [_i. e._ the truth of the affirmation, That figured
-language, according as it is found to be a deviation from the principles
-of metaphysics and logic, is frequently vicious] the great master,
-QUINCTILIAN, freely confesseth, where, speaking of that ornamented
-speech, which he calls σχήματα λέξεως, he makes the following confession
-and apology—esset enim omne schema VITIUM, si non peteretur, sed
-accideret. Verum auctoritate, vetustate, consuetudine, plerumque
-defenditur, sæpe etiam RATIONE QUADAM. Ideoque cum sit à simplici
-rectoque loquendi genere deflexa, _virtus est_, si habet PROBABILE
-ALIQUID quod sequatur[159].’
-
-The difficulty, I trust, now begins to clear up. Figured language, is
-frequently vicious. Of this we have an instance given in one entire
-species of figured or ornamented speech, namely σχήματα λέξεως, or
-_verbal figures_. Can any thing be clearer and plainer? Yet, because you
-had taken it into your head that by _tropes and figures of composition_
-the Bishop understood, nay could only understand, _metaphors, allegories,
-and comparisons_, you dreamt of nothing, here, but the same fine things.
-And though QUINCTILIAN lay before the Bishop, when he quoted these
-words, though the Bishop’s own express words shew the contrary, for he
-speaks not of tropes and figures in general, much less of such tropes
-and figures as you speak of, but solely of _that ornamented speech_,
-called σχήματα λέξεως, you will needs have him quote QUINCTILIAN in
-this place as speaking of _Rhetorical figures_. But let us attend to
-QUINCTILIAN’S words. _Esset omne schema vitium, si non peterentur,
-sed acciderent._ What! Shall we think the Bishop could mean to affirm
-of _rhetorical figures_, that they would _always be vicious_, if they
-_were not sought for, but occurred of themselves_? For that, I think,
-is the translation of—_si non peterentur, sed acciderent_. Surely one
-way, and that the chief, in which _rhetorical figures, metaphors,
-allegories, and comparisons_, become vicious, is, when they ARE _sought
-for, sollicitously hunted after, and affectedly brought in_. The very
-contrary happens with regard to these verbal figures: they are vicious,
-when they _are_ NOT _sought for and purposely affected_. I conclude
-then, that his Lordship, who surely does not want common sense, and, I
-think, understands Latin, did not, and could not intend to exemplify his
-observation in the case of _rhetorical figures_.
-
-Still you are something puzzled and perplexed by the Bishop’s
-observation. Admitting him to mean, as his author does, _verbal figures_,
-how can these be considered _as a deviation from the principles of
-metaphysics and logic_? How? Why, has not the Bishop told us, or, if
-he had not, is it not certain in itself, that _to give a language
-clearness is the office of philosophy; and that Definition, a part of
-Logic, performs that service by a resolution of the ideas, which make up
-the terms_? But these verbal figures are often a deviation from, nay a
-willful defiance of, _all logical definition_. Witness the very instance
-you and QUINCTILIAN give us, in VIRGIL’S _timidi damæ_. Logic defines
-_Damæ_ to be the _females_ of that species of animals called _Deer_. The
-figurative VIRGIL confounds this distinction by using this term for the
-_males_, as well as females. But, universally, _Grammar_ itself, whose
-peculiar office is to _give precision to language_, is a part of logic:
-the Bishop says, _its rules are conducted on the principles of Logic_.
-But _verbal figures_, even when they do not offend against the strictness
-of definition, are universally violations, in some degree or other, of
-_Grammar_, i. e. of _Logic_. Yet these violations of _Logical Grammar_,
-QUINCTILIAN tells us, may be allowed, _si habent probabile aliquid quod
-sequantur_; that is, for some fantastical reason or other, by which the
-masters of Rhetoric are pleased to recommend them to us.
-
-And now, Sir, let me ask, what becomes of your fine comment on
-QUINCTILIAN’S chapter concerning _verbal figures_, and, particularly,
-of your nice distinction between these, and _rhetorical figures_, which
-the Bishop, no doubt, wanted to be informed of? The issue of your
-exploits in Logic and Criticism is now seen to be this, That you have
-grossly misrepresented the Bishop; and needlessly, at least, explained
-QUINCTILIAN. _First_, you make the Bishop talk of _rhetorical figures_
-ONLY, in the _specific_ sense of these terms, when his Lordship was all
-the while speaking of _figured language, in general_. _Next_, you make
-him deliver a bold position concerning rhetorical figures, as being
-_frequently_ vicious, because _always_ deviations from the principles of
-metaphysics and logic; when all he maintains, is, That figured language
-is FREQUENTLY vicious, according as it deviates from those principles;
-and, in particular, that _that_ part of figured speech, called
-grammatical or verbal figures, is ALWAYS vicious.
-
-To conclude, if you had shewn any compunction, or even common respect in
-exposing what you took to be the Bishop’s absurdities on this subject,
-I should have made a conscience of laying you open on this head of
-_Rhetorical and Grammatical figures_. As it is, your unmerciful triumph
-over the poor Bishop makes it allowable for me to lay your dealing with
-him before the reader in all its nakedness; and, after what has been
-said, I cannot do it better than by letting him see how the Bishop’s
-argumentation is represented by you, as drawn out in your own words, and
-that in full mood and figure.
-
-“I should by no means,” say you, “willingly misrepresent the argument of
-my Lord Bishop; but upon repeated examination of the passage here quoted,
-I must state it thus:
-
-“Quinctilian declares, that what are called grammatical figures are
-really no more than faulty violations of grammatical rules, unless when
-purposely introduced upon some reasonable or plausible grounds.”
-
-Therefore,
-
-“He confesses that tropes and figures of composition, as they are a
-deviation from the principles of metaphysics and logic, are frequently
-vicious.”
-
-You add, “If this be a fair representation, it were to be wished that the
-learned author _had so far condescended to men of confined abilities_, as
-to explain the connexion between these two propositions[160].”
-
-As the _learned author_, I guess, may be better employed than in this
-unnecessary task, which you _wish_ to impose upon him, I have taken
-upon me to discharge that office, with less able hands; and, yet, have
-_explained the connexion between these two propositions_ in such sort,
-that, if I mistake not, we shall never hear more from you, of any
-inconsistency between them.
-
-I have NOW, Sir, gone through the several particulars of your
-Dissertation, and have shewn, I think, clearly and invincibly, that all
-your objections to the Bishop’s paradoxical sentiments on the subject of
-Eloquence are mistaken and wholly groundless.
-
-The TWO propositions his Lordship took upon him to confute, 1. _That an
-inspired language must needs be a language of perfect eloquence_; and,
-2. _That eloquence is something congenial and essential to human speech,
-and inherent in the constitution of things_: These two propositions,
-I say, are so thoroughly confuted by the Bishop, that not one word of
-all you say in any degree affects his reasoning, or supports those two
-propositions against the force of it. I am even candid enough to believe
-that, on further thoughts, you will not yourself be displeased with this
-ill success of your attack on the learned Prelate’s _principles_; which
-are manifestly calculated for the service of religion and the honour of
-inspired scripture. For, though you attempt to shew us in your two last
-chapters, how the honour of inspired scripture may be saved on _other
-principles_, yet allow me to say that, for certain reasons, I much
-question the validity of those principles; at least, that the persons,
-most concerned in this controversy, will by no means subscribe to them.
-If there be an Archetype of eloquence in nature, ‘one should be apt
-enough, as the Bishop says, to conclude, that when the Author of nature
-condescended to inspire one of these plastic performances of human art,
-he would make it by the exactest pattern of the Archetype[161].’ Or,
-whatever you and I and the Bishop might conclude, assure yourself that
-the objectors to inspired scripture will infallibly draw that conclusion.
-And, when they do so, and fortify themselves, besides, with the authority
-of so great a master of eloquence, as yourself, it will be in vain, I
-doubt, to oppose to them your ingenious harangues and encomiums on the
-eloquent composition of the sacred scriptures. Nay, it would give you, no
-doubt, some pain to find that, though they should accept your authority
-for the truth of their favourite principle of there being _an Archetype
-in nature of perfect eloquence_, they would yet reject your _harangues
-and encomiums_ with that disdain which is so natural to them. The
-honour of sacred scripture will then hang on a question of _Taste_: and
-unluckily the objectors are of such authority in that respect, that there
-is no appeal from their decisions of it.
-
-The contemplation of these _inconveniencies_, together with the _love of
-truth_, determined me to hazard this address to you. I will not deny,
-besides, that the mere _justice_ due to a great character, whom I found
-somewhat freely, not to say injuriously treated by you, was also, _one_
-motive with me. If I add still _another_, it is such as I need not
-disown, and which you, of all men, will be the last to object to, I mean
-a motive of _Charity_ towards yourself.
-
-I am much a stranger to your person, and, what it may perhaps be scarce
-decent for me to profess to you, even to your writings. All I know of
-YOURSELF, is, what your book tells me, that you are distinguished by
-an honourable place and office in the University of _Dublin_: and what
-I have heared of your WRITINGS, makes me think favourably of a private
-scholar, who, they say, employs himself in such works of learning and
-taste, as are proper to instill a reverence into young minds for the best
-models of ancient eloquence. While you are thus creditably stationed,
-and thus usefully employed, I could not but feel some concern for the
-hurt you were likely to do yourself by engaging in so warm and so
-unnecessary an opposition to a _writer_, as you characterize him, _of
-distinguished eminence_[162]. Time was, when even with us on this side
-the water, the novelty of this writer’s positions, and the envy, which
-ever attends superior merit, disposed some warm persons to open, and
-prosecute with many hard words, the unpopular cry against him, of his
-being a bold and PARADOXICAL writer. But reflexion and experience have
-quieted this alarm. Men of sense and judgment now consider his Paradoxes
-as very harmless, nay as very sober and certain truths; and even vye with
-each other in their zeal of building upon them, as the surest basis,
-on which a just and rational vindication of our common religion can be
-raised. This is the present state of things with us, and especially, they
-say, in the Universities of this kingdom.
-
-It was, therefore, not without some surprize, and, as I said, with much
-real concern, that I found a gentleman of learning and education revive,
-at such a juncture, that stale and worn-out topic, and disgrace himself
-by propagating this clamour, of I know not what _paradoxical boldness_,
-now long out of date, in the much-approved writings of this great
-Prelate. Nor was the dishonour to yourself, the only circumstance to be
-lamented. You were striving, with all your might, to infuse prejudices
-into the minds of many ingenious and virtuous young men; whom you would
-surely be sorry to mislead; and who would owe you little thanks for
-prepossessing them with unfavourable sentiments of such a man and writer,
-as the Bishop of _Gloucester_, they will find, is generally esteemed to
-be.
-
-These, then, were the considerations, which induced me to employ an hour
-or two of leisure in giving your book a free examination. I have done it
-in as few words as possible, and in a _manner_ which no reasonable and
-candid man, I persuade myself, will disapprove. I know what apologies
-may be requisite to the learned Bishop for a stranger’s engaging in
-this officious task. But to you, Sir, I make none: It is enough if any
-benefits to yourself or others may be derived from it.
-
-I am, with respect, &c.
-
-
-FINIS.
-
-Printed by J. Nichols and Son, Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[1] Prov. xvi. 7.
-
-[2] Isaiah, xxvi. 9.
-
-[3] Rev. ii. 4, 5.
-
-[4] Eph. i. 7.
-
-[5] John i. 1.
-
-[6] Col. i. 17.
-
-[7] Rev. i. 17. xxii. 13.
-
-[8] Heb. i. 8.
-
-[9] Micah v. 2.
-
-[10] Rev. i. 8.
-
-[11] John xvii. 5.
-
-[12] Ps. iii. 2.
-
-[13] Eph. iii. 9, 10, 11.
-
-[14] Eph. iii. 18, 19.
-
-[15] Acts x. 18.
-
-[16] Eph. iii. 21.
-
-[17] 1. Pet. i. 12.
-
-[18] Eph. i. 10.
-
-[19] Rev. xiv. 6.
-
-[20] Gal. i. 6.
-
-[21] Rom. x. 18.
-
-[22] Col. xi. 10.
-
-[23] Matth. xxviii. 19.
-
-[24] 2 Cor. i. 12.
-
-[25] 2 Cor. xii. 9.
-
-[26] 1 Cor. vii. 21-24.
-
-[27] John xv. 16.
-
-[28] 1 Tim. iv. 16.
-
-[29] Phil. i. 10, 11.
-
-[30] Archbishop’s Injunctions, S. xi.
-
-[31] Canon LXXV.
-
-[32] Phil. i. 9-11.
-
-[33] Rom. xii. 16.
-
-[34] Erasmi in Evang. Joannis Paraphrasis, cap. i.
-
-[35] 1 Cor. ii. 14.
-
-[36] 1 Cor. ii. 14.
-
-[37] 2 Tim. iv. 2.
-
-[38] Lord Bacon, A. L. B. i. p. 417.
-
-[39] _Fiduciam_ orator præ se ferat, semperque ità dicat tanquàm de causâ
-optimè sentiat. Quint. l. v. c. 13, p. 422.
-
-[40] Matth. vii. 29.
-
-[41] Matth. xv. 6.
-
-[42] “In omnibus quæ dicit tanta auctoritas inest, ut dissentire pudeat;
-nec advocati studium, sed testis aut judicis afferat fidem.” Said of
-Cicero by Quintilian. The Roman orator acquired this praise by consummate
-art and genius. The plainest Christian homilist, who does his duty in
-_speaking as the oracles of God_, attains it with ease, and deserves it
-much better. Such is the pre-eminence of what the Apostle calls _the
-foolishness of preaching_!
-
-[43] Tanta in oratione auctoritas, ut _probationis_ locum obtineat.
-Quintil. p. 422.
-
-[44] Bishop Stillingfleet, Sermon IV.
-
-[45] _Afficiamur_, antequam afficere conemur. Quint. p. 461. _moveamur_
-ipsi. Ib.
-
-[46] If I mention the names of the Bishops BEVERIDGE and BLACKALL, it
-is not in exclusion of many others, but because I suspect they are less
-known to the younger clergy than they deserve to be.
-
-[47] Matth. xxviii. 20.
-
-[48] “Parentes et Pædagogi pueros olim cum primum per ætatem sapere, et
-intelligere cœpissent, primis Christianæ religionis rudimentis diligenter
-instituebant, ut pietatem unà penè cum lacte nutricis imbiberent, et
-à primis statim cunis, virtutis incunabilis ad vitam illam beatam
-alerentur. Quem etiam ad usum breves libri, quos _Catechismos_ nostri
-appellant, conscribebantur.”
-
- Noelli Catechismus de Baptismo.
-
-[49] 2 Cor. xiii. 14.
-
-[50] W. Weston, B. D. Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge; and vicar
-of Campden, Gloucestershire. Camb. 1746.
-
-[51] Pref. p. ii.
-
-[52] Pref. p. ii.
-
-[53] Ded. p. iv.—“The best compliment I can make your Lordship on the
-occasion is the true one, _that I have a good opinion of the present
-performance myself_,” &c.
-
-[54] Pref. p. iii.
-
-[55] Pref. p. iii.
-
-[56] Pref. p. ii.
-
-[57] The following passages brought to confirm this _fact_ are so well
-known, that, if there was not something uncommonly strong, and subversive
-of the writer’s objection in the very turn of expression, I should scarce
-think myself at liberty to transcribe them.—Visa est mihi res digna
-consultatione, maximè propter perielitantium _numerum_. Multi enim _omnis
-ætatis, omnis ordinis_, utriusque sexûs etiam vocantur in periculum
-et vocabuntur. Neque enim civitates tantum, sed vicos etiam atque
-_agros_ superstitionis istius contagio pervagata——_propè jam desolata
-templa,——sacra solemnia diu intermissa_.—Plin.
-
-[58] Hesterni sumus, et _vestra omnia implevimus, urbes, insulas,
-castella, municipia, conciliabula, castra ipsa, tribus, decurias,
-palatium, senatum, forum_; sola vobis relinquimus templa. Tertull.
-Apol. c. 37. And before speaking of the heathens, _Obessam vociferantur
-civitatem, in agris, in castellis, in insulis_ Christianos, _omnem
-sexum, ætatem, conditionem & dignitatem_ transgredi ad hoc nomen quasi
-detrimento mærent. c. i. See also Arnobius, contr. Gentes, insisting on
-the same fact.—Vel hæc saltem fidem vobis faciunt argumenta credendi,
-quod jam per _omnes terras_ in _tam brevi tempore et parvo immensi
-nominis hujus sacramenta diffusa sunt_? &c. L. ii. sub fin.
-
-[59] Pref. p. iii.
-
-[60] Chap. iii. p. 38.
-
-[61] Speaking of I know not what _sour and dogmatical_ divines, “I am not
-sure (says he) that I shall escape _their anathema_; since it is their
-custom generally to be displeased with every thing that does not fall in
-with their _fixed and settled sentiments_; and every defence of religion
-that is _out of their way_ wants another to support it.” Pref. p. viii.
-And again: “With some, I suppose, the _novelty_ of this matter will be
-for ever a bar to its reception.” P. 370.
-
-[62] The reader sees I complaisantly allow the writer’s representation
-of the cases both of _Pilate and Gallio_; though much might, with good
-reason, be objected to each of them. For, 1. If I should lay any stress
-on the _acts of Pilate_, which, he owns, if admitted, would overturn
-the whole use of his evidence, I should but follow in this the best
-authorities, and those too supported by such reasonings as the Inquirer
-would find it difficult to confute. And, 2. As to Gallio’s case, however
-inattentive he might be to the fame of Paul’s miracles, the passage
-alledged is certainly insufficient to prove it. Acts, chap. xviii. 17.
-For, indeed, the Inquirer did not so much as apprehend the purpose of
-the sacred writer in that whole narration; which manifestly was not
-to signify to us Gallio’s inattention to the Apostle’s miracles, but
-his candour, and prudent conduct in refusing to interfere in religious
-matters, and in chusing rather to overlook an act of violence done in
-his presence (which, though strictly speaking illegal, he might probably
-think not altogether undeserved of the malicious intolerating Jew), than
-gratify the complainant’s passion in punishing either Paul or his heathen
-advocates. For this is the sense of those words, _He cared for none of
-these things_; which the writer ought to have seen is so far from proving
-Gallio’s disregard of miracles, that, had he been Paul’s convert, the
-very same thing had been observed of him.
-
-[63] Aristeas.—The writers referred to in the margin are _Strabo_,
-_Maximus Tyrius_, _Pliny_, and _Herodotus_. Of these, the three first
-mention Aristeas _occasionally_ only; and yet Strabo calls him ανηρ
-γοης ει τις αλλος; and _Max. Tyrius_ and _Pliny_, though they explode
-miracles, yet plainly enough declare the common creed to run in his
-favour. Max. Tyrius in particular, after having given us his opinion of
-his miracles, together with his reasons for pretending to them, adds,
-_And Aristeas gained more credit by this pretension to wonders and
-supernatural communications, than Xenagoras, Xenophanes, or any other
-philosopher could have acquired by relating the plain truth_. Και ην
-πιθανωτερος ταυτα λεγων ὁ Αριστεας η ὁ Ξεναγορας η Ξενοφανης, η τις αλλος
-των εξηγησαμενων τα οντα ὡς εχει. Lastly, the account Herodotus gives us
-is so much to the credit of his miracles, that one cannot imagine how
-the writer should think it to his purpose to refer to him. For he _was_,
-indeed, delivering the popular history of Aristeas; and therefore did,
-as might be expected, represent him, not only as a worker of miracles,
-but as much reverenced and _esteemed_ for them. This he attests upon his
-own knowledge of several cities, all concurring in the firm belief of
-his miracles; and one of them in particular transported by so religious
-a veneration of him, as to erect a statue to his memory; which they also
-caused to be set up in the most public part of their city, and even close
-to one they had at the same time decreed to Apollo. And for the historian
-himself, though in truth the story be even foolish enough, yet so far
-is he from speaking of it with disregard, that I am not certain if he
-did not believe it, at least that part which relates to the Metapontini;
-which, after the mention of some other things from hearsay only, he
-introduces in the following assured manner: “Thus far the report of these
-cities: But what I am now going to relate, I _certainly know_ to have
-happened to the Metapontini in Italy, &c.” Ταυτα μεν αἱ πολεις αὑται
-λεγουσι, τα δε οιδα Μεταποντινοισι εν Ιταλιη συγκυρησαντα, &c. L iv. 15;
-and then mentions the affair which gave occasion to the statue; which, he
-tells us, he saw himself, placed, as I have said, and inscribed to the
-memory of Aristeas.
-
-[64] The other impostors mentioned as not much esteemed for their
-miracles are _Pythagoras_, _Jamblichus_, and _Adrian_; though it
-is certain the writers of their lives lay great stress upon them.
-_Jamblichus_ and _Porphyry_, after enlarging on several of Pythagoras’s
-miracles, which drew the applause and admiration of his followers, appeal
-to current fame for the credit of these, and of other still _diviner
-miracles_, which, say they, _are related of him with an uniform_ and
-constant belief, μυρια δ’ ἑτερα θαυμαστοτερα και θειοτερα περι τ’ ανδρος
-ὁμαλως και συμφονως ειρηται. (_Porph._ S. 28 and to the same purpose, and
-nearly in the same words, _Jambl._ S. 135). Jamblichus even goes so far,
-in speaking of the Pythagorean fondness for miracles, as to assure us,
-that they were conceived to prove the _divinity_ of their authors, and
-by that means to give a sanction to their _opinions and doctrines_. την
-πιστιν των παρ’ αυτοις ὑποληψεων ἡγουνται ειναι ταυτην, &c. S. 140. _They
-conceive it, says he, to add a_ CREDIT _and authority to their doctrines,
-that the author of them was a_ GOD; _and therefore to the question, Who
-was Pythagoras? their answer was, The hyperborean Apollo; and in proof
-of this they alledge the miracle of his golden thigh. And yet_, says the
-Inquirer, _Pythagoras was not much more esteemed for his thigh of gold
-than one of flesh_. What pity is it, the wit of this antithesis should be
-no better supported!
-
-As for _Eunapius_, though he plainly disbelieved the silly tale of the
-two boys of Gadara, yet, in relating it circumstantially as he does, he
-clearly enough expresses his own opinion of miracles, and acknowledges
-thereby the credit they would bring his master, were they better
-attested, or but fairly received.
-
-The miracles of the emperors are well known. And as their manifest intent
-was, of the one of them, to add a credit, or, as Suetonius more strongly
-expresses it, an _authority, and certain awfulness, befitting majesty_,
-to the person of _Trajan_, and of the _other_, to inspire the hopes of
-recovery into _Adrian_, so the relation of them by their historians, as
-useful and subservient to those ends, is a thorough confutation of what
-the author pretends about the little regard paid to them. And here it
-may be proper to observe, once for all, that the frequent narrations of
-prodigies and miracles, of which all Pagan story and antiquity is full,
-is infinitely a stronger argument for the high credit of miracles amongst
-the heathens in general, than any pretended _coolness, tranquillity,
-and indifference_, which the writer’s warmth, in the prosecution of his
-favourite novelty, leads him to imagine in the narrations themselves,
-is, or can be, for the contrary opinion. Since _this_ could only shew
-the incredulity of the relaters; whilst the _relating_ them at all
-demonstrates the general good reception they met with from the people.
-
-[65] This miracle was that of the fiery eruptions which hindered the
-building of the temple at Jerusalem by _Julian_; and which, falling
-into the hands of _Marcellinus_, might be expected to be spoken of as
-a natural event. But this is all: for, as to that _wonderful coolness
-and tranquillity_, which the writer pretends to have discovered in the
-narration, it is so far from appearing to me, that, on the contrary, I
-see not how the historian could have expressed himself with more emotion,
-without directly owning the miracle. His words are these: Quum itaque rei
-fortiter instaret Alypius, juvaretque provinciæ rector, _metuendi globi
-flammarum prope fundamenta crebris assultibus erumpentes, fecere locum,
-exustis aliquoties operantibus, inaccessum: hoc modo elemento destinatius
-repellente cessavit Inceptum_.
-
-[66] Pp. 40, 54, 57.
-
-[67] Epicurus, Democritus, &c. p. 58.
-
-[68] For the passage referred to (Orig. contr. Cels. l. 8) is in
-answer to an harangue of Celsus, wherein he had expatiated largely on
-the heathen miracles, and opposed them with great confidence to the
-Christian. Upon which the excellent Father observes with much force,
-“I know not how it is that Celsus thinks proper to alledge the heathen
-miracles as incontestably evident, and undoubted facts; and yet affects
-to treat the Jewish and Christian miracles recorded in our books as
-mere fables. For why should not ours rather be thought true, and those
-which Celsus preaches up fabulous? Especially, since those were never
-_credited_ by their own philosophers, such as _Democritus_, _Epicurus_,
-and _Aristotle_; who yet, had they lived with Moses or Jesus, on account
-of the exceeding great clearness and evidence of the facts, δια την
-εναργειαν, would in all probability have believed ours.” Having thus
-fairly laid the passage before the reader, it is submitted to his
-judgment with what colour of reason the learned writer could think of
-deducing a proof of the _low opinion of miracles in general amongst the
-philosophers_ from it.
-
-[69] P. 62.
-
-[70] P. 63. Philost. L., v. c. 15.
-
-[71] P. 64.
-
-[72] This was remarkably the case of Mahomet and Numa; the former of
-whose _converse with the angel Gabriel, his journey to heaven, and
-the armies of angels attending on his battles_—as well as the other’s
-pretended _intercourse with the goddess Egeria_, is well known.
-
-[73] It may seem odd that any of the Fathers of the Church should retain
-such a strong tincture of this _evil principle_; yet this, &c. p. 66.
-
-[74] Matthew, xxiv. 24. For there shall arise false Christs and false
-Prophets, and shall shew _great signs and wonders_, insomuch that (if it
-were possible) they shall deceive the very Elect.
-
-[75] Our evidence is still increasing, and is in the next place confirmed
-even by Divine authority. P. 70.
-
-[76] But I could not lay too great a stress on the authority of the Jews,
-because it _neither properly belongs to the present case_, nor, &c. P. 74.
-
-[77] For this would shew that the _heathen_ rejection of miracles _might_
-not be owing to any contempt of them as _such_, since the _Jewish_ was
-plainly owing to a very different reason.
-
-[78] 1 Cor. i. 22. The Jews require a _sign_, and the Greeks seek after
-wisdom, &c.
-
-[79] V. 17.
-
-[80] V. 19.
-
-[81] V. 20, 21, 22.
-
-[82] It is remarkable that Maimonides pushes this prejudice so far
-as to deny that the true Messiah was to work any miracles at all,
-except that of restoring the temporal dominion of Israel. _If he_ (the
-person pretending to be the Messiah) PROSPERS _in what he undertakes,
-and subdues all the neighbouring nations round him, and rebuilds the
-Sanctuary in its former place, and gathers together the dispersed of
-Israel, then_ HE IS FOR CERTAIN THE MESSIAH. Maimon. in Yad Hachazekah
-Tract. de Reg. et Bell. eorum. c. 11. s. 4.
-
-[83] The right understanding of what is meant by the Jews _requiring a
-sign_ is of such importance to the perfectly comprehending several parts
-of the Gospel history, that I shall be allowed to justify and illustrate
-the interpretation here given by some further considerations. And,
-
-1. If by σημειον is to be understood simply a _miracle_, then it is not
-true that Jesus, whom Paul preached, was or could be on that account a
-_stumbling block_ to the Jews, it being allowed on all hands that many
-and great miracles _did shew forth themselves through him_. See John vii.
-31. xi. 47. But,
-
-2. Notwithstanding this, and though it was owned in the fullest manner
-by the chief priests and Pharisees themselves, yet we find them very
-pressing for a _sign_, σημειον [Matth. xii. 38. xvi. 1. Luke xi. 29.] and
-that too (which is very remarkable) at the instant our Saviour had been
-working a miracle before them; a degree of perversity not rashly to be
-credited of the Jews themselves.
-
-It is true this _sign_ is sometimes called σημειον απο του ουρανου,
-_a sign from Heaven_; which, if meaning any thing more than σημειον,
-as explained above, i. e. a _test_ or credential of his heavenly or
-divine mission (and what can be more natural than that the Jews should
-express by this name the _only_ mark they would admit of the Messiah’s
-coming from Heaven?) I say, if any thing further be intended in it, it
-must be either, 1. An outward, sensible display of the Divine power,
-_indicating_, by some prodigious and splendid appearance in the heavens,
-or actually _interposing_, in some signal way, to _accomplish_ the
-deliverance of Israel; and then either way it falls in with and includes
-the interpretation here given. Or else, 2. It must mean a _mere_ prodigy,
-asked out of wantonness, and for no other end than to gratify a silly
-curiosity in beholding a wondrous sight from Heaven: an interpretation,
-which, though maintained by some good writers, is utterly unsupported by
-the sacred accounts, calling it σημειον indiscriminately, without as with
-the addition of του ουρανου; and shocking to common sense, which makes it
-incredible that so frivolous a reason as the being denied a _sign_, thus
-understood, could be, as St. Paul asserts it was, _the stumbling-block_
-of infidelity to the Jewish nation.
-
-3. But what above all confirms and fixes this interpretation is the
-tenor of our Saviour’s answer to the question itself. For, upon the
-inquiry, _Master, shew us a sign_, &c. his constant reply was, _A wicked
-and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign, and there shall no sign
-be given them but that of the prophet Jonas: For_, &c. As though he
-had said, “A perverse and degenerate people, disregarding the wisdom
-of my doctrines, and the power of my miracles—the genuine marks and
-characteristics of the Messiah—are yet crying out for the _test_,
-σημειον, of my coming. I know the proud and ambitious sentiment of your
-heart: but assure yourselves, God will not accommodate his proceedings to
-your fond views and prejudices. No such _test_ shall be given you. One
-sure and certain TEST indeed there shall be, over and above what has yet
-been afforded; but to shew you how widely different the Divine conduct
-is from your prescriptions, it is such a one as ye shall least expect;
-the very reverse of your hopes and expectations. It shall be that of the
-prophet _Jonas_. _For, as Jonas was three days and three nights in the
-whale’s belly_, so shall Christ (sad contradiction to your conceit of
-temporal dominion!) be put to death by the Jews, and _lie three days and
-three nights in the heart of the earth_. And this event, so degrading of
-my character with you, and so repugnant to your wishes, shall, I readily
-foresee, so scandalize you, that, though my return from the grave, like
-that of _Jonas_ from the whale, shall be in the demonstration of power,
-yet shall ye, through the inveteracy of that prejudice, be so hardened,
-as not to be convinced by it.”
-
-The answer of our Saviour is related by _Matthew_ and _Luke_ with some
-addition, but such as is further favourable to this interpretation. For,
-upon their asking a sign, it is plain he understood them to mean not a
-_miracle_, but a TEST, by the question immediately put to them: _When it
-is evening, ye say it will be fair weather; for the sky is red. And in
-the morning, it will be foul to-day; for the sky is red and lowering. O!
-ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky, but can ye not discern
-the face of the times?_ “Are the appearances which, in the order and
-constitution of nature, precede the changes of weather, a sign or test to
-you of those changes? And are ye stupid and perverse enough to neglect
-those which, by the Divine appointment, are made the _sign_ or _test_ of
-the TIMES, of the change of the Mosaic for the Christian dispensation?
-How is it that ye do not collect this from my _miracles_ and _doctrine_,
-the ordinary and stated marks of this change, but ye must perversely
-demand a _test_ of it, which the Scriptures nowhere promise, and the
-order and course of God’s Providence disclaim?”
-
-If, after all this, there can yet remain any doubt of the truth of this
-comment, it will be effectually removed by an authority or two from the
-other Evangelist, which the reader will indulge me in just mentioning. In
-our Saviour’s exerting an act of civil power, in scourging and driving
-the money-changers out of the temple, the Jews require him to shew the
-credentials of his authority, _What sign shewest thou that thou doest
-these things?_ The asking a miracle in this case were impertinent; for
-that, how extraordinary soever, could never prove to the Jews that he
-came invested with the powers of the civil magistrate. The sign they
-expected, then was evidently of another kind: an express declaration,
-or open display, of the regal character and office, evidencing his
-commission _to do such things_. Accordingly, the reply of our Saviour was
-to the same effect as before. _Jesus said unto them, destroy this temple,
-and in three days I will raise it up_; for he spake, we know, _of the
-temple of his body_. c. ii.
-
-The next authority is in the sixth chapter, where we have an account
-of the miracle of feeding _the five thousand_. Upon the multitude’s
-following him after this, our Saviour objects to them their neglect of
-miracles, which he presses upon them as motives to their belief. _Ye seek
-me not, because ye saw the miracles_, &c. Now what do the Jews return to
-this charge? Why, they fairly own it to be just, and, what is more, give
-a reason for their conduct. Their answer is to this effect: “Wherefore do
-you urge your miracles thus constantly to us, as motives for our belief?
-If you would have us trust and confide in you as the Messiah, _Where
-is the sign?_ For, as to your miracles so often insisted on by you, we
-cannot admit them as proper evidences of your commission. And indeed
-how should we? for Moses wrought as great, if not greater wonders than
-you. To confront your late boasted miracle of feeding _the five thousand
-with five loaves_, did not he, as it is written, _give our fathers bread
-from heaven_? What miracle of yours can be more extraordinary? Yet
-_Moses_ could do this. The Messiah, therefore, of whom greater things are
-promised, we expect to be _characterized_ by other _signs_. What work
-takest thou in hand, τι εργαζη?” Here, at last, we see (and the reader
-will forgive the length of the note for the sake of so clear conviction)
-that the _sign_ asked for, of what kind soever it might be, neither _was_
-nor _could_ be a miracle, since all such _signs_ were rejected by these
-inquirers upon _principle_.
-
-[84] I have now done with this head [the low opinion of miracles in the
-heathen world] and am not aware that any reasonable exceptions can be
-made to the testimonies which have been brought to confirm it; but if any
-one should think otherwise, and maintain that something else is necessary
-for the establishment of so _singular_ an opinion, he will be _gratify’d_
-in his expectations, as we _go along_; and will find the principles
-and practices of much the greater part of the heathens on this point
-_strengthening and confirming_ each other. P. 77.
-
-[85] For this he must say, and not that the credit of miracles would
-hereby be something weakened: a point, that, as we shall see hereafter,
-may be allowed, and yet be of no manner of service to his conclusion.
-
-[86] I have said _bad Dæmons_; for miracles wrought by the assistance of
-_good Dæmons_ were, as the Inquirer observes, p. 247, in great repute.
-
-[87] For that this was the obvious and essential difference betwixt the
-genuine miracles of the gospel, and the tricks of magic, is apparent
-from many strong expostulations of the Christian apologists, who, when
-encountered with this frivolous, but _malicious_ objection, used to
-exclaim: _Potestis aliquem nobis designare, monstrare ex omnibus illis
-magis, Qui unquam fuere per sæcula, consimile aliquid Christo millesimâ
-ex parte qui fecerit? Qui_ SINE ULLA VI CARMINUM SINE HERBARUM AUT
-GRAMINUM SUCCIS, SINE ULLA ALIQUA OBSERVATIONE SOLLICITA SACRORUM,
-LIBAMINUM, TEMPORUM? &c. Arnob. contr. Gen. L. i. And again, ibid. Atqui
-constitit Christum SINE ULLIS ADMINICULIS RERUM, SINE ULLIUS RITUS
-ORSERVATIONE TEL LEGE, _omnia illa, quæ fecit, nominis sui possibilitate
-fecisse; et quod proprium, consentaneum, Deo dignum fuerat vero, nihil
-nocens, aut noxium, sed_ OPIFERUM, SED SALUTARE, SED AUXILIARIBUS PLENUM
-BONIS _potestatis munificæ liberalitate donâsse_.
-
-[88] Acts, C. viii. and xix.
-
-[89] For as to the remaining chapters on the _idolatry of the Heathens,
-the parallel betwixt the Heathen and Protestant rejection of miracles,
-and his Conclusion_, they seem very little to concern either him, or me.
-For, 1. The influence of idolatry is urged to prove, that the _religion_,
-not _miracles_, of Jesus, _was hard to be admitted_ (p. 352); which,
-though true, has nothing _new_ in it, and is, besides, intirely foreign,
-if not contradictory, to his purpose. 2. _The parallel betwixt the
-Heathen and Protestant rejection of miracles_ derives all its little
-illustrative force from this poor presumption, already confuted, that the
-Heathens had universally _a contempt of miracles_. I said the parallel
-drew its whole force from this fact, for unless it be true that the
-Heathens universally disbelieved all miracles said to be wrought amongst
-them, the case of their rejection of Christian miracles, the reader sees,
-is widely different from that of the Protestant rejection of the Popish.
-This one circumstance then, to mention no others, overturns the whole use
-of his parallel. But, 3. As to his conclusion, the design and business
-of that is, I allow, something extraordinary. It is to shew us, that
-his whole force was not spent in this wearisome Inquiry, but that, was
-he disposed for it, he _could_ go on to answer other objections against
-miracles (p. 408-9) and our common Christianity, which had been already
-confuted to his hands. For, having shewn us what he _could not_ do with
-an argument of his _own_, he was willing, it seems, to shew us what he
-_could_ do with those of _other writers_. For which meritorious service
-he has my compliments and congratulations:
-
- Labore alieno magno, partam Gloriam
- Verbis sæpè in se transfert, qua sal habet,
- Quod in TE est.
-
-[90] Page 348, and in another place he says, it has been fairly shewn
-from _their own accounts_, and from THE NATURE OF THEIR PRINCIPLES, that
-the Heathens neither _had_, nor _could_ have an high opinion of miracles.
-P. 383.
-
-[91] Matth. xi. 20. Luke x. 13.
-
-[92] Page 172.
-
-[93] 1 Cor. i. Col. ii. 8.
-
-[94] Rom. i. Eph. v. and elsewhere _passim_.
-
-[95] Mr. Addison of the Christian Religion, S. 1.
-
-[96] Lord Chancellor Hardwicke.
-
-[97] Page 70.
-
-[98] Page 12.
-
-[99] Or, by _judicio suo_ may be understood that the Chancellor is
-impowered to inflict which of the several censures mentioned in the
-Statute he shall think fit, on offenders. The words are _ignavos, &c.
-suspensione graduum, carcere, aut alio leviore supplicio_, JUDICIO SUO
-_castigandos_. And the same is the meaning of PRO ARBITRIO SUO in the
-Statute _de Officio Procuratorum_; on which the _Inquirer_ affects to
-lay some stress (p. 32). “_Eum, qui deliquerit, primò pecuniâ præfinitâ
-mulctabit; iterum delinquenti duplicabit mulctam; tertiò verò si
-deliquerit, gravius, pro_ ARBITRIO SUO, coercebit.” But take it in which
-sense you will, either of _passing sentence by his single authority_
-or _determining the kind of punishment at his discretion_, neither
-way can this expression be made to serve the cause in hand. No art of
-construction can pick, out of the words _judicio suo_, the sense of
-_final determination_.
-
-[100] Lord Chancellor Hardwicke.
-
-[101] The ignorance of the _Inquirer_, who asserts _that the University
-has nothing to do with ecclesiastical censures_, and that _suspension_
-from degrees, in particular, _is a punishment merely academical_ (p. 26),
-is amazing. Had he been in the least qualified to treat the matter he has
-undertaken, he would have known that _suspension_ is not merely an usage
-of the University Court, as such, but was practised by the Ecclesiastical
-Court of the Bishops or Archbishops, as long as they had jurisdiction in
-the University. To let in one ray or two of light, in mere compassion, on
-that utter darkness which environs him, and shuts out all law, _canon_
-as well as _civil_, I will just refer him to _Arundel’s Constitutions_
-in a provincial Council; where Members of the University offending in
-the premisses are declared _suspended_, _ab omni actu scholastico_, and
-_deprived_, _ab omni privilegio scholastico_. [_Lyndwood_, de _Hæret._
-cap. _Finaliter_.] And the same appears in a Constitution of Archbishop
-_Stratford_. [Ib. _De Vit. & Honest. Clericorum_, cap. _Exterior_.]
-
-[102] So Mr. Attorney General _Yorke_, in his _Argument for the
-University in Dr._ Bentley’s _Case_,—“The congregation are to be
-considered as the judges of the Court, and the _Vice-chancellor_ as their
-_official_.” The _Inquirer_ hath himself desired the reader to observe
-(p. 10) that the _V. C._ in the absence of the _Chancellor_, hath all the
-power which the University delegates to this great officer.
-
-[103] That his Court was directed by this law, appears from a
-determination of Delegates, concerning _second Appeals in the same
-cause_, which I will take the liberty to transcribe.
-
-De Appellationibus à Delegatis.
-
-In Dei nomine, Amen. Nos D. Buckmaister, Inceptor Dakyns, M’ri Myddylton,
-Longforth, et Pomell, authoritate nobis ab Universitate commissâ,
-decernimus ac pro firmâ sententiâ determinamus, quòd liceat unicuique in
-suâ causâ appellare à judicibus delegatis per Universitatem ad eandem
-Universitatem, modò id fiat juxta juris exigentiam, hoc est, si antea ab
-eodem secundâ vice in eâdem causâ appellatum non fuerit. Quod si anteà
-bis appellaverit, neutiqùam tertiò appellare licebit, quum id prorsus
-sit vetitum _tam per jus civile quàm canonicum_: Cæterum unicuique tam
-actori quàm reo maneat sua libertas appellandi in suâ causâ à judicibus
-delegatis per Universitatem modo supradicto et à jure præscripto. [_Lib.
-Proc. Jun. fol._ 132.]
-
-[104] See old Statutes _De Judiciis et Foro scholarium_; _De pœnis
-Appellantium_; _De tempore prosequendi Appellationes_.
-
-[105] See _Determination of Delegates_, before cited, p. 25.
-
-[106] P. 26.
-
-[107] P. 1.
-
-[108] P. 62.
-
-[109] _Delegates_ are nominated by the _Caput_; and the Caput is, in
-effect, appointed by the Vice-chancellor and Heads of Colleges, who are
-commonly parties in all appellations. [See Stat. _De capite Eligendo_.]
-So (as the University complained, in their remonstrance against this
-very Statute of Q. _Elizabeth_) “when they [the V. C. and Masters of
-Houses] offer wrong, and themselves appoint judges to redress that
-wrong; it is too true, which _Livy_ writeth in the state of _Decemvira,
-siquis Collegam appellaverit_, (meaning Appius’s judgment), _ab eo, ad
-quem venerit, ità discessurum, tanquam pæniteret prioris decreto non
-stetisse_.” [C. C. C. MSS.] So little reason is there on the part of the
-Vice-chancellor, to fear any thing from _partial Delegates_!
-
-[110] The _Inquirer_ hath even had the hardiness to advance this in
-the plainest terms. He harangues at large from p. 9. to 13. on the
-impropriety of appealing from the _determination of a superior to an
-inferior_; and, in another place, p. 39. derides the notion of _citing
-the supreme Magistrate before more supreme Delegates_. But how different
-were the sentiments of a late learned Civilian on this head, from
-those of this _little academical Lawyer_! Speaking of Mr. _Campbell’s_
-case, in 1725. “There is, says he, a subordination of jurisdiction in
-the University. The Vice-chancellor’s jurisdiction is _inferior_ to
-that of the Senate; and upon Mr. _C—’s_ saying, that he appealed to
-the University, the _inferior jurisdiction_ ceased and devolved to the
-Senate, even before the inhibition. And, afterwards in considering the
-proctor’s inhibition; _upon the Appeal_, the Proctors represent the
-University, and are in that case superior to the Vice-chancellor.—And
-I am of opinion, that the Delegates in Mr. _C—’s_ cause may, upon
-the Proctor’s applying to them, _primo et ante omnia_ reverse the
-whole proceedings against him, in the V. C’s court, _as an attentat
-upon the University’s jurisdiction_; and may likewise inflict such
-censures, as the Statutes impower them to make use of, for the breach
-of the inhibition; all inhibitions being by Law, _sub pænâ juris et
-contemptûs_.” Dr. ANDREWS.
-
-[111] P. 70.
-
-[112] We have this confession from the candid writer of _Considerations
-on the late Regulations, &c._ “I must enter, says he, upon this subject
-with acknowledging, as I do with equal truth and pleasure, that there
-never was, within my remembrance, nor, I believe, within any one’s
-memory, a set of more able and industrious tutors than we have at
-present; more capable of discharging that useful office, or more diligent
-and careful in the discharge of it,” p. 12. And, again, “I think there
-prevails in general and through all degrees among us, a great disposition
-to sobriety and temperance,” p. 14.
-
-[113] P. 64.
-
-[114] P. 13.
-
-[115] P. 65.
-
-[116] “You will urge—that, as a previous _oath_ must be taken by the
-tutor, that he believes _in his conscience_ that his pupil has a just
-cause of appeal, all Appeals would by this means be prevented, but such
-as were founded upon good reasons. But the force of this argument will
-not be thought very great, if, _&c._”
-
-Reader, I can easily guess the sentiments which must arise in thee, at
-the sight of this shocking paragraph. But think not I have abused thee
-in this citation. They are the author’s own words, as they lie in p. 65
-of the _Inquiry_. Well, but his reason? Why, “if it be remembered, that,
-though oaths of this kind were exacted in order to prevent the frequency
-of Appeals, they by no means had their proper effect, the same number
-having been commenced for the three years next after this regulation, as
-in that towards the close of which it was first made.” This provision of
-_oaths had not_, he says, _its proper effect_. And how does this appear?
-Why, _because Appeals were as frequent afterwards as before_. Now, any
-other man would, surely, have inferred from hence, that “therefore the
-Appeals made were not without good reason.” Not so the _Inquirer_. He
-is of another spirit. Rather than give any quarter to _Appeals_, let
-every tutor in the University be an abandoned perjured villain. In very
-tenderness to this unhappy writer, whoever he be, I forbear to press him
-farther on such a subject.
-
-[117] P. 66.
-
-[118] Diss. VI. p. 259.
-
-[119] Diss. VI. p. 251.
-
-[120] Hodges, Garnet, Chappelow.
-
-[121] P. 296.
-
-[122] P. 255.
-
-[123] P. 296.
-
-[124] Dr. Lowth.
-
-[125] Page 261.
-
-[126] Page 253.
-
-[127] Page 269.
-
-[128] Page 293.
-
-[129] Julian, p. 316.
-
-[130] _Essay on the Gift of Tongues_, Works, vol. ii. p. 91.
-
-[131] DOCTRINE OF GRACE, b. i. c. viii. p. 41. 2ᵈ Ed. 8ᵛᵒ.
-
-[132] Ib.
-
-[133] D. G. p. 51.
-
-[134] P. 41, 42.
-
-[135] From p. 42 to p. 45.
-
-[136] Dissertation, p. 82.
-
-[137] Dissert. p. 82.
-
-[138] Dissert. p. 86.
-
-[139] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 41.
-
-[140] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 45.
-
-[141] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 43.
-
-[142] Dissert. p. 88.
-
-[143] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 52, 53.
-
-[144] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 55, 56.
-
-[145] Dissert. p. 19.
-
-[146] Dissert. p. 4.
-
-[147] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 52.
-
-[148] Dissert. p. 41.
-
-[149] Dissert. p. 45.
-
-[150] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 53.
-
-[151] Dissert. p. 58.
-
-[152] Dissert. p. 80, n.
-
-[153] _Doctrine of Grace_, pp. 56, 57.
-
-[154] Dissert. p. 20.
-
-[155] Dissert. p. 80. n.
-
-[156] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 58.
-
-[157] Dissert. p. 24.
-
-[158] Dissert. p. 25.
-
-[159] QUINCT. l. ix. c. 3.
-
-[160] Dissert. p. 34.
-
-[161] _Doctrine of Grace_, p. 52.
-
-[162] Adv. to the Dissert.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-TO
-
-VOLUMES V. VI. VII. AND VIII.
-
-
- A.
-
- ADULTERY, absolution of the woman taken in, vi. 319, 327.
- gives no encouragement to think slightly of the sin, 330.
-
- ÆNEID, the sixth book of, finely criticized in the D. L. viii. 277.
- the same subject discussed by Dr. Jortin, 283, 285, 287.
-
- ALEMBERT, M. D’, his opinion on Antichrist, v. 202.
-
- ALPHONSUS the Wise, blasphemed the system of nature, vi. 31. n.
-
- AMUSEMENTS, LAWFUL, may not be expedient, vii. 300.
-
- ANTICATO, a name once assumed by Cæsar, v. 181.
-
- ANTICHRIST, prophecies concerning, v. 172.
- characters which distinguish that power, _ib._
- meaning of the term, 179, 180.
- how construed and applied by the early Christian writers, 181.
- how by the Church of Rome, 187.
- application of the term to that Church at various periods, 190 to 201.
- deduction from those facts, 202.
- prejudices against the doctrine, 205, 214.
- how to be removed, 207.
- term not applied against the person of the Pope, 216.
- prophecies respecting the downfal of, 218.
- disagreeing opinions of learned men concerning, 220.
- time and other circumstances relating to, not to be ascertained, 224.
- main prejudice against it, whence arising, 232.
- prophetic characters of, 286.
- testimony of St. Paul, 299.
- another symbol from St. John, 302.
- tyrannical, intolerant, and idolatrous, 304.
- time of appearance in the world, 326.
- declared expressly by the prophets, 328.
- the several marks of, enumerated, 331.
- uses of this inquiry, 334.
-
- ANTICHRISTIAN SUPERSTITION, prevailed not against the Church of Christ,
- vii. 364.
-
- ANTINOMIANS, of the last century, their profligacy, vi. 16.
-
- APOLOGIES for Christianity, wherein generally faulty, vi. 26.
-
- APPEALS. See CAMBRIDGE.
-
- APHORISMS, why a favourite mode of instruction with the inspired writers,
- vi. 175.
-
- APOSTOLIC AGE, Christianity how propagated in, vii. 116, 117.
-
- APOSTLES, conveyed instruction by general precepts, vi. 175.
- preached not themselves but Christ Jesus the Lord, vii. 176.
- used no arts to set off their moral character, 178.
- or their intellectual, 186.
- preached therefore by the direction of the Holy Spirit, 191.
- the Spirit promised them by our Saviour, 222.
- to guide them into all truth, 224.
- to shew them things to come, 225.
- their character, 229.
- and situation considered, 231.
- the promise not abused by them, 232.
- admonition of the angels to them on our Lord’s ascension, 240.
- under what circumstances the Greek language was inspired into them,
- viii. 325.
- had time to improve themselves in it, ere they turned to the Gentiles,
- 326.
- their style such as might be expected, 327.
- needed no aid from eloquence, 357, 363.
- By what considerations generally restrained from the use of it, 364.
-
- APOSTROPHE, of Solomon to youth, vi. 405.
-
- APOCALYPSE. See REVELATIONS.
-
- ARISTEAS, an impostor, esteemed as a worker of miracles, viii. 157. n.
-
- ARISTOTLE, at one time gave law to the Christian world, vii. 266.
-
- ARNULPHUS, bishop of Orleans, styled the Pope Antichrist, v. 191.
-
- ARTICLES, the Thirty-nine, are the formulary of faith with us, viii. 63.
-
- ARTS, FINE, administer to luxury, vii. 299, 302.
-
- ASIATIC CHRISTIANS, their condition different from that of the Jews, v.
- 149.
-
- ASCENSION of Jesus into Heaven, vii. 237.
- his coming to be in like manner, 238.
-
- ASSENTATIO, a species of flattery, viii. 289.
-
- ATHEISM, adopted as a release from the restraints of morality, vi. 19.
-
- AVENTINUS, JOANNES, points out the beginning of the reign of Antichrist,
- v. 193.
-
- AUGURY, of the duration of the Roman Empire, v. 84.
-
- AUTHORITY, an air of, its effect in orators, viii. 124. n.
-
- ——, of our Saviour’s teaching, in what consisting, vii. 130.
-
-
- B.
-
- BABYLON, a Pagan idolatrous city, of what an emblem, v. 196, 309.
-
- BACON, Lord, his observation on the double sense of prophecy, v. 55.
-
- BAPTISM, its reference to the typical washings of the law, vi. 155.
-
- BAPTIST, THE, his food and raiment emblematical, vii. 402.
-
- BARROW, Dr. an eminent expositor of the Catechism, viii. 138.
-
- BEAST, in the Revelations, its seven heads a double type, v. 296.
-
- BENEVOLENCE, how perverted, vi. 120.
- in the Gospel takes the name of Charity, 135.
-
- BERENGARIUS, styles Rome the seat of Satan, v. 192.
-
- BERNARD, St. denounces the church of Rome as Antichristian, v. 194.
-
- BIBLE, only, the religion of Protestants, v. 349.
-
- BLOOD of Christ, its efficacy and value how signified by him, vi. 151,
- 154.
- danger of refusing to be washed by it, 157.
- its benefits how to be secured, 158.
-
- BONIFACE III. begged the title of Œcumenical Bishop, v. 190.
-
- BOSSUET, M. his remark on the conduct of the primitive Christians, v.
- 168. n.
- on Mr. Mede’s work on the Revelations, 272.
- on the terms _fornication_ and _adultery_, as applied to Rome, 307. n.
- justifies persecution, 315. n.
- his unreasonable jocularity on the Reformation, 318. n.
-
- BRITISH PEOPLE, zeal for religion abated among them, viii. 9.
- private morals relaxed, 11.
- civil or political virtues disappearing, 13.
-
- BRUTUS, erred from excess of virtue, vi. 309.
-
-
- C.
-
- CÆSAR, his baldness a mark of infamy, vi. 403.
- his admirable way of recording his own achievements, vii. 179.
-
- CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY, dispute concerning appeals at, viii. 189.
- historical account of its jurisdiction, 208.
- addition of civil power to the spiritual, 211.
- power of making local statutes, 213.
- body of new statutes given, 214.
- appeals not forbidden, 216.
- the right of appealing not affected by disuse, 219.
- grace proposed by the assertors of the right of appeal, 226.
- delegates by whom nominated, 228. n.
- subordination in the jurisdiction, 230. n.
- objections against the grace answered, 235.
- right of under-graduates exercised by the interposition of their
- tutors, 238.
- insinuations against the advocates for the right of appeal exposed,
- 241, 242, 245.
- the claim as ancient as the English Constitution, 250.
-
- CASUISTS, have perverted the precepts of the Gospel, vi. 237.
-
- CATECHIZING, the duty of, viii. 133.
- its uses to the catechumens, 134.
- to the congregation present, 136.
- to the clergy themselves, 137.
-
- CATILINE, described by Cicero, vi. 314.
-
- CATO, his virtue contrasted with that of Cæsar, vi. 308.
-
- CELSUS, how he represents the Jews, v. 6. n.
- his objections against their oracles, 14. n.
-
- CHANCE, by some considered, as supplying the place of inspiration, v. 81.
- could not have accomplished the spiritual prophecies, 90.
-
- CHARACTER, moral, artifices which men use to display it, vii. 178, 181,
- 184.
- intellectual, two ways of displaying, 186.
-
- CHARITY, Christian, its genealogy, vi. 116, 121, 123.
- genuine how to be distinguished from false, 126.
- the proper cure for learned pride, 278, 287.
-
- CHARLES I. the religious troubles in his reign whence originating, viii.
- 41.
- struggles for civil liberty, 44.
-
- CHILLINGWORTH, and others, established the old principle of the
- Protestant religion, v. 349.
-
- CHRIST, the spirit of prophecy, his testimony, v. 21.
- his appeal to that spirit, 30.
- all the prophets bear witness to him, 35.
- great purpose of his coming, 37.
- fortunes of his dispensation not yet perfectly disclosed, 69.
- his prophecy concerning the treachery of Judas, 74.
- its use, 100.
- prophecies concerning his first coming, 102.
- how enforced among the Jews, 107, 110.
- concerning his second coming, 132.
- his prophecy of the destruction of Jerusalem, 136.
- fulfilled, 141.
- his sublime command to his followers, to teach all nations, 163.
- foretold the appearance of false Christs, 177.
- his mediatorial office not to be interfered with by the worship of
- saints, 324.
- time of his appearing how foretold, 326.
- vast scheme of prophecy relating to his first and second coming, 336.
- benefits of his death extend to all men, vi. 63.
- faith in him the condition of salvation, 71.
- declared to the believing Jews, how they were to be judged, 79.
- to his disciples, that they had seen the Father, 84.
- why he spake in parables, 94.
- his promise to manifest himself, to whom given, 100.
- why he condescended to wash the feet of his disciples, 145.
- his answer to Peter on that occasion, 149.
- his death a propitiation for sin, 154.
- his admonition respecting the hearing of the word, 209.
- his sentence on those who receive it not, 212.
- his reply to the Pharisees concerning blindness and sin, 260.
- denounces a woe against those of whom all men speak well, 305.
- his question of the Jews who stoned him, 311.
- his admonition to the woman taken in adultery, 319.
- his address to those who accused her, 325.
- why he did not condemn her, 328.
- HE first acknowledged humility as a virtue, 334.
- particulars of his humility, 339.
- why derided by the Pharisees, who were covetous, 351, 352.
- the author of eternal life, vii. 18, 24.
- duties which we owe him, 29.
- made manifest in the flesh, 64.
- justified in the spirit, 66.
- seen of angels, 68.
- preached to the Gentiles, 70.
- believed on in the world, 72.
- received up into glory, 74.
- never man spake like him, 124.
- as to the matter of his discourses, 125.
- the authority with which they were delivered, 130.
- their wisdom, 133.
- their divine energy, 137.
- why he spake to the unbelieving Jews in parables, 145, 151.
- why he wrought few miracles among them, 159.
- why he preached the Gospel to the poor, 194.
- the goodness of his character thus displayed, 203.
- his wisdom equally, 206.
- his Father’s house, of many mansions, 210.
- his sincerity conspicuous in this declaration, 213, 214.
- what was truly his character, 218.
- what our expectations from him, 220.
- promised the spirit of truth to his disciples, 222.
- fulfilment of the promise, 234.
- his ascension graced by the ministry of angels, 237.
- prejudices of his countrymen against him, 253.
- his triumphs over the kingdom of Satan, 271.
- forbade strict retaliation, 310.
- his declaration to those who shall be ashamed of him, 328.
- and of his words, 341.
- his memorable promise to Peter a two-fold prophecy, 357, 367.
- his driving the buyers and sellers out of the temple, 386.
- in what light understood, 390.
- acted thus not as a zealot but a prophet only, 400.
- prophecy to which he appealed, 405, 408.
- in what light regarded by the Jews, 416.
- why he used this mysterious method of information, 423.
- the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever, viii. 19.
- dignity of his person here expressed, 21.
- immense scheme of redemption through him, 22.
- unchangeable nature of his religion, 25.
-
- CHRISTIAN, bound by principle to be modest and humble, vi. 180.
- character of a wise one, 227.
- his body the temple of God, 382.
- he is bought with a price, 386.
- encouraged to reason on the subject of religion, vii. 115.
- not bound to inquire curiously into the doctrinal and moral part of
- the gospel, 119.
-
- CHRISTIANITY, attested by prophecy, v. 69.
- in a secondary as well as a primary sense, 98.
- weight of the general evidence, 100.
- argument from prophecy of no less weight to us because the Jews were
- not convinced by it, 128.
- proof of its divine institution, 338.
- why propagated by mean instruments, vi. 90.
- its evidences many and various, 99.
- philosophy how far serviceable to it, 196, 199.
- objections on its mysterious nature answered, 272.
- questions to those who sincerely reject it, 298.
- danger and crime of disbelief, 300.
- its evidences a subject of inquiry in different ages, vii. 111, 118.
- the faith early adulterated by vain speculations, 245, 246.
- purified in part after the Reformation, 247, 248.
- use of reason in its support, 250.
- force of prejudice against, 254, 258, 262.
- in modern times, against its evidences and doctrines, 264.
- what the only exorcism it permits, 274.
- doctrine of not resisting evil, 310.
- does not supersede the use of resentment, 314.
- except in case of persecution, 316.
- liberties taken with it to render it not mysterious, 347.
- zeal for it abated among us, viii. 9.
- its unchangeable nature, as a rule of life, 25.
-
- CHRISTIANS, Primitive, idea formed of Antichrist by them, v. 184.
- their advantages of acquiring religious knowledge, vi. 191.
- precept addressed to them of giving a reason for their hope, 111, 116.
-
- CICERO, palliated the desertion of his principles, vii. 181.
- abounded in fulsome encomiums, viii. 261.
-
- CLEMENS ALEXANDRINUS, his opinion on the persecution of Christianity,
- vii. 360.
-
- CHURCH, its union with Christ, how prefigured, v. 23.
- on what rock founded, vii. 355.
- Jewish and Gentile persecutions raised against it, 358.
- internal commotions when settled under Constantine, 361.
- endangered by the Mahometan imposture, 362.
- by the Antichristian superstition, 363.
- its trial by the enlightened reason of mankind, 365.
- by the learned Jews, 368.
- by the Gentiles, 369.
- after the revival of letters, 374.
- by modern infidel writers, 377.
- the gates of Hell prevail not against it, 381.
-
- CLARKE, Dr. SAMUEL, his remark on the book of Revelations, v. 267.
-
- CLERGY, why chosen and ordained, viii. 59.
- first object of their ministry to teach a right faith, 59.
- the second, to produce the fruits of piety, 65.
- and of charity, 68.
- benefits of personal residence, 76.
- directions respecting curates, 80.
- none but fit ones to be recommended, 84.
- what the office of reason on the subject of revealed religion, 90, 94.
- requisites of a Christian preacher, fidelity, 120.
- an air of authority, 123.
- zeal, 125.
- duty of catechizing, 133.
- benefit of sermons to accompany the examinations, 138.
-
- COBHAM, Lord, why committed to the flames, v. 200.
-
- CONCEIT, admonition against, vi. 178, 181.
- proper remedy for, 185.
-
- CONJECTURES, in the way of prophecy, frequently verified, v. 82.
-
- CONSCIENCE, defined, vi. 44, 121.
-
- CONSTANTINOPLE, not the residence of Antichrist, v. 291.
-
- CONTROVERSY, in public discourses, to be avoided, viii. 124.
-
- CORINTHIANS, how addressed by the Apostle on their impurity, vi. 380.
- their city a market of prostitution, 387.
-
- COVENANT, New, the christian dispensation so called, v. 163.
-
- COURAGE, the affectation of, a snare to those who seek the honour of
- men, vi. 252.
-
- CREEDS, origin and justification of, viii. 61.
-
- CREVIER, M., defends persecution, v. 315. n.
-
- CRITICISM, as of late improved, of what use in explaining the Scriptures,
- vi. 199.
- rational, what its established principles, viii. 349.
-
- CURATES, directions respecting, viii. 80.
-
- CURIOSITY, anxious, its folly, vi. 408.
- tends to create quick resentments, 412.
- leads to peevish complaints, 413.
- breeds uneasy suspicions, 415.
- its injustice, 416.
-
- CYAXARES, of Xenophon, supposed to be Darius the Mede, v. 381, 396.
-
-
- D.
-
- DAILLÉ, M., on the use of the Fathers, v. 348.
-
- DANIEL, his vision of the four kingdoms, and of Antichrist, v. 287, 297.
- foretold the rise of that power, 328.
- antiquity of the book questioned, 365.
- objections answered, 387.
- cause of his advancement, 390.
-
- DARIUS the Mede, doubts respecting his existence, v. 380.
-
- DEDICATION, two good instances of, pointed out, viii. 282.
-
- DEMOSTHENES, his sublime and energetic oath, viii. 345.
-
- DEVIL, if resisted, will flee, vii. 267.
- terms applied to that wicked spirit in Scripture, 269.
- Christ’s triumphs over, 271.
- powers permitted him over the bodies and fortunes of men, 272.
- over the souls of men, 274.
- objections answered, 277.
- religious and moral uses of the doctrine, 280.
- whole scheme of Christianity depends on it, 348.
-
- DISTRESS, National, never inflicted before it is deserved, viii. 7.
-
- DIVINATION, idea of pagan philosophers concerning, v. 9.
- from augury, instances of, v. 83.
-
- D. L. the author of, his character by a warm friend, viii. 270.
- his personal virtues,—reference to Dr. Jortin, 272.
- some of his foibles enumerated, 273.
- his talents for classical criticism, 277.
-
- DRAGON, a symbol of the Roman Government, v. 303.
-
- DREAMS, a mode of prophecy, v. 17, 248.
-
- DRUSILLA, her character, vii. 2.
-
-
- E.
-
- EAGLES, a figurative expression for the standards of the Roman army,
- v. 138.
-
- ECLIPSE, why an emblem of the ruin of empires, v. 246.
-
- ELEGANCE, of speech, what, viii. 334, 342.
-
- ELOQUENCE, among the ancients, studied from vanity, vi. 284.
- Dr. Middleton’s notion of, confuted, viii. 333.
- no archetype of it in nature, 339.
- its rules for the most part, local and arbitrary, 352.
- what its end, 354, 356.
-
- EGYPTIANS, retained their hieroglyphics after the invention of the
- alphabet, v. 239.
-
- ENERGY, of our Saviour’s discourses, vii. 137.
-
- ENVY, excited by eminent virtue, vi. 306.
- a striking picture of, vii. 253.
-
- ERASMUS, his observation on the use of reason in religion, viii. 101.
-
- ERROR, in matters of religion, notion of its innocency considered, vi.
- 297.
-
- EVIDENCE, moral, gradation in the scale of, vi. 88.
-
- EZEKIEL, foretold the cessation of prophecy among the Jews, v. 116. n.
-
-
- F.
-
- FAITH, the condition of salvation, vi. 71.
- the parent of charity, 123, 125.
- why said to come by hearing, 201.
- some inclined too much to it, at the expence of morality, 218.
- not at variance with knowledge, 262.
- See CHRISTIANITY.
-
- FALKLAND, Lord, his glorious excess of virtue, vi. 309.
-
- FAME, the love of, to be controuled by the love of truth, vi. 259.
-
- FASHION, the rule of life with men of the world, vii. 286.
-
- FATHERS of the Church, their application of the term Antichrist, v. 182.
- question respecting their authority in the interpretation of scripture,
- 347, 348.
- plainness of their discourses, vii. 8.
-
- FEAR OF GOD, the proper guide of life, vii. 284.
- contrasted with fashion, 286.
- with law, 288.
- with philosophy, 291.
- inclines men to depart from evil, 293.
-
- FELIX the Procurator, his character, vii. 2.
- effect of Paul’s preaching on him, 5.
- his subsequent treatment of the apostle, 15.
-
- FIGURATIVE language, a cause of obscurity in prophecy, v. 68.
-
- FIG-TREE, cursed, a sign, vii. 403.
- connected with that of purging the temple, 413.
-
- FIRE, allusion to its effects, frequent in Scripture, vi. 168.
-
- FLESH, the vices of, to be put away from us, vii. 48.
-
- FLEURY, Abbé, his observation on the authority of the Pope, v. 314.
-
- FREE-THINKING, modern, to be resolved into two sophisms, vii. 379.
-
- FRIENDSHIP, among the great scholars of every age, indelicacy in the
- expression of, viii. 259.
- various arguments in exercise for, 261.
- answered, 264.
- specimen of the high complimentary manner, 270.
- delicate ways of conveying encomium, 282.
- See Dr. JORTIN.
-
-
- G.
-
- GADARENES, their sordid prejudice against our Saviour, vii. 260.
-
- GALATIA, Churches of, early infested with false teachers, vi. 177.
-
- GALLIO, his disregard of miracles not proved, viii. 156.
-
- GENEALOGIES, system of, reprobated by St. Paul, vi. 116.
-
- GENESIS, a famous passage in, how regarded by different critics, viii.
- 346.
-
- GENTILES, method of the early Christians to convert, v. 125.
- how convinced by the argument of prophecy, 126.
- their conversion foretold, 155.
- took its rise by small beginnings, 164.
- prevailed by pacific means only, 165.
- are a law unto themselves, vi. 37, 38.
- force of conscience among them, 43.
- diversity of human judgment accounted for, 44.
- their debates concerning right and wrong evinced their sense of
- natural law, 49.
- benefits of redemption extend to them, 63.
- their notion of a temple, 383.
- their conversion quick and general, vii. 73.
- condition of the poor among them, 198.
- adversaries of the Christian religion among them, vii. 371.
- the calling of, predicted by the expulsion of buyers and sellers from
- the temple, vii. 409.
-
- GIBBON, Mr. his anonymous letter to Dr. Hurd, v. 363.
- answered, 386.
- character of his _History_, 401.
-
- GLORIFYING of God, in our body and spirit, vi. 378.
-
- GLOUCESTER, Bishop of, his idea of the nature and character of an
- inspired language vindicated, viii. 307.
- obviates an objection made by Dr. Middleton, 309, 311.
- avows his notion of eloquence to be a paradox, and at the same time
- truth, 312.
- nominal barbarity of the style of the New Testament, a mark of its
- miraculous original, 317.
- the inspiration comprehended the terms, and their grammatical
- congruity, 321.
- circumstances, abilities, and qualifications of the Apostles who
- received it, 324.
- opposes Dr. Middleton’s proposition concerning eloquence, 333.
- proves that no archetype of that quality exists, 339.
- that the sublime of eloquent expression depends on casual
- associations, 334, 347.
- shews that eloquence was not necessary to the Apostles, 354.
- his idea of the end of eloquence justified, 354, 362.
- considers clearness and precision as the aids common to all
- language, 365.
- tropes and figures when and in what sense vicious, 367, 373.
-
- GOD, what must be done to obtain his favour, vii. 81.
- what that favour is, 89.
-
- GODLINESS, the great mystery of, vii. 62.
-
- GOSPEL, its connection with prophecy, iv. 42.
- with that concerning its promulgation, v. 156.
- by whom announced, 160.
- contrary to the structure of the Jewish law, 161.
- its use not discredited by the natural moral law, vi. 57.
- its necessity not superseded, 59.
- the eternal purpose of God declared in it, 76.
- why not forced on the minds of men by irresistible evidence, 93.
- stress laid on Faith, 95.
- binds men together as brethren, 136.
- illuminates and sanctifies men by successive improvements, vi. 208.
- its doctrines and precepts forbid us to seek the honour of men, 247.
- its rapid propagation, vii. 73.
- if hid, is hid to them that are lost, 96.
- appealed to, when written, as the ground of belief, 117.
- preached to the poor, 193.
-
- ——, Sermon before the society for propagating, viii. 23.
-
- GRACE, the law of, vi. 70, 71.
- some had rather trust to the law of nature, 73.
- obligatory on those who do not receive it, 77, 78.
-
- GREGORY I., his dispute with the Bishop of Constantinople, v. 188.
- disclaimed the title of universal Bishop, 189.
-
- GROTIUS, HUGO, undertook to prove that the Pope was not Antichrist, v.
- 221.
- from what motives, 222.
- a conjecture of his confuted by Bishop Newton, 300.
- his comment on the washing of the disciples’ feet, vi. 152. n.
-
-
- H.
-
- HALF-BELIEF, a vice of the spirit, vii. 50.
-
- HARDWICKE, Lord Chancellor, his opinion concerning appeals at the
- University of Cambridge, supported, viii. 189, 221.
-
- HEARING, the way by which faith cometh, vi. 201.
- admonitions concerning, 203.
- diligence in, why requisite, _ib._ 205, 207.
-
- HEATHENS, their quick conversion to Christianity, viii. 152.
- inquiry into their opinion of miracles, 155, 181.
-
- HELL, the gates of, their signification in Scripture, vii. 356.
-
- HERESIES, their origin, vii. 102.
-
- HESIOD, his maxim on contention, viii. 279, 281.
-
- HIEROGLYPHICS, their origin, v. 239.
- means of learning them, 245.
-
- HIPPIAS, the Elean, boasted that he knew every thing, vi. 285.
-
- HOLY GHOST, the living in communion with, vi. 382.
- the possessor of the body of Christians, 386.
- See SPIRIT.
-
- HONOUR, the duty of preferring one another in, explained, vi. 130.
- its nature and grounds, 132.
- right application of it in practice, 137.
- that only which cometh of God, to be sought, 245.
- the Gothic principle of, inflames pride, 337.
-
- HOPE, Christian, the precept of giving a reason for, explained, vii. 110.
- to be given with meekness and fear, 122.
-
- HORACE, his indelicate encomium on Virgil, viii. 259.
-
- HUMANITY, its duties never overlooked by the inspired writers, vi. 130.
-
- HUMILITY, Christian, how best expressed, vi. 186.
- first acknowledged as a virtue by our Saviour, 334.
- why so rare among men, _ib._ 336, 337.
- of whom to be learned, 339.
- ensures rest to our souls, 343.
-
- HYPOCRITES, those who embrace Christianity from corrupt motives, vi. 302.
-
-
- I. and J.
-
- JAMES I. remark of Hume on his commentary on the Revelations, vi. 266.
-
- IDOLATRY, how designated in the language of Scripture, v. 305, 311.
- of two sorts, 316.
-
- JEROM, states the notion of the ancient Fathers respecting Antichrist,
- v. 184.
- Speaks of the fall of the Roman empire, 230.
-
- JERUSALEM, destruction of, v. 135.
- by the Romans, 138.
- of the temple, 140.
- its mystical sense, 301.
- its destruction, of what emblematical, vii. 328.
-
- JEWS, their erroneous notion of the use and end of prophecy, v. 10.
- divine communications concerning Christ, why appropriated to them, 64.
- origin of their principal mistake respecting the Messiah, 99.
- prophetic spirit, how employed under their system of polity, 106.
- why many of them not convinced by the argument of prophecy, 119.
- their incredulity foretold by their own prophets, 120.
- their invincible prejudices, 122.
- driven to the necessity of supposing a two-fold Messias, 123.
- destruction of their city and temple, 135.
- their dispersion, 143.
- their number comparatively small in Judæa, 152.
- distinguished by descent, as well as by religion, 153.
- their language why figurative, 241.
- hieroglyphic style common among them, 243.
- their ritual abounding in symbols, 263.
- their idolatry considered as adultery, 306.
- how far enabled to compute the time of the Messiah’s appearing, 327.
- a plain frugal people, vi. 2.
- to what purpose their law was given, 53.
- how to be judged for disbelieving the Gospel, 79.
- questions respecting wars and fightings among them, 101.
- their practice of conveying information by action, 146.
- heterodoxy with them disloyalty, 292.
- their notion of a temple, 383.
- why our Lord spake to them in parables, vii. 143, 151.
- and wrought few miracles among them who believed not, 159.
- condition of the poor among them, 197.
- their prejudices against our Saviour, 256.
- abused the right of retaliation, 311.
- ashamed of Christ, 327.
- the Christian religion prevailed over their prejudices, 369.
- the rejection of them prefigured, 412.
- conduct of their rulers, when our Lord had purged the temple, 414.
-
- IMMANUEL, prophecy of Isaiah concerning, v. 108.
-
- IMMORTALITY, a free gift to man, how forfeited, and restored, vi. 70.
- vii. 19.
-
- IMPENITENCE, final, the issue of procrastination and vice, vii. 14.
-
- INCENSE, a symbol of prayer, v. 263.
-
- INCUMBENT, the proper name of a parochial minister, viii. 76.
-
- INDEPENDENCY, a name comprehending a thousand sects, viii. 43.
-
- INFIDELITY, may proceed from the pride of reason, vii. 99.
-
- INFIDELS, their main argument against prophecy answered, v. 82.
-
- INQUIRIES, religious, how to be conducted, vii. 116, 119, 122.
-
- INTERCESSION, of Christians for each other, a duty, v. 322.
- distinguished from the worship of saints, 323.
-
- INTEGRITY, requisite in judging of religion, vi. 34.
- an admiration of, may lead to irreligion, vi. 254.
-
- JOB, his complaint of being made to possess the iniquities of his youth,
- vi. 393.
-
- JOHN, St. his vision of the marriage of the Lamb, v. 23, 24.
- his mention of Antichrist, v. 175.
- designates the appearance of Antichrist, v. 329, 330.
-
- JORTIN, Dr. an address to, on the delicacy of friendship, viii. 257.
- happy in avoiding the offensive custom into which the learned have
- fallen, 268.
- his conduct towards his friend the author of the D. L. 274.
- adopted his subject, 275, 283.
- wrote against him, 277, 285.
- glanced at him, _ib._ 286.
- spared his arguments, _ib._
- furnished him with others, 287.
- quoted him, 288.
- called his conjecture ingenious, 290.
- nay elegant, 293.
- and the writer a learned friend, 297.
-
- JOSEPHUS, his account of the religion of his countrymen, v. 356.
- his praise of Daniel, 370.
-
- IRRELIGION, not so general as is imagined, v. 354.
-
- ISAIAH, a remarkable prophecy addressed by him to Ahaz, v. 107.
- how he claimed belief of the Jews, 110.
- his prophecy respecting parables, vii. 148.
- considered two ways, 149, 150.
- his prophecies, to what chiefly relating, 405.
-
- JUDAS, his treachery foreseen, vi. 150.
- had no part with Jesus, 158.
-
- JUS TALIONIS, why necessary in the Mosaic institute, vii. 311.
-
- JUSTICE, Civil, perverted by the lusts of men, vi. 109.
-
- JUSTIN MARTYR, urges the argument from prophecy in his apology to the
- Antonines, v. 125.
-
-
- K.
-
- KEY to the Revelations, by Mr. Mede, examined, v. 275.
-
- KINGDOM of Christ, import of the prayer, that it may _come_, v. 103.
-
- KNOWLEDGE, requisite to judge of Christianity, vi. 32.
- why productive of pride and vanity, vi. 277.
- its remedy, not ignorance, but charity, _ib._
- error in considering it the supreme good, 278.
-
- —— religious, of the present age, compared with that in the times of
- the Reformation, vi. 189.
-
- KNOWLEDGE OF LIFE, a name for fraud and disingenuity, vi. 233.
-
-
- L.
-
- LACTANTIUS, his confidence in the spread of the Gospel, v. 355.
-
- LANGUAGE, original, of all nations imperfect, v. 237.
-
- —— inspired, needs not be perfectly eloquent, viii. 311.
- must necessarily abound in the native idioms of the persons inspired,
- 314.
- correspondency of terms, to give clear intelligence, 319.
- impression of phrases and idioms not to be expected, 328.
- no archetype in nature, to which eloquence refers, 333.
- clearness and precision the aids common to all language, 365.
-
- LAW of the magistrate, by whom deemed an adequate rule of action, vii.
- 288.
-
- —— Jewish, to what end instituted, v. 48, 52.
-
- —— Natural, written in the heart, vi. 39, 40.
- appealed to by heathens as well as Christians, 48.
- necessary to the support of revelation, 54.
- does not discredit the use of the Gospel, 57.
- its existence presupposed by the Christian law, 64.
- its penalties, 69.
-
- LEBANON, a symbol of a city, v. 263.
-
- LELAND, Dr. letter to, viii. 307.
- Real subject of his dissertation on the principles of eloquence, _ib._
- his remark on the imperfect correspondency of words in languages, 318.
- his objections to the Bishop of Gloucester’s notion of inspired
- language refuted, 328, 330.
- his opinion respecting eloquence controverted, 337.
- his appeal to the rules of rational criticism answered, 349.
- his misrepresentation of the Bishop’s remark on tropes and figures,
- exposed, 366, 370, 378.
-
- LEO X. issued an edict against the use of the term Antichrist, v. 201.
-
- LETTER, anonymous, to Dr. Hurd, concerning the Apocalypse, v. 364.
- answer to it, 386.
- Mr. Gibbon the writer of the letter, 400.
-
- LEVITY of mind, a spiritual vice, vii. 53.
-
- LIBERTY, misused, its fatal effects, vi. 103.
- civil and religious, favoured by religion, viii. 38.
- questions respecting the abuse of the latter, 48.
- of the former, 49.
-
- LIFE ETERNAL, doctrine of, first delivered to us through Jesus Christ,
- vii. 18.
- scheme of God’s providence respecting, 22.
- different degrees of happiness or misery in, 27.
- may be taken in two senses, 34.
-
- LIGHT, the emblem of knowledge, vii. 78.
- that of revelation the most certain, 79.
-
- LIGHTFOOT, Dr. his idea of the apocalyptic style, v. 266.
-
- LITIGATION, ancient, a picture of, vi. 112, 113.
-
- LITURGY of the church of England, generally commended, viii. 65.
-
- LONGINUS, his opinion of a famous passage in Genesis, viii. 346.
-
- LOWTH, Dr. distinguished for a species of literary address, viii. 286.
-
- LUSTS, the origin of wars and fighting among men, vi. 102.
- perverted religion, 104.
- and civil justice, 109.
-
- LUTHER, his resolution to break through the papal servitude, v. 209.
- dreaded the charge of schism, 211.
-
-
- M.
-
- MAHOMETAN imposture, its success, to what owing, vii. 362.
-
- MALACHI, foretold the precursor of the Messiah, v. 115.
-
- MALMESBURY, the philosopher of, how misled into infidelity, vi. 253.
-
- MAMMON of unrighteousness, the precept of making friends of, vi. 351,
- 377.
-
- MANICHÆAN doctrine, early prevalent in the East, vii. 245, 268.
- spirit of Christianity abhorrent from it, 271.
-
- MANSIONS, many in the house of our heavenly Father, vii. 210.
-
- MANTUAN, his character of a pope, v. 303, 304.
-
- MARCELLINUS, his mention of the fiery eruptions of Jerusalem, viii. 160.
-
- MEAUX, Bishop of. See Bossuet.
-
- MEDE, his observation on the prophetic chronology of Daniel, v. 66. n.
- on the use and intent of prophecy, 106. n.
- on the doctrine of Antichrist, 195. n.
- his opinion on the Apocalypse, 261.
- sketch of his character, 271.
- his disinterestedness and impartiality, 273.
- his Key to the Revelations considered, 275.
-
- MEDES and Persians, their law unalterable, v. 376, 392.
-
- MEEKNESS, the virtue of, nearly dismissed from the world, vi. 338.
- not absolutely incompatible with resentment, 347.
-
- MESSIAS, a particular prophecy concerning, v. 75.
- various specific characters in the prophecies respecting him, 82.
- contrast of the Christian and the Jewish interpretations, 123.
-
- METAPHORS, in the Oriental style, frequent, vi. 171.
- the offspring of nature and necessity, viii. 338.
-
- MIDDLETON, Dr. his objection to the notion of an inspired language,
- viii. 309.
-
- MILTON, his allusion to an eclipse as ominous, v. 246. n.
-
- MINISTER of the Gospel, for what use his stores of knowledge are
- destined, vi. 5.
- his office, 7.
- decorum of his character, 8.
- the word to be dispensed to those who most need it, 11.
-
- MIRACLES, a great foundation of our faith, 266.
- few wrought by our Saviour among the unbelieving Jews, vii. 159.
- because many were not necessary to their conviction, 163.
- or to give a just proof of his mission, 165.
- would have hindered the success of his ministry, 167.
- and have violated a general rule of his conduct, 170.
- opinion of the heathens concerning, viii. 155.
- many seeming ones imputed to the power of magic, 176.
- difference of those wrought by Christ and his apostles, 177.
-
- MISSIONARY, Christian, his arduous duties, vii. 30.
-
- MORALIST, Pagan, his reproof of a young reveller, vi. 210.
-
- MORALITIES, the lesser, what, vi. 131.
-
- MORALITY, some incline too much to it, at the expence of faith, vi. 218.
- how relaxed by casuistry, 237.
-
- MOSES, weight of his prophecy with the Jews, v. 109, 110.
- foretold their dispersion, 143.
-
- MYSTERIES of God’s kingdom, declared in parables, vii. 155.
-
- MYSTICAL meanings, in the prophetic style, v. 301.
-
-
- N.
-
- NAHUM, his prediction of the overthrow of Nineveh, v. 254.
-
- NAMES of eminent persons, custom of changing in the ancient world,
- iii. 354.
-
- NATURE, human, not a sufficient guide in religion, vi. 269.
- a generous pride why implanted in it, 334.
-
- NAZARETH, why our Saviour wrought few miracles there, vii. 160.
- evil disposition of the people towards him, 168, 253.
-
- NERO, by some considered as the Antichrist of a future age, v. 183.
-
- NEWTON, Sir ISAAC, his remark on the prophecy of Revelations, v. 226. n.
- on the prophetic characters of Antichrist, 289.
- his illustration of prophecy how considered by the infidels, vi.
- 265. n.
-
- NICODEMUS, ashamed of Christ, vii. 337.
-
-
- O.
-
- OBEDIENCE, perfect, to be attained by degrees, vi. 208.
- the promise annexed to it, vii. 20.
-
- OECUMENICAL (or universal) Bishop, a title assumed by the Bishop of
- Constantinople, v. 188.
- accepted by Boniface VI. 190.
-
- OFFENCES, or scandals, mentioned by our Lord, what, vi. 161.
-
- ONEIROCRITICS, v. 246.
- their rules of use in explaining prophecy, 248.
-
- ORACLES, Pagan, their design, v. 8.
- wherein unlike scriptural prophecies, 60.
-
- ORIGEN, his reply to a remark of Celsus on miracles, viii. 161. n.
-
-
- P.
-
- PAGANS, their superstitions whence derived, v. 246.
- two religious topics on which their wise men were chiefly intent,
- vii. 241.
- ashamed of Christ, vii. 332.
-
- PARABLES, all the prophecies written in, v. 260.
- why addressed by our Saviour to the Jews, vii. 143, 145.
- what their subject, 154.
-
- PARIS, MATTHEW, his testimony respecting the charge of Antichristianism
- on the see of Rome, v. 197.
-
- PASCAL, his remark on the dispensation of prophecy, v. 62.
- on the danger of disbelief, 301.
-
- PATIENCE, requisite in judging of Christianity, vi. 32.
-
- PAUL, St. his characteristic of Antichrist, v. 299.
- his remark on his appearance, 329.
- his awful warning against unbelief, 359.
- his zeal of persecution while a Jew, vi. 290.
- why he called himself the chief of sinners, 295.
- his error not innocent, 303.
- his address in reproving the Corinthians, 379.
- substance of his remonstrance, 387.
- his preaching before Felix, vii. 2.
- his divine encomium on our Lord’s ministry, 205.
- his labours at Ephesus how overturned, 259.
- effects of his preaching at Athens, 261.
-
- PEARSON, Dr. an excellent commentator on the Catechism, viii. 138.
-
- PERSECUTION, almost sanctioned by the Jewish law, vi. 293.
-
- —— of the Apostles, resistance to it forbidden, vii. 316.
- of the first Christians by the Jews and Gentiles, 358.
-
- PETER, St. denied his Lord through shame, vii. 334.
- and fear, 335.
- his name why conferred on him, 355.
- two prophecies thus given, 357.
-
- PETRARCH, applies the name of Babylon to Rome, v. 198.
-
- PHARISEES, how reproved by our Saviour for infidelity, vi. 261.
- with what view they heard the word of the Lord, vi. 212.
- why they derided our Saviour’s precepts, 350, 352.
-
- PHILIP, one of the Apostles, asks of Christ that he would shew them the
- Father, vi. 84.
-
- PHILOLOGIST, Italian, his objection to reading the Bible, vii. 343.
-
- PHILOSOPHERS of the Gentiles, ill treated the poor, vii. 198.
-
- PHILOSOPHY, an inadequate rule of life, vii. 291.
- progress in, since the reformation, how far serviceable to religion,
- vi. 196, 199.
-
- PHINEHAS, his act of zeal, vii. 393.
- had relation to religion and not morals, 396.
-
- PLATO, at one time gave law to the Christian world, vii. 246.
-
- PLAY, the favourite amusement, because the most violent, vii. 299.
-
- PLEASURE, the lover of, cannot be rich, vi. 403.
-
- PLEASURES, the pursuit of, to be restrained, vii. 298.
- when lawful, may not be expedient, 300.
- the mind should be independent of, 305.
-
- PLINY, abounded in fulsome encomiums, viii. 261.
-
- POETS, Greek and Latin, their works of use in the exposition of the
- ancient Prophets, v. 249.
-
- POLITENESS, true, distinguished from false, vi. 139.
-
- POMPEY, his generosity in burning the papers of an enemy, vi. 414.
-
- POOR, the Gospel preached to the, vii. 193.
- their condition when Saviour appeared among them, 197, 198.
- their hearts less perverse than those of the rich and great and
- wise, 200.
-
- POPE, the, styled Antichrist at the synod of Rheims in the tenth
- century, v. 191.
- his authority defined by the Abbé Fleury, v. 314.
-
- POPERY, how brought into disrepute among us, vi. 19.
-
- PORPHYRY, illustrated the book of Daniel, v. 365.
-
- POSSESSIONS, demonic, explained, vii. 273.
-
- PRAISE, general, a woe denounced against those who obtain it, vi. 304.
- implies a mediocrity of virtue, 306.
- frequently positive ill desert, 310.
- and sometimes depravity and prostitution of character, 313.
-
- PRAYER, its efficacy considered, vii. 82.
-
- —— THE LORD’S, an instance of Oriental construction in, vi. 165.
-
- PREACHER, Christian, character of one, viii. 120, 122, 125.
-
- PREJUDICE, the strange power of, exemplified, vii. 255.
- among the Jews, 254.
- among the Gentiles, 258, 261.
- among the Heathens in the fourth century, 262.
- in later times, 263.
-
- PRETENCES, continued, become realities, vi. 257.
-
- PRIDE, how generated, vi. 132, 133.
- to be corrected by philanthropy, 134.
- why a vice, 277.
- how counteracted by charity, 278, 287.
- mistaken for a natural principle, 336.
- made sacred by fashion, 337.
- danger of indulging it, 343.
- intellectual and moral, productive of infidelity, vii. 99, 106.
-
- PROCRASTINATION, the usual support of vice, vii. 5, 6.
- is itself supported by sophistry, 9.
- leads to final impenitence, 14.
-
- PROPHECY, scriptural meaning of the term, v. 3.
- origin of false ideas respecting its subjects, 4.
- its ultimate purpose, 8.
- and dispensation, 12.
- questions to be answered by enquirers into its divine character, 15.
- true idea of it, 21, 26, 27. n.
- our reasonings on the subject how to be regulated, 32.
- what its ultimate accomplishment, 34.
- its extent, 37.
- considered as a system, 39.
- conclusions from the true idea of it, 44.
- why obscurely delivered, 45, 46.
- what its _double sense_, 51.
- how distinguished from Pagan oracles, 60.
- why confined to one nation, 62.
- its obscurity affords no objection to it, 67.
- general argument from it, 74, 76.
- instances of casual conjecture fulfilled by events, 83, 85.
- answer to objection on this ground, 88.
- examples illustrating the general scheme of prophetic writings, 96.
- prophecies concerning the Messiah’s first coming, 103.
- unity of design with all the prophets, 113.
- amount of evidence on comparing predictions with facts, 118.
- the Jews why not convinced, 119.
- its weight with the Gentiles, 125.
- how connected with the evidence from miracles, 130.
- prophecies concerning Christ’s second coming, 132.
- and the Christian Church, 133.
- destruction of Jerusalem, 135.
- dispersion of the Jews, 143.
- call and conversion of the Gentiles, 156.
- concerning Antichrist, 171.
- what its declared end, 226.
- style of prophetic writing considered, 233.
- why more figurative than ours, 236.
- tinctured with the Hieroglyphic spirit, 240.
- means of rendering it intelligible to us, 244.
- some important prophecies delivered in the way of dreams, 248.
- causes of the obscurity of prophecy, 251.
- suspicions taken up against it, unfounded, 256.
- the symbolic style expedient in such writings, 258.
- its chronology not defined with historical exactness, 326.
- uses of the inquiry into, 351.
- chief evidences of religion drawn from, 263.
- nature of the prophetic power, vii. 226.
- how liable to be abused by pretenders to it, 227.
-
- PROPHETS, Jewish, used similitudes, vii. 402.
-
- PROPITIATION, doctrine of, how inculcated by our Lord, vi. 151, 155.
-
- PROTESTANTS, their tenets respecting Antichrist, v. 173.
- how far their aversion to the Church of Rome properly extends, 217.
- their divines censured for temerity in fixing the fall of Antichrist,
- 229.
- justified by the Apocalyptic prophecies, 342.
- how secured against the charges of schism and heresy, 350.
-
- PUNISHMENTS, future, how proved to be eternal, vi. 164.
-
- PURITANS, their struggles for Church dominion, viii. 42, 43.
-
- PURITY of speech, what, viii. 334, 342.
-
-
- Q.
-
- QUERIES, respecting the right or appeal in the University of Cambridge,
- viii. 195.
- answers to, 197.
- the proper ones formerly put, and differently answered, 207, 221.
-
- QUINTILIAN, his admiration of Plato’s eloquence, vii. 125.
- his idea of the nature of eloquence, viii. 358, 360.
- his observation on verbal figures, 366.
-
-
- R.
-
- REASON, its use, on the argument of prophecy, v. 19.
- how to be employed on the evidences of religion, vi. 97, 98.
- compared with revelation as a guide in matters of religion, vii. 80,
- 92.
- why given to man, 99.
- what its pride, 102.
- its true use in support of Christianity, vii. 250, viii. 90.
- how abused, 99.
- how unpropitious to revelation, 109, 112.
-
- REBELLION, American, Sermon preached on account of, viii. 3.
-
- REDEMPTION, the great scheme of Providence, v. 57.
- through Christ extends to all men, vi. 63.
- brief account of, 70.
- vastness of the scheme, viii. 22.
-
- REFORMATION, in Germany, not effected wholly in the spirit of the
- Gospel, v. 167.
- begun and prosecuted on the principle that the Pope was Antichrist,
- 200.
- that doctrine not an innovation, 207.
- two great principles on which it was conducted, 346.
- question respecting the interpretation of Scripture, _ib._
- various considerations decisive of the controversy with the Papists,
- 350.
- an evil originating in, vii. 42.
-
- REFORMERS, their advancement in religious knowledge, vi. 190.
- formed their idea of Religion from the scriptures, _ib._
- how enabled to understand them, 192.
- especially the most important points of doctrine, 194, 196.
-
- RELIGION of Nature, and of the Gospel, defined, vi. 67.
-
- —— Christian, designed for the instruction of all degrees of men, vi. 24.
- its truths how to be explained to wise men, 25.
- high demands of evidence impertinent, 88.
- improper to be complied with, 90.
- presumptuous and unwarrantable, 96.
- mischiefs arising from misapplication of, 104.
- early attacked by superstition, 108.
- by worldly policy, 106.
- its whole system in what founded, 124.
- its doctrines objects of faith, and not of knowledge, 197.
- its chief evidences drawn from prophecies, 263.
- and miracles, 266.
- its doctrines consistent with reason, 268.
- does not oblige us to profess poverty, 375.
- hath descended to us through two, the most enlightened ages of the
- world, vii. 367.
- its power shewn in the zeal of Missionaries, viii. 30.
- most friendly to civil and religious liberty, 37.
- use and abuse of reason in, 89.
- its evidence the proper subject of enquiry, 98.
-
- REPENTANCE, what its merits and claims, vii. 85, 94.
- the great duty of, viii. 6.
- in the hour of national distress, 15.
-
- RESIDENCE, personal, of the clergy, its benefits, viii. 76.
-
- RETALIATION, strict, forbidden by our Saviour, vii. 310.
- natural resentment not therefore superseded, 314.
- true patriotism not injured, 318.
- nor military spirit weakened, 319.
- the injunction consistent with the true interest of individuals, 321.
-
- REVELATION, the only sure guide in matters of religion, vii. 79.
- how opposed by the pride of reason, 104.
- why not accompanied with the strongest possible evidence, 91.
-
- REVELATIONS, book of, its prophecies in part fulfilled, v. 127.
- its character and authority, 261.
- its style, 262, 265.
- its method, 268.
- examined by means of Mr. Mede’s discovery, 275.
- what the chronological order of the visions, 276.
- the prophecy made up of two great parts, 279.
- the book, of three, 280.
- of the residence of Antichrist, 290.
- proved to be Rome Christian, 297.
- its predictions respecting the time of his appearing, 326.
- foretels all the events of the Christian dispensation, 341.
- utility of studying this prophecy, 351.
-
- REVOLUTION, the æra of our liberty, viii. 47.
-
- RICHARD I. heard a lecture against Antichrist at Messina, v. 195.
-
- RIDICULE, the resource of sinners, vi. 353, 357, 359.
- especially when reproof comes home to them, 363.
-
- ROMAN EMPIRE, its reverse of fortune ascribed by the Heathens to
- Christianity, vii. 262.
-
- ROMANS, their nice sense of right and wrong, vi. 50.
- abuses in the administration of justice, 111.
-
- ROME, ancient, a supposition concerning, v. 57.
- Virgil’s allusion to its seven hills, 293.
- modern, the throne of Antichrist, v. 291.
- ecclesiastical and not civil, 297.
- its idolatry how described, 309.
- why a harlot and not an adulteress, 312.
- her pride and intolerance, 313.
- professes and enjoins the worship of Saints, 317.
- its tenets respecting Antichrist, v. 173.
- the Antipopes branded each other with that name, 186.
- denounced as Antichristian at various periods, 191 to 201.
-
- ROMULUS, famous omen of his twelve vultures, v. 83.
-
- ROUSSEAU, disclaims the authority of prophecy, v. 77. n.
- his reasons examined, 78.
- his strange boast of probity, vi. 257.
-
-
- S.
-
- SACRAMENTS, Christian, on what principle founded, vii. 402.
-
- SAINTS, the worship of, in the Romish Church, v. 317.
- apology for, controverted, 319.
-
- SALLUST, in his writings, appears a model of frugality, vii. 185.
-
- SALT, allusion of our Saviour to, its two interpretations, vi. 163, 164.
- applied to discipline as well as faith, 170.
-
- SALVATION through the blood of Christ, the eternal purpose of God,
- viii. 25.
- danger of neglecting it, vi. 67, 81.
- faith and morality its appointed means, 218.
-
- SANHEDRIN, could not punish with death but by leave of the Roman
- governor, vi. 323.
-
- SCHISM, import and application of the term by the Church of Rome, v. 208.
- how introduced into the Church, viii. 61.
-
- SCIENCE, human, very limited, vi. 184.
-
- SCIPIO, his continence, and frivolous curiosity, vii. 306.
-
- SCRIBE, Christian, compared with a Jewish householder, vi. 3.
-
- SCORN, irreligious, the sources of, vi. 353.
- admonition against, 364.
-
- SECTS, fanatical, of the last century, confusion caused by, vi. 16.
-
- SELDEN, his notion on the expulsion of the buyers and sellers from the
- temple, vii. 393.
- where apparently taken up, 398.
-
- SELF-DENIAL, its uses, vii. 306.
-
- SELF-LOVE, too frequently the parent of pride, vi. 132, 133.
- its ends how answered by philanthropy, 137.
- an instinctive sentiment, 335.
-
- SENECA, an oracle of his, predicting the discoveries of Columbus, v. 85.
-
- SERMONS, advice respecting, viii. 68, 120, 124.
- models proposed, 128. n.
-
- SHAKESPEAR, various editions and criticisms of, how occasioned, viii.
- 283.
-
- SHAME of Christ, what, vii. 329.
- cases which imply its existence among unbelievers, 330.
- among professors of Christianity, 334, 338.
- shame of his words, 342.
- of the doctrines contained in them, 346.
- of the precepts, 349.
-
- SHERLOCK, Bishop, his remark on the figurative language of prophecy,
- v. 68. n.
-
- SIBYLLINE oracles, general opinion concerning, v. 369.
-
- SIGN, what is meant by the Jews requiring one, viii. 168. n.
-
- SILVER, the lover of, shall not be satisfied, vi. 366.
-
- SIMPLICITY concerning evil, the virtue of, in what consisting, vi. 231.
- the neglect of it has degraded religion, 234.
- relaxed morality, 237.
- and polluted common life, 239.
- caution against evasive pleas and pretences to part with it, 240.
-
- SLAVERY, personal, common among the Heathen, vi. 386.
-
- SOCIETY for the Propagation of the Gospel, its objects, viii. 27, 28.
-
- SOCINIANISM, what, viii. 114.
-
- SOCRATES, his prediction of his own death fulfilled, v. 80. n.
- confessed that he knew nothing, vi. 285.
- uncertain in his hope of immortality, vii. 215.
-
- SOLOMON, prescribes the Fear of God as a rule of life, vii. 283.
- peculiar deference due to his judgment from men of the world, 293.
- from politicians and philosophers, 294.
-
- SOULS of Men, influence of evil spirits on, vii. 274.
-
- SPEAKING, the rules of, more arbitrary than they are taken to be, vii.
- 344.
-
- SPENDTHRIFT, more to be reprobated than the miser, vi. 370.
-
- SPENSER, his general purpose in the Faery Queen, v. 97.
-
- SPIRIT, Holy, he that soweth in, shall reap life everlasting, vii. 32.
- in what sense the assertion understood, 33.
- in what way the blessing conferred, 37.
- returns of duty thereby required, 40.
- justification of God in, 66.
-
- —— Human, its vices, vii. 49.
- —a fluctuating faith, 50.
- levity of mind, 53.
- deadness of heart, 56.
- perverse sophistry, 58.
-
- STATE, why it countenances the Church, viii. 62.
-
- STATUTES, relating to the jurisdiction of Cambridge university,
- examined, viii. 200.
-
- SUBLIMITY of speech, what, viii. 334, 342.
- the definition illustrated, 345.
- not united with simplicity, 347.
-
- SULLY, the great, his situation somewhat similar to that of Daniel,
- v. 374.
-
- SUPERSTITION, its early inroads into the Christian religion, vi. 105.
-
- SYMBOLS, an early way of writing, v. 238.
-
- SYNCHRONISMS of the book of Revelations, v. 275, 279, 283.
-
-
- T.
-
- TABOR, Mr. his mumpings against university-appeals, viii. 231.
-
- TEMPLE, what the notion of one implies, vi. 383.
- of God, an emblem of the Church of Christ, v. 301.
-
- —— of Jerusalem, utterly destroyed, v. 140.
- buyers and sellers driven from, vii. 386.
- the act a prediction of the call of the Gentiles, 408.
-
- TEMPTATION, God’s providence respecting, vii. 280.
-
- TERTULLIAN, his remark on the rapid progress of Christianity, viii. 153.
-
- TESTAMENT, Old, considered by St. Austin, a prophecy to the New, v.
- 53. n.
- the divinity of both inferred from the completion of prophecy, 127.
-
- TESTIMONY of Jesus, the spirit of prophecy, v. 21, 24.
-
- TEXT, which the most difficult in the four Gospels, vi. 160.
-
- THEOLOGY, dogmatical, essential to Christianity, viii. 60.
-
- THEOPHRASTUS, a name, why given, vii. 125.
-
- THOMAS the Apostle, admonished respecting faith, vi. 95.
-
- TIBERIUS, the religion of Jesus first published in his reign, vii. 367.
-
- TILLOTSON, Abp. his zeal against Antinomianism, vi. 17.
-
- TIME, scriptural division of, respecting the coming of Christ, v. 17.
-
- TOLERATION, not yet perfectly understood, vi. 195.
-
- TRINITY in Unity, where accurately distinguished, vii. 44.
-
- TROPES and figures, when and in what sense vicious, viii. 366.
- what forms of language so denominated by Quintilian, 371.
- often a deviation from logical definition, 377.
- when they may be allowed, 378.
-
- TRUTH, the spirit of, promised by our Lord to his apostles, vii. 222.
- the promise fulfilled by the event, 235.
-
-
- U. & V.
-
- VANITY, why a vice, vi. 127.
-
- VETTIUS VALENS, augured the duration of the Roman empire, v. 83.
-
- VICE, naturally breeds a disposition to ridicule, vi. 353.
- what its usual support, vii. 5.
-
- VIRGIL, purpose of his predictions in the Æneid, v. 96.
- a passage from, descriptive of Rome, 292.
- allusion to the predictions in his fourth eclogue, 368.
- the sixth book of his Æneid by whom finely criticized, viii. 277.
-
- VIRTUE, superior, excites envy, vi. 306.
- runs at times into excesses, 308.
- can never obtain general praise, 309.
- an intermitting state of, most miserable, 399.
- what its reasonable reward, vii. 91.
- the pride of, by which the Gospel may be hid from us, 106.
-
- VIRTUES of the Heathen, vi. 42.
-
- ULPIAN, his observation on the right of appeal, viii. 249.
-
- UNBELIEF, always owing to some or other of the passions, vi. 245.
- accounted for, from man’s pride, viii. 109.
- and indolence, 113.
-
- UNCLEANNESS, arguments against the sin of, vi. 382, 385.
- its heinousness, 391.
- inexcusable in Christians, 392.
-
- VOLTAIRE, his sarcasm on Sir Isaac Newton, vi. 265. n.
-
-
- W.
-
- WALDENSES, or ALBIGENSES, in what age they first appeared, v. 195.
- leading principle of their heresy, 196.
- crusades employed against them, _ib._
-
- WAR, civil, a most dreadful instrument of God’s government, viii. 8.
-
- WASHING of the disciples’ feet, a lesson of humility, vi. 145.
- its other, and more important signification, 149, 150.
-
- WEALTH, pernicious when over-rated, vi. 368.
- or when misapplied, 370.
- always a snare, and too often a curse, 375.
- has a tendency to corrupt manners, vii. 293.
-
- WESTON, Mr. remarks on his inquiry into the rejection of Christian
- miracles by the heathens, viii. 150.
- his negative testimonies examined, 155.
- his positive testimonies, 161.
- his charge on the fathers of the Church, 163.
- claims the sanction of an apostle, 165.
- his strong hold proves to be magic, 175.
- answer to his argument from the multiplication of Heathen Gods, 179.
- ground-work of his performance, 183.
-
- WESTERN EMPIRE, the period of its dismemberment that of the rise of
- Antichrist, v. 330.
-
- WICLIF exposed the Antichristianism of the Roman pontiff, v. 199.
- great effects of his writings, 200.
-
- WILL-WORSHIP, condemned in Scripture, v. 325.
-
- WISDOM, infinite, in the dispensation of prophecy, v. 6, 70.
-
- —— Christian, its properties and characters, vi. 215.
- defects in our nature which hinder the attainment of it, 217.
- virtues, how to be rendered most graceful, 220.
- how most reasonable, 222.
- and how most attractive and efficacious, 225.
- character of a wise Christian, 227.
- the duty of being simple concerning evil, 231.
-
- WISE MEN, invited to judge of Christianity, vi. 8.
- qualities requisite for this, 32.
-
- WIT, the ostentation of, leads to infidelity, vi. 248.
-
- WOE to those of whom all men speak well, vi. 304.
-
- WORD OF GOD, admonitions respecting the hearing of, vi. 203, 205.
- the ministry of it, for what purposes destined, 207.
- men will finally be judged by it, 211.
-
-
- X.
-
- XENOPHON, character of his writings, v. 382.
- his admirable way of recording his own acts, vii. 179.
-
-
- Y.
-
- YOUTH, its peculiar sins, vi. 394.
- just decrees of God against them, 395.
- guilt and remorse, _ib._
- tyrannous habits produced by them, 399.
- temporal afflictions which they entail, 401.
- value of innocency and rectitude, 405.
-
-
- Z.
-
- ZEDEKIAH, two ænigmatical prophecies respecting him fulfilled, v. 253.
-
- ZELOTISM, its object, vii. 396.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-Nichols and Son, Printers, Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London.
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.
-
-Greek words beginning with ϖ have had the character replaced with π.]
-
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The works of Richard Hurd, Volume 8 (of 8), by Richard Hurd</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The works of Richard Hurd, Volume 8 (of 8)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Richard Hurd</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 18, 2023 [eBook #69824]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF RICHARD HURD, VOLUME 8 (OF 8) ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
-
-<p>This project uses utf-8 encoded characters. If some characters are
-not readable, check your settings of your browser to ensure you have a
-default font installed that can display utf-8 characters.</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>i</span></p>
-
-<h1><small>THE</small><br />
-WORKS<br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-RICHARD HURD, D.D.<br />
-<span class="large">LORD BISHOP OF WORCESTER.</span><br />
-<span class="medium">VOL. VIII.</span><br /></h1>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">ii</span></p>
-
-<p class="copy">
-Printed by J. Nichols and Son,<br />
-Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London.<br /></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>iii</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large"><small>THE</small><br />
-WORKS<br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-RICHARD HURD, D.D.<br />
-<span class="large">LORD BISHOP OF WORCESTER.<br />
-IN EIGHT VOLUMES.<br />
-VOL. VIII.</span><br />
-<img src="images/titlepage.png" alt="" /><br />
-<span class="large">LONDON:</span><br />
-<span class="medium">PRINTED FOR T. CADELL AND W. DAVIES, STRAND.<br />
-1811.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">iv</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">v</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">
-THEOLOGICAL WORKS.<br />
-<span class="large">VOL. IV.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">
-<span class="large">SERMONS ON PUBLIC OCCASIONS.<br />
-CHARGES TO THE CLERGY.</span><br />
-<small>AND</small><br />
-<span class="medium">AN APPENDIX:</span><br />
-<small>CONTAINING</small><br />
-<span class="large">CONTROVERSIAL TRACTS</span><br />
-<span class="medium">ON DIFFERENT SUBJECTS AND OCCASIONS.</span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>viii</span></h2>
-
-<h2 id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS<br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-THE EIGHTH VOLUME.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>ix</span></h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#SERMONS">SERMONS.</a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Sermon, preached before the House of
- Lords, Dec. 13, 1776; being the Day of
- the General Fast, on account of the American
- Rebellion</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#SERMON_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Sermon, preached before the Society for
- the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
- Parts, Feb. 16, 1781</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#SERMON_2">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Sermon, preached before the House of
- Lords, January 30, 1786; being the Anniversary
- of King Charles’s Martyrdom</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#SERMON_3">35</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#SIX_CHARGES">CHARGES.</a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Lichfield and Coventry, in 1775 and 1776</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_CHARGE_1">55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1782</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_CHARGE_2">73</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x"></a>x</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1785</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_CHARGE_3">87</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1790</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_CHARGE_4">103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1796</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_CHARGE_5">117</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Charge to the Clergy of the Diocese of
- Worcester, 1800</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_CHARGE_6">129</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#CONTROVERSIAL_TRACTS">CONTROVERSIAL TRACTS.</a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Remarks on the Rev.</i> <span class="smcap">W. Weston’s</span> <i>Enquiry
- into the Rejection of the Christian Miracles
- by the Heathens, 1746</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#REMARKS_ON_A_LATE_BOOK">145</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>The Opinion of an eminent Lawyer, concerning
- the Right of Appeal from the Vice-Chancellor
- of Cambridge to the Senate, 1751</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#THE_OPINION_OF_AN_EMINENT_LAWYER">185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>On the Delicacy of Friendship, 1755</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#AN_ADDRESS_TO_THE_REV_DR_JORTIN">255</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>A Letter to the Rev. Dr.</i> <span class="smcap">Thomas Leland</span>,
- <i>Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin; on his
- Dissertation on the Principles of Human
- Eloquence, &amp;c. 1764</i></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#A_LETTER_TO_THE_REV_DR_LELAND">303</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="SERMONS">THREE SERMONS<br />
-<small>PREACHED ON</small><br />
-<span class="medium">PUBLIC OCCASIONS.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="SERMON_1"><small>A</small><br />
-SERMON<br />
-<small>PREACHED BEFORE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE RIGHT HONOURABLE</span><br />
-<span class="large">THE HOUSE OF LORDS,</span><br />
-<small>IN THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">ABBEY CHURCH OF WESTMINSTER,</span><br />
-<small>ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1776,<br />
-BEING<br />
-The Day appointed by <span class="smcap">Authority</span> for a <span class="smcap">General Fast</span>,
-on Account of the <span class="smcap">American Rebellion</span>.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span></h2>
-
-<h3><i>Die Veneris, 13ᵒ Decembris 14, 1776, Post
-Meridiem.</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Ordered</span>, by the Lords Spiritual and
-Temporal, in Parliament assembled, That the
-Thanks of this House be, and are hereby, given
-to the Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry,
-for the Sermon by him preached before this
-House, this day, in the Abbey Church, Westminster;
-and he is hereby desired to cause the
-same to be forthwith printed and published.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Ashley Cowper</span>,<br />
-Cler. Parliamentor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
-<h2>SERMON, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Psalm CXIX.</span> v. 59.</h3>
-
-<p><i>I called mine own ways to remembrance: and
-turned my feet unto thy testimonies.</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">The</span> great object of this day’s solemnity, is,
-<i>to humble ourselves before Almighty God, in
-order to obtain pardon of our sins</i>. But this
-end requires, that we enter into an earnest recollection
-of our <i>ways</i>, and stedfastly resolve
-to <i>forsake</i> all those, which we shall find reason
-to condemn.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the example set us by the royal author
-of the text: And, though it might claim
-our respect at all times, it especially does so,
-at this juncture, when our sins have brought
-down upon us the heaviest of those judgments,
-with which it pleases God to visit, and, if it
-may be, to reclaim, offending nations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span></p>
-
-<p>And the hand of Heaven is not the less, but
-the more visible in this calamity, for it’s befalling
-us, when the acknowledged power of
-our country seemed to secure it against all resistance,
-both within and without; and when
-it was not to be expected, from the usual course
-of human affairs, that an attempt of this nature,
-so unprovoked, at once, and so hazardous,
-would be made. Something there must have
-been, much amiss in that people, against whom
-the Almighty permits the sword of civil fury,
-under <i>such</i> circumstances, to be drawn.</p>
-
-<p>From what <i>causes</i>, and by what <i>steps</i>, this
-portentous mischief hath grown up to it’s present
-size and terror, it is not needful, and may
-not be proper, for me to say. For which of us
-is unacquainted with these things? And how
-ill suited to the modest piety of this day would
-be, the vehement accusation of others, or the
-sollicitous justification of ourselves!</p>
-
-<p>Yet, among the various pretences, which
-have served to pervert the judgments of many,
-<span class="smcap">One</span> is so strange, and of so pernicious a tendency,
-were it to be generally admitted, that a
-word or two cannot be misemployed in the
-censure of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span></p>
-
-<p>It is in the order of things, that they who,
-for any purpose, wish to draw the people into a
-scheme of resistance to an established government,
-should labour to impress them, first of
-all, with a persuasion of their being ill governed.
-Acts of tyranny and oppression are, therefore,
-sought out with diligence; and invented, when
-they cannot be found: And the credulous
-multitude have but too easily, at all times, lent
-an ear to such charges.</p>
-
-<p>But it is quite new, and beyond measure
-extravagant, to tell us, That, although there be
-no considerable abuse of the government, as it
-now stands, we are bound in conscience to resist
-it, because such abuse is possible, and because
-a more desirable form of government may
-be conceived. And yet, to the disgrace of an
-age, calling itself philosophical, such sophistry
-has passed, not on the multitude only, but, as
-it is said, on wise men.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, it would be unjust to
-say, that speculations on the nature and end of
-government are, therefore, useless or even hurtful,
-because we see them, in the present instance,
-so egregiously misapplied. Theories on
-government, when framed by sober and thinking
-men, cannot but be of great importance, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-serving to remind both the governors and governed
-of their respective interests and duties;
-nay, and as tending ultimately to improve establishments
-themselves; but by degrees only,
-and by constitutional means. Our own excellent
-establishment has, in this way, been much
-improved: And we surely owe our thanks to
-those theorists, whose generous labours have
-contributed to this end.</p>
-
-<p>But to apply these theories, how reasonable
-soever in themselves, directly to the correction
-of established governments, and to insist, that
-force may, or should, be called in to realize
-these visions, is a sort of fanaticism, which, if
-suffered to take it’s course, would introduce
-the utmost confusion into human affairs; would
-be constantly disturbing, and must, in the end,
-subvert, the best government, that ever did,
-or ever can, subsist in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Thus much, then, in reproof of so wild and
-destructive a principle, I could not help saying
-in the entrance of a discourse, which, to suit
-the occasion, should have little of altercation
-and dispute; and which, agreeably to the text,
-must turn chiefly on the great duties of Recollection
-and Repentance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
-
-<p>But what, you will say, “Is a criminal enterprize,
-like this, which occasions our present
-meeting, to be charged on those only, against
-whom it is directed? And must we be the
-worst of sinners, because there are those of our
-fellow-subjects, who have taken up arms against
-their Sovereign?”</p>
-
-<p>Far be it from me to affirm either of these
-things! Yet he was a wise man, who said,
-that, <i>when a man’s ways please the Lord, he
-maketh even his enemies to be at peace with
-him</i><a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>: And I think it clear from the tenour of
-scripture, and even from our own experience,
-that no national distress is ever inflicted, before
-it is deserved.</p>
-
-<p>And the conviction of this sad truth is
-ground enough for us to turn ourselves to the
-great work of Repentance; which does not require
-us to form discouraging, or indeed any,
-comparisons between ourselves and the enemies
-we contend with, but to call to mind
-that we have, indeed, merited the evil, we
-suffer, whether brought upon us immediately
-by our own sins, or those of other men. A
-civil war is the most dreadful of those instruments,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-by which the moral government of God
-is administered in this world. And, <i>when such
-a judgement is in the earth</i>, be our comparative
-merits what they may, we shall do well to <i>learn
-righteousness</i><a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But, after all, who, or what are we, that we
-should talk of <i>merits</i>, or scruple to place this
-alarming visitation of Heaven to the account of
-our sins?—Merciful God! Do thou incline
-our hearts to follow the example of thy servant,
-David, this day, in <i>calling our own ways to remembrance</i>,
-and we shall presently see what
-need there is for us to <i>turn our feet unto thy
-testimonies</i>!</p>
-
-<p>1. To begin from that point, whence all true
-worth and goodness, proceeds, I mean, from
-<span class="smcap">Religion</span>.</p>
-
-<p>There is no people on the face of the earth,
-more deeply indebted to Providence for blessings
-of all sorts, spiritual as well as temporal, than
-we of this Christian and Protestant nation.
-But has our pious gratitude kept pace with
-these obligations?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span></p>
-
-<p>Infinite are the benefits, that descend upon
-us from our <small>WELL-REFORMED</small> Religion, and
-from the watchful care of Heaven in the support
-and protection of it. Yet who reflects on
-these things? Should we so much as hear a
-word on the subject, if it did not suit the purpose,
-sometimes, of peevish men and parties
-among us, to revive the memory of it? Have
-we even a decent regard for the honour of our
-great Reformers? And is not the little zeal,
-we have left for Protestantism itself, spent in
-idle cavils at the stupendous work, atchieved
-by their hands?</p>
-
-<p>But why speak I of <i>reformed</i> religion? Is
-there any of us, almost, who is animated with
-that zeal for <span class="smcap">Christianity</span> itself, which glowed
-in the breasts of our fathers?</p>
-
-<p>Too many proclaim their disbelief of it, nay,
-their utter contempt of all that is called Religion;
-and yet appear to give no offence (where,
-methinks, it should be taken) by their manifest,
-their avowed, their ostentatious impieties. Is
-it not even growing into a maxim, in certain
-quarters, that Religion, or Irreligion, is a matter
-of no moment in the characters of men, and
-that none, but a bigot, is affected by that distinction?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span></p>
-
-<p>It is true, the wiser, and, in every sense of
-the word, better, part of the public have an
-abhorrence of this profligacy. They profess,
-and without doubt entertain, a respect for the
-authority of their divine religion. Yet who
-has not observed, that more than a few of these
-reduce that authority to just nothing, and, in a
-sort of philosophical delirium, are for setting
-up their Reason, that is, their <i>own</i> authority,
-in it’s stead?</p>
-
-<p>Even we, of the Clergy, have we not some
-need to be put in mind of <i>doing our first works</i>,
-and of returning to <i>our first love</i><a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>? Has not
-the contagion of the times sicklied over the
-complexion of even <i>our</i> zeal and charity? while
-we neither repell the enemies of the faith with
-that vigour, nor confirm the faithful themselves
-with that vigilance, which did so much honour
-to our predecessors in the sacred ministry.</p>
-
-<p>But to come to plain <i>practical Religion</i>, as
-evidenced in our churches, and houses, and in
-the offices of common life.</p>
-
-<p>How few are there, in comparison, who
-make a conscience of serving God, either in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-public, or in private? Is there so much as the
-air of piety in numberless families, even on
-that day, which by God and man is set apart
-for the duties of it? Nay, is not that day, I
-had almost said, in preference to others, prophaned
-by every sort of amusement and dissipation?
-As if there was a full purpose to
-shake off even that small appearance of religion,
-which the Lord’s day has hitherto, and
-but barely, kept up. So little do we retain of
-that habitual seriousness, that awful sense of
-God, and of our dependence upon him, in
-which the essence of the religious character
-consists!</p>
-
-<p>2. And, if such be the state of religion
-among us, who will wonder, that the <small>MORAL
-VIRTUES</small>, which have no firm abode in the
-Godless mind, are deserting us so fast? Who
-can think it strange, that oaths have lost their
-power? And that the most solemn engagements,
-even those contracted at the altar itself,
-are falling apace, or rather are <i>fallen</i> with many,
-into contempt?</p>
-
-<p>Our <i>natural</i> appetites, indeed, are impatient
-for their respective gratifications; and the lower
-classes of men, uneducated and undisciplined,
-are, at all times, too generally enslaved by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-them. But an overflow of wealth, and, it’s
-consequence, ingenious Luxury, has now made
-our <i>fantastic</i> wants, as clamorous, as the natural;
-and the rage, with which the objects of
-them, or what we call polite and elegant pleasures
-and accommodations, are pursued in the
-higher ranks of life, discovers an impotency of
-mind, equal to that of the lowest vulgar, and
-more ruinous in its effects. For, whence is it,
-else, that bankruptcies are so frequent? that
-every species of fraud and rapine is hazarded?
-that a lust for gaming is grown epidemical and
-uncontroulable? that the ruin of noble and
-opulent families surprizes nobody? that even
-suicide is the crime of almost every day, nay
-and justified, too, as well as committed?</p>
-
-<p>If horrors, like these, admit of aggravation,
-it is, that they meet us in a country, where the
-religion of Jesus is taught in it’s purity, and,
-as yet, is publicly professed; in a country, that
-wants no means of knowing it’s duty, and,
-among it’s other motives to the practice of it,
-has one, as rare as it is valuable, I mean, The
-best example in the highest place.</p>
-
-<p>3. In this relaxed state of <i>private morals</i>, it
-is easy to guess what must be the tone of our
-<small>CIVIL</small> or <small>POLITICAL</small> virtues.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span></p>
-
-<p>Vice is never so shameless, as when it pretends
-to public spirit. Yet this effrontery is
-so common, that it scandalizes nobody. If,
-indeed, noise and clamour and violence; if an
-affected tumour of words, breaking out in a
-loud defiance of dignities; if intemperate invectives
-against the most respected characters,
-and a contempt of all that wears the face of
-authority among us——were proofs of a just
-concern for the common weal; there would be
-no want of this virtue.</p>
-
-<p>But who sees not, that true patriotism dares
-not allow itself in these liberties? that, if, in
-pursuit of a favourite object, it goes, occasionally,
-some lengths, scarce justifiable itself,
-it never fails, however, to stop at a certain
-point, and to respect, at least, the firm immoveable
-barriers of the Constitution? But
-has such been the modesty of our times? Let
-every one judge for himself. And, for the rest,
-I wish it had not appeared of late, that such a
-spirit of rapine and corruption prevails, both at
-home and abroad, as threatens the subversion
-of all our public interests;—a spirit! which
-neither the vigilance of parliament, for the severity
-of public justice, hath been able to
-controul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span></p>
-
-<p>I <small>PASS RAPIDLY</small> over these things, and omit
-a thousand others, that might be mentioned,
-because I would rather suggest matter to your
-own reflexions, than enlarge on so unwelcome
-a subject, myself. Besides, I know what is
-commonly thought of such representations.
-Some will treat them, as decent words, on this
-occasion; others, as charges much aggravated,
-if not groundless; even, on many well-intentioned
-men an old and oft-repeated complaint
-will make, it is possible, but a slight impression.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it is <i>our</i> duty to speak plainly, on such
-a day, as this; and if we speak truly too, it is
-very clear what must be the duty of our <i>hearers</i>.
-Reason stands aghast at the sight of an “unprincipled,
-immoral, incorrigible” publick: And
-the word of God abounds in such threats and
-denunciations, as must strike terror into the
-heart of every Believer. And, although Repentance
-may not ensure success in the great
-contest, now depending, (for the All-wise Disposer
-of events may see fit to decree otherwise);
-yet the likeliest method we can take to procure
-that success will be, by rendering ourselves
-somewhat less unworthy of it, than, assuredly,
-we now are. At all events, an amendment of
-life will recommend us to the favour of God,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-and must therefore be useful, indeed is the only
-thing that, in the end, can be truly so, to us.</p>
-
-<p>Let us then (every one for himself) try what
-Repentance can do, under this conviction of a
-too general depravity, and in this hour of national
-distress. One natural effect of it will
-be, A readiness to submit ourselves to the authority
-of Government in all those just measures,
-which it may see fit to take in the present
-emergency, and to give the utmost effect
-to them by our entire agreement and unanimity.</p>
-
-<p>And would to God, we had always been of
-this mind!—But, let us, at length, resolve to
-be so. Then may we hope, with the divine
-blessing (which we have supplicated this day)
-on his Majesty’s arms and councils, that this
-unnatural Rebellion will be soon composed; the
-just rights of the nation restored; and a way
-opened for the re-establishment of <i>law</i> and <i>order</i>
-in those miserably distracted provinces, which
-have now learned, from experience, the just
-value of both.</p>
-
-<p>To conclude; a pious and Christian use of
-the present occasion, in putting up our vows to
-heaven for the return of the public tranquillity,
-and in forsaking, every one of us, the error of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-our ways, will perfectly correspond to the views
-of our most religious and gracious Sovereign;
-who, in calling upon us to join with him in
-this solemn fast, in the midst of his successes,
-demonstrates, that his trust is not in his own
-strength, but that of the Almighty; that He
-regards this necessary chastisement of his undutiful
-subjects as a matter of the deepest humiliation;
-and that Victory itself but redoubles
-his ardour to procure for us, and for all his
-people, the blessings of Peace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="SERMON_2"><small>A</small><br />
-SERMON<br />
-<small>PREACHED BEFORE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE INCORPORATED SOCIETY</span><br />
-<small>FOR THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">PROPAGATION OF THE GOSPEL IN FOREIGN PARTS;</span><br />
-<span class="medium">AT THEIR ANNIVERSARY MEETING</span><br />
-<small>IN THE PARISH CHURCH OF ST. MARY-LE-BOW,<br />
-ON FRIDAY FEBRUARY 16, 1781.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></h2>
-
-<h3><i>At the Anniversary Meeting of the</i> Society for
-the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
-Parts, <i>in the</i> Vestry-Room <i>of St.</i> Mary-le-Bow,
-<i>on</i> Friday <i>the</i> 16<i>th Day of</i> February,
-1781;</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Agreed</span>, That the Thanks of the <span class="smcap">Society</span>
-be given to the Right Reverend the Lord
-Bishop of <i>Lichfield</i> and <i>Coventry</i>, for the Sermon
-preached by his Lordship this day before
-the <span class="smcap">Society</span>; and that his Lordship be desired
-to deliver a copy of the same to the <span class="smcap">Society</span>
-to be printed.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><i>William Morice</i>, Secretary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span></p>
-
-<h2>SERMON, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Hebrews</span>, xiii. 8.</h3>
-
-<p><i>Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, to-day, and
-for ever.</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">These</span> words, if considered with an eye to
-the preceding verses, may mean, “That our
-Lord Jesus Christ is always attentive to the
-wants and distresses of his faithful followers,
-and always at hand to relieve them:” Or, if
-we connect them with the verse immediately
-following, we may understand them as expressing
-this proposition, “That the doctrine
-of Jesus Christ is always one and the same,
-independently of the wayward and changeable
-fancies of men.” In either way, I say, the
-words may be taken; and they do not necessarily
-imply more than the one or the other of
-these two senses, which the context will oblige
-us to bestow upon them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span></p>
-
-<p>But the minds of the Apostles, full of the
-greatest ideas, and swelling with the suggestions
-of the holy Spirit, which, in no scanty measure,
-was imparted to them, perpetually overflow,
-as it were, the subject of their discourse, and
-expatiate into other and larger views, than seem
-necessary to the completion of the argument,
-immediately presented to them.</p>
-
-<p>This being the manner of the inspired writers,
-it can be thought no forced or violent construction
-of the text, to take it in the full extent
-of the expression; which is so striking and
-awful, as naturally to turn our thoughts towards
-the contemplation of the three following particulars:</p>
-
-<p>First, The ineffable glory of our Lord’s
-<i>Person</i>;</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, The immensity of the scheme of
-<i>Redemption through his blood</i><a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>; And</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, The unchangeable nature of his
-<i>Religion</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In these several senses, it is truly and emphatically
-said of Jesus Christ, That <i>he is the
-same yesterday, to-day, and for ever</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span></p>
-
-<p>I. The transcendent dignity of our blessed
-Lord’s <span class="smcap">Person</span> is expressed in these words.</p>
-
-<p>For what less do they imply than a perfect
-state of being, a proper eternity of existence?
-Agreeably to what we read elsewhere, That <i>he
-was in the beginning</i><a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>—<i>before all things</i><a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>—that
-<i>he is Alpha and Omega, the first and the last</i><a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>—that
-<i>his throne is for ever and ever</i><a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>—and <i>his
-goings forth from everlasting</i><a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>: Nay, and suitably
-to the very turn of phrase, which the Holy
-Ghost employs in characterizing the Supreme
-Majesty of Heaven, <i>I am Alpha and Omega,
-the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord,
-which is, and which was, and which is to come,
-the Almighty</i><a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>When Jesus Christ, therefore, is held out to
-us in the text, as being <i>the same yesterday, to-day,
-and for ever</i>, we may be allowed, or rather
-we are required, to elevate our thoughts to the
-utmost, and to conceive with inexpressible awe
-and veneration <i>of that glory which he had with
-the Father, before the world was</i><a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span></p>
-
-<p>II. We are called upon by these words to
-reflect on the constant, uniform tenour of that
-amazing scheme of <span class="smcap">Redemption</span>, which was
-planned before the ages, was unfolded by just
-degrees, and was finally completed in <i>Christ
-Jesus</i>; in this sense, likewise, so interesting to
-us, <i>the</i> <small>SAME</small> <i>yesterday, to-day, and for ever</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>The works of the Lord</i>, says the Psalmist,
-<i>are great, and sought out of all those that have
-pleasure therein</i><a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>. But which of his works is
-so stupendous, or carries the enraptured mind
-to so high an original, as that which respects
-the redemption by Christ Jesus? Man was
-produced in time, and stationed on this earth at
-the distance of no more years, than our chronology
-easily reckons up. But who can go
-back to that moment, when the Godhead sate
-in council on <i>the dispensation of Grace</i> by the
-Gospel? <i>On the mystery, which from the beginning
-of the world hath been hid in God, who
-created all things by Jesus Christ; to the intent
-that</i>, in the fullness of time, <i>unto the principalities
-and powers in heavenly places might be
-known by the Church the manifold wisdom of
-God, according to the eternal purpose which he
-purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord</i><a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>? Inspired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-language itself labours, we see, in setting forth
-the extent of this dispensation; in declaring
-to us <i>what is the breadth, and length, and depth,
-and height</i> of this scheme of divine wisdom,
-<i>through the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge</i><a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Known unto God</i>, indeed, <i>are</i> <small>ALL</small> <i>his works
-from the beginning</i><a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>. But this great work of
-love seems to have been ever present to him;
-to have engaged and occupied, if we may presume
-so to speak, the constant, the unremitting,
-the unwearied attention of the divine
-mind; and to have entered into all the counsels
-of his providence, which he had formed for
-the display of his glory, <i>through all ages, world
-without end</i><a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the idea which the Scriptures oblige
-us to entertain of <i>the manifold wisdom</i> of God
-in Christ Jesus: <i>manifold</i>, as it presents to us
-the various evolutions of an eternal and infinitely
-extended dispensation of Grace; but
-<i>one and the same</i>, with regard to the end in
-view, the redemption of a ruined world, and
-to the conduct and completion of them all by
-the means, and in the person, of the Redeemer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span></p>
-
-<p>What parts of this scheme lie out of the
-verge of our world, and how much of it hath
-respected, or may hereafter respect, other and
-higher natures by far, than the sons of men, it
-would be fruitless to inquire, as these deep
-things of God have not been distinctly revealed
-to us. Yet one thing deserves our notice,
-That <i>the Angels themselves<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> desire to look into
-this</i> scheme of salvation; and are surely some
-way concerned in it, since it was designed to
-comprehend, <i>and gather together in one, all
-things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and
-which are on earth, even in</i> <small>HIM</small><a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But conceive of the interest which celestial
-beings have in Jesus Christ, as you will; there
-can be no doubt, that he has been invariably
-the end of all God’s revelations to mankind.
-The history of Redemption is coæval with that
-of the Globe itself, has run through every
-stage of its existence, and will outlast its utmost
-duration. The precious hope of a Redeemer
-was the support of fallen man; the
-theme of all the Patriarchs; the basis of all
-the Covenants; the boast and exultation of all
-the Prophets; and the desire of all nations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span></p>
-
-<p>Look round on the shifting scenes of glory,
-which have been exhibited in the theatre of
-this world; and see the success of mighty conquerors,
-the policy of states, the destiny of
-empires, depend on the secret purpose of God
-in his son Jesus: before whom all the atchievements
-and imaginations of men must bow
-down, and to whose honour all the mysterious
-workings of his providence are now, have hitherto
-been, and will for ever be, directed.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the uniform, immutable, everlasting
-tenour of that dispensation, we call Christian;
-the power and wisdom of God in <i>Jesus Christ,
-the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever</i>. But</p>
-
-<p>III. Lastly, these words express the unchangeable
-nature and perpetual obligation of
-Christianity, considered as a <i>Law of Religion</i>,
-or <i>Rule of Life</i>, as well as a scheme of wisdom
-and mercy unspeakable for the redemption of
-mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Salvation by the blood of Christ was the
-eternal purpose of God, the ultimate end of
-all his counsels. But, for the attainment of it,
-He chose to reveal his will gradually by several
-intermediate and preparatory communications.
-Hence the divine Law, though still directed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-the same end, has been diversified, according
-as the Legislator saw fit, <i>at sundry times, and
-in divers manners, to speak in times past unto
-the Fathers by the</i> <span class="smcap">Prophets</span>.</p>
-
-<p>But now, at length, <i>He hath spoken to us by
-his</i> <span class="smcap">Son</span>; whose word has become the standing
-law of mankind; obligatory on all, to whom it
-is made known, and unalterable by any authority,
-or by any change of circumstances whatsoever.
-The terms of salvation are irrevocably
-fixed. They are proposed to all, and required
-of all, without distinction of seasons or persons.
-The everlasting Gospel is addressed to <i>all that
-dwell on the earth; to every nation and kindred
-and tongue and people</i><a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>. The extent of it is
-universal; and the obligation so indispensable,
-that <i>if an Angel from Heaven preach any other
-Gospel than that we have received</i>, he is to be
-rejected by us; nay, an anathema rests upon
-him<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>. Since <i>the sound of the Gospel is gone
-out into all the world</i><a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>, we are to listen to no
-other. Nor is it to be modified to our expectations
-or fancies. <i>We are complete in</i> <small>HIM</small>,
-<i>which is the head of all principality and power</i><a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>;
-even in <span class="smcap">Jesus Christ</span>, with regard to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-perpetuity and eternity of his Law, as well as in
-the other senses before considered, <i>the</i> <small>SAME</small>
-<i>yesterday, to-day, and for ever</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After this</span> explanation of the text, every
-one sees with what force it applies to the occasion
-of our present meeting. For surely
-such a Religion, as that of Jesus, so divine in
-its origin, so extensive in its views, and so
-permanent in its obligations, deserves to be
-propagated through the world; and justifies,
-or rather demands, the utmost zeal of its professors
-to spread it abroad among all nations.</p>
-
-<p>And such is the end of this venerable Society;
-instituted for the double purpose of
-converting the Heathen, who sit in darkness
-and the shadow of death, to the blessed hopes
-of the Gospel; and of keeping up and promoting
-in professed Christians that <i>faith</i>, which
-they have already received, but, through indigence,
-ignorance, or a vicious life, have suffered
-to languish and die away, or have not,
-at least, cultivated to any valuable purpose.</p>
-
-<p>And can either of these objects be indifferent
-to us? Be it but the <i>latter</i> of the two, it
-must deeply affect a good and compassionate
-mind. Where the want of instruction is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-extreme in those who bear the name of Christians,
-and the means of obtaining it clearly
-not within their power, there is no doubt that
-both benevolence and piety call upon us to
-administer what relief we properly can to their
-pressing necessities.</p>
-
-<p>But the <i>former</i>, I suppose, is the main object
-of the Society: And if, on this occasion,
-we may have leave to enlarge our ideas a little,
-and to contemplate that object in the extent
-to which it has been carried by the zeal not
-of our’s only, but of other ancient and modern
-missions, we shall find it above measure interesting
-to all true believers in Jesus.</p>
-
-<p>For look on the various wild and uncivilized
-tribes of men, of whatever name or colour,
-which our ambition, or avarice, or curiosity
-has discovered, in the new or old world; and
-say, if the sight of human nature in such
-crying distress, in such sordid, disgraceful, and
-more than brutal wretchedness, be not enough
-to make us fly with ardour to their relief and
-better accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>To impart some ideas of order and civility
-to their rude minds, is an effort of true generosity:
-But, if we can find means at the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-time, or in consequence of such civility, to
-infuse a sense of God and Religion, of the
-virtues and hopes which spring out of faith in
-Christ, and which open a scene of consolation
-and glory to them, who but must regard this as
-an act of the most sublime charity?</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the difficulties, the dangers, the distresses
-of all sorts, which must be encountered
-by the Christian Missionary, require a more
-than ordinary degree of that virtue, and will
-only be sustained by <i>him</i>, whom a fervent love
-of Christ and the quickening graces of his
-Spirit have anointed, as it were, and consecrated
-to this arduous service. Then it is, that
-we have seen the faithful minister of the word
-go forth with the zeal of an Apostle, and the
-constancy of a Martyr. We have seen him
-forsake ease and affluence; a competency at
-least, and the ordinary comforts of Society;
-and, with the Gospel in his hand and his Saviour
-in his heart, make his way through burning
-deserts and the howling wilderness: braving
-the rage of climates, and all the inconveniencies
-of long and perilous voyages; submitting to
-the drudgery of learning barbarous languages,
-and to the disgust of complying with barbarous
-manners; watching the dark suspicions, and
-exposed to the capricious fury, of impotent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-savages; courting their offensive society, adopting
-their loathsome customs, and assimilating
-his very nature, almost, to their’s; in a word,
-<i>enduring all things, becoming all things</i>, in the
-patient hope of finding a way to their good
-opinion, and of succeeding, finally, in his unwearied
-endeavours to make the word of life
-and salvation not unacceptable to them.</p>
-
-<p>I confess, when I reflect on all these things,
-I humble myself before such heroic virtue; or,
-rather, I adore the grace of God in Christ
-Jesus, which is able to produce such examples
-of it in our degenerate world.</p>
-
-<p>The power of Religion has, no doubt, appeared
-in other instances; in <small>PENANCES</small>, suppose,
-in <small>PILGRIMAGES</small>, in <small>CRUSADES</small>; and we
-know in what light they are now regarded by
-reasonable and judicious men.</p>
-
-<p>But let not things so dissimilar be compared
-together, much less confounded. Uncommanded,
-useless, sanguinary zeal provokes your
-contempt and abhorrence; and with reason:
-Only remember, for pity’s sake, under what
-circumstances of ignorance and barbarity the
-provocation was given. But when the duty is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-clearly enjoined<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> by the Redeemer himself;
-when no weapon is employed by the enterprizing
-adventurer but that of the Spirit; when
-the friendliest affections prompt his zeal; and
-the object in view is eternal life; when, I say,
-the authority is unquestionable, and the means
-blameless; the motive so pure, and the end so
-glorious—O! let not the hard heart of Infidelity
-prophane such a virtue, as this, with the
-disgraceful name of <i>fanaticism</i>, or <i>superstition</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Nay, Candour, methinks, should be ready to
-make allowance for some real defects or miscarriages,
-which will ever attend the best performances
-of mortal men. What though some
-error in judgment, some impropriety of conduct,
-some infirmity of temper, I had almost
-said, some imbecillity of understanding, be
-discernible in the zealous Missionary? Something,
-nay much, may be overlooked, where so
-much is endured for Christ’s sake. It is enough
-that the word of the Cross is preached <i>in simplicity
-and godly sincerity</i><a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>. He, whose <i>strength
-is made perfect in weakness</i><a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>, will provide that
-even the frailties of his servants contribute, in
-the end, to the success of so good a cause, and
-the display of his own glory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus much I could not help saying on the
-behalf, and in admiration, of a <span class="smcap">Charity</span>,
-which intends so much benefit to the souls of
-men, which brings out so many shining virtues
-in its ministers, and reflects so much honour
-on the Christian name. They that feel themselves
-unworthy to be made the immediate instruments
-of carrying on this great work of conversion
-among savage tribes and infidel nations,
-should bless God for the nobler gifts of zeal,
-and resolution, and fortitude, which he has bestowed
-on others; and should promote it by
-such means as are in their power, by their countenance,
-their liberality, their counsel; by a
-strenuous endeavour, in this humbler way, to
-spread the honour of their Saviour, and the
-invaluable blessings of his Religion, to the ends
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Thus shall we make some amends for those
-multiplied mischiefs, and, I doubt, injuries,
-which our insatiable Commerce occasions; and
-second the gracious designs of an all-wise
-Providence, which brings good out of evil, and
-turns to his own righteous ends even those
-<small>VICES</small> which our boisterous passions produce,
-and which He sees it not fit, in this our day of
-trial, to prevent or restrain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span></p>
-
-<p>Lastly, Thus shall we act as becomes the
-professors of that Religion, which is divine,
-universal, perfect; in one word, the gift and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-the likeness of <span class="smcap">Him</span>, who is <small>THE SAME YESTERDAY,
-TO-DAY, AND FOR EVER</small>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="SERMON_3"><small>A</small><br />
-SERMON<br />
-<small>PREACHED BEFORE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE RIGHT HONOURABLE</span><br />
-<span class="large">THE HOUSE OF LORDS,</span><br />
-<small>IN THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">ABBEY CHURCH OF WESTMINSTER,</span><br />
-<small>ON MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1786,<br />
-BEING<br />
-The Anniversary of <span class="smcap">King Charles’s Martyrdom</span>.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span></h2>
-
-<h3><i>Die Lunæ, 6ᵒ Februarii, 1786.</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Ordered</span>, by the Lords Spiritual and
-Temporal in Parliament assembled, That the
-Thanks of this House be, and are hereby, given
-to the Lord Bishop of Worcester, for the Sermon
-by him preached before this House, on
-Monday last, in the Abbey Church, Westminster;
-and he is hereby desired to cause the
-same to be forthwith printed and published.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Ashley Cowper</span>,<br />
-Cler. Parliamentor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span></p>
-
-<h2>SERMON, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">1 St. Peter</span>, ii. 16.</h3>
-
-<p><i>As free, and not using your liberty for a cloak
-of maliciousness, but as the servants of God.</i></p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">Christianity</span>, while it provides, chiefly,
-for the future interests of men, by no means
-overlooks their present; but is, indeed, studious
-to make its followers as happy in both worlds,
-as they are capable of being.</p>
-
-<p>As an instance of this beneficent purpose,
-we may observe, that the religion of Jesus is
-most friendly to the <small>CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTIES</small>
-of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>There is something in the constitution of our
-nature, which leads men to expect, and even
-claim, as much independence on the will and
-caprice of each other, as the ends of society,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-and the form of government, under which they
-live, will permit.</p>
-
-<p>Agreeably to these instincts, or conclusions
-of reason, call them which you will, the
-Gospel, both in its genius and precepts, invites
-its professors to the love and cultivation
-of <span class="smcap">Liberty</span>. It allows the freedom of private
-judgment, in which the essence of <i>religious</i>
-liberty consists: And it indulges our natural
-love of <i>civil</i> liberty, not only by giving an express
-preference<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> to it, before a state of slavery,
-when by just and lawful means we can obtain
-it; but, also, by erecting our thoughts, and
-giving us higher notions of the value and dignity
-of human nature (now redeemed by so
-immense a price, as the blood of the Lamb of
-God), and consequently by representing a servile
-condition as more degrading and dishonourable
-to us, than, on the footing of mere
-reason, we could have conceived.</p>
-
-<p>But now this great indulgence of Heaven,
-like every other, is liable to be misused; and
-was, in fact, so misused even in the early
-times, when this indulgence of the Gospel to
-the natural feelings of men was, with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-Gospel itself, first notified and declared. For
-the zealot Jews, full of theocratic ideas, were
-forward to conclude, that their Christian privileges
-absolved them from obedience to <i>civil
-government</i>: And the believing Gentiles (who
-had not the Jewish prejudices to mislead them)
-were yet unwilling to think that the Gospel
-had not, at least, set them free from <i>domestic
-slavery</i>; which was the too general condition
-of those converts in their heathen state.</p>
-
-<p>These notions, as they were not authorized
-by Christianity (which made no immediate and
-direct change in the politic and personal condition
-of mankind), so, if they had not been
-opposed and discountenanced, would have given
-great scandal to the ruling powers in every
-country, where the Christians resided, and have
-very much obstructed the propagation of the
-Christian faith.</p>
-
-<p>The holy Spirit, therefore, to guard the rising
-Church from these mischiefs, saw fit, by the
-Apostle Peter, to admonish both the Jewish
-and Gentile converts to conduct themselves as
-<i>free men</i> indeed, so far as they were, or could
-honestly contrive to become free (for that their
-religion no way disallowed); but not as <i>misusing</i>
-the liberty they had, or might have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-(which every principle of their religion, as well
-as prudence, forbad). <i>As free</i>, says he, <i>and
-not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness</i>:
-As if he had said, “Be careful to observe
-a due mean in this matter: Maintain your just
-liberties; yet so, as not to gratify your malignant
-passions under pretence of discharging
-that duty.” And the better to secure the observance
-of this precept, he adds—<i>but as the
-servants of God</i>—that is, “Remember ye are
-so to employ your liberty as never to forget the
-service ye owe to God; who, in the present
-instance, commands you to <i>obey Magistrates</i>;
-that is, to submit yourselves to the government,
-under which ye live, <i>not only for wrath</i>,
-for fear of punishment, <i>but for conscience sake</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>And this caution, so guarded by religious as
-well as moral considerations, was the more
-important, because no word is so fascinating
-to the common ear, as that of <i>Liberty</i>, while
-the few only know what it means; and the
-many, of all ranks, in all times, mistake it for
-<i>licence</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And well had it been if this warning voice
-of the holy Apostle, which sunk deep into the
-hearts of the first Christians, had continued to
-make the same impression on the whole Christian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-world; which, unhappily, has contemned,
-or at least neglected it, in almost all ages; but
-never more remarkably, than in those disastrous
-days, which the present solemnity calls upon
-us to recollect and lament.</p>
-
-<p>I. The great quarrel of the times I speak of,
-was opened with the cry of <small>RELIGIOUS LIBERTY</small>;
-not without reason, it must be confessed,
-yet with an ill grace in the complainants;
-who certainly would have denied to others
-what they so peremptorily, and indeed with
-too much petulance, demanded for themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The source of this evil (to do justice to all
-sides) is to be sought in the Reformation itself;
-which, when it had succeeded in its great view
-of cleansing Religion from the corruptions of
-Popery, concluded that no man could have reason,
-thenceforth, to dissent from the national
-church; and that an universal conformity to its
-discipline and doctrine was to be exacted. The
-conclusion was natural enough in their situation;
-and the benefit of such conformity, past
-dispute. But it was not considered, that differences
-<i>will</i> arise, many times, without reason;
-and, when they do, that force is not the proper
-way to compose them. This oversight continued
-long, and had terrible effects. It kept<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-the Protestants of all denominations from entertaining
-just ideas of <i>Toleration</i>; the <i>last</i>
-great point of reformed religion which was
-clearly understood, and perhaps the <i>only</i> one of
-real moment in which the extraordinary persons,
-whom Providence raised up to be the
-conductors of <i>our</i> Reformation, were deficient.</p>
-
-<p>In this state of things, it unfortunately happened
-that the Reformation was suddenly
-checked by the return of Popery, which forced
-many pious and eminent men to take refuge in
-the Protestant churches abroad; where they
-grew enamoured of certain forms of church-government,
-different from those that prevailed
-at home; and which, on their subsequent return,
-they fanatically strove to obtrude on
-their brethren, and to erect, under the new
-name of <span class="smcap">The Discipline</span>, on the ruins of the
-established hierarchy. So unreasonable a pretension
-naturally alarmed and exasperated those
-who had power in their hands, and had their
-prejudices too, not less violent than those by
-which the <i>Puritans</i> (for that was the name they
-went by) were possessed. The consequence
-was what might be expected. A <i>toleration</i> for
-their discipline out of the establishment, which
-was all they should have aimed at, and to which
-they had a right, would not have satisfied them;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-and their iniquitous claim of <i>Dominion</i> was
-too naturally repaid by penal laws and compulsive
-statutes: that is, one sort of tyranny was
-repressed and counteracted by another. And
-thus matters continued through several reigns;
-till some more pressing claims of civil liberty,
-mixing with these struggles for church-dominion,
-overthrew, in the end, the ancient ecclesiastical
-government; drove the bishops from
-their sees, the liturgy from our churches, and
-brought in the classical regimen, enforced, in
-its turn, as the episcopal one had been, with
-the rigours of persecution.</p>
-
-<p>Still, the restless spirit of the times continuing,
-or rather increasing, this new model
-was forced to give may to another, which assumed
-the more popular name of <i>Independency</i>;
-under whose broad wing a thousand sects sprung
-up, each more extravagant than the other,
-till, in the end, all order in religious matters,
-and religion itself, disappeared, under the prevailing
-torrent of fanaticism and confusion.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the brief, but just, account of the
-religious factions of those days: from which
-we collect how miserably the zealots for religious
-liberty defeated their own aims; or rather
-how wickedly they contended for power and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-libertinism, under the mask of liberty: An evil,
-which could not have happened, had they paid
-the least regard to the Apostle’s injunction of
-<i>being free, but not as using their liberty for a
-cloak of maliciousness</i>.</p>
-
-<p>II. The claims of <small>CIVIL LIBERTY</small> (which
-sprung up amid this rage of religious parties)
-were better founded; were for a time carried
-on more soberly; and, as was fitting, were, at
-first, attended with better success.</p>
-
-<p>The mixed form of the English government,
-originally founded on the principles of liberty,
-had, from many concurring causes, degenerated
-into a kind of monarchical despotism, which
-an unquestionably virtuous, but misinformed
-and misguided Prince, was for moulding into a
-regular system. Happily the growing light
-and spirit of the times excited a general impatience
-of that project; and produced a steady
-and constitutional opposition to it. The distresses
-of government aided the friends of liberty,
-who managed their advantage so well as,
-in process of time, to support their claims, redress
-their grievances, establish their rights,
-and, in a word, to reduce the Crown, from the
-exorbitances it affected, within the ancient and
-legal boundaries of the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span></p>
-
-<p>This the Patriots of that time effected; with
-great advantage to their country, and with
-singular honour to themselves. Nothing indeed
-could have equalled their glory, had their
-labours in the cause of liberty stopped there.
-But, besides that some means employed by
-them, in the prosecution of their best-intended
-services, cannot be justified; the intention
-itself of many of them, hitherto so pure, began
-to grow corrupt; their fears and passions transported
-them too far; their public ends degenerated
-into selfish: having vindicated the constitution,
-their own security, or some worse
-motive, prompted them to make free with it,
-that is, to commit the very fault they had so
-justly resented at the hands of their Sovereign:
-In a word, the patriots, in their turn, insulted
-the Crown, and invaded the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>The particulars are well known. Ambitious
-leaders arose, or the old leaders in the popular
-cause turned ambitious. Unconstitutional
-claims were made: unconstitutional schemes
-were meditated: what before was self-defence
-and sober policy, was, now, revenge and hate:
-the nation grew delirious, and the civil war
-followed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
-
-<p>The rest is recorded in the disgusting annals
-of those times. Six desolating years brought
-on the subversion of the monarchy; and (as if
-the victors meant to insult the law itself), by I
-know not what forms of mock-justice, the
-bloody scene was wantonly closed with the
-public arraignment, trial, condemnation, and
-execution of the monarch.</p>
-
-<p>The tragedy of this day was the last insolent
-triumph of pretended liberty. What followed,
-was the most avowed tyranny; upheld for a
-while by force and great ability, but terminating
-at length in wild and powerless anarchy.</p>
-
-<p>Such, again, were the miserable consequences
-of not observing the Apostle’s rule of <i>being
-free, but not as using liberty for a cloak of maliciousness</i>.
-Freedom was, first, justly sought
-after, and happily obtained: It was, then,
-made the cover of every selfish and malicious
-passion, till the wearers of it were enabled to
-throw it off, as an useless disguise; when barefaced
-tyranny and licentious misrule were seen
-to emerge from beneath this specious mantle of
-public liberty.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Restoration</span>, which followed, redeemed
-these nations from some part of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-miseries, which their madness had brought on
-themselves. But for the full establishment of
-our civil and religious rights, we were finally
-and chiefly indebted to the <span class="smcap">Revolution</span>.</p>
-
-<p>From that memorable æra, we became, in
-every sense of the word, a free people. Conscience
-was secured in the exercise of its just
-rights by a legal toleration: and the civil constitution
-was restored to its integrity.</p>
-
-<p>III. Such are the observations, which the
-sad story of the times we have been reviewing
-obviously suggests to us. And now let us
-pause a little: And having before us what the
-nation so long suffered, and what it so late acquired;
-that is, the horrors of fanatical tyranny
-on the one hand, and the blessings of established
-order and freedom on the other; let us inquire
-dispassionately what improvements we have
-made of both. Have the black pages of our
-annals given us a just abhorrence of the principles
-and practices, which brought that cloud
-over them? And have the bright ones, which
-so happily at length succeeded, affected our
-hearts and lives, as, in all reasonable expectation,
-they ought? In particular (to keep
-the momentous admonition of my text in full
-view) has the most perfect <small>LIBERTY</small>, civil and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-religious, been acknowledged with that thankfulness
-it calls for, or been enjoyed with that
-sobriety which so inestimable a gift of Heaven
-should naturally inspire?</p>
-
-<p>1. To begin with <small>RELIGIOUS</small> liberty.</p>
-
-<p>Has this great privilege, so rightfully belonging
-to us, as men, as Protestants, and as
-Christians, which so many ages had panted
-after, and the last so happily obtained, Has this
-invaluable acquisition been employed by us to
-the promotion of its proper ends, the cultivation
-of just inquiry, and manly piety? On
-the contrary, has not the right of private judgment
-been abused to the worst of purposes;
-the open profession of libertinism in principle,
-and its consequent encouragement of all corruption
-in practice? Has not religious liberty
-been the <i>cloak</i>, under which revealed and even
-natural religion has been insulted; infidelity,
-and even atheism, avowed; and the most flagitious
-tenets propagated among the people? In
-a word, has not every species of what is called
-<i>free-thinking</i>, <i>free-speaking</i>, and <i>free-writing</i>,
-been carried to an extreme?</p>
-
-<p>But to come to those who are not guilty of
-these excesses; have <i>we</i> all of us made the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-proper use of the fostering liberty we enjoy in
-religious matters? Have we been careful to
-apply it to the purpose of dispassionately studying
-the sacred scriptures; of investigating
-their true sense with a due veneration for the
-high authority they claim, and for the awful
-subjects they set before us; and of maintaining
-our conclusions from them with a becoming
-modesty, which in such inquiries can hardly
-be too great? Have we betrayed no symptoms
-of bigotry even in disclaiming it? Are we
-ready to indulge that candour to others, which
-we so justly expect ourselves? And is the
-public wisdom itself treated by those who speculate,
-at their ease, under the most tolerant
-establishment of Christianity that ever existed,
-Has it been treated, I do not say, with a blind
-submission (God forbid!) but with that decent
-respect, which is surely due to it? In short,
-have we, in our several situations and characters,
-been careful to exert the full spirit of
-Christianity, which, one is ready to think,
-should naturally spring up from Christian liberty;
-or, at least to observe that temper of
-mutual forbearance, which should seem to be
-an easy as well as reasonable duty, now that all
-unjust restraints and provoking severities are
-withdrawn?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span></p>
-
-<p>2. Thus much for our religious liberties.
-Have our <small>CIVIL</small>, on which we equally, and
-with good reason, value ourselves, been secured
-from all abuse? Have we that reverence of
-just authority, not only as lodged in the persons
-of inferior magistrates, or in the sacred
-person of the supreme Magistrate, but as residing
-in the <small>LAW</small> itself (in which the public
-will, that is, the whole collective authority of
-the State is, as it were, concentered)—Have
-we, I say, that ingenuous and submissive respect
-for this authority, which not only reason
-and religion, but true policy, and every man’s
-proper interest requires? Our boasted Constitution
-itself, now so accurately defined and
-generally understood, Does it meet with that
-awful regard from us, which it justly deserves?
-Are we anxious, that, of its several parts, each
-should have its full play, without interfering
-with any other? And are we sufficiently on
-our guard against a spirit of innovation, which,
-after all our experience, can have no probable
-view of effecting much good, but may easily
-do unforeseen and irreparable mischief? It is
-true, in the less perfect forms of government,
-alterations may not be so sensibly felt. But in
-a Polity like our’s, so nicely and artificially
-adjusted, and, like a well-constructed arch,
-held together by the intimate relation and mutual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-pressure of its several parts, the removal
-or even change of any one may loosen the connexion
-of the rest, and, by disjointing the
-whole fabrick, bring it unexpectedly on our
-heads.</p>
-
-<p>Let me, then, repeat the question.
-Have we that religious reverence for the
-Constitution which its value, its authority,
-its compact and harmonious contexture, so
-evidently demands? And, when it hath bestowed
-upon us the blessings of civil liberty,
-in as full measure as is perhaps consistent with
-government itself, are we only solicitous to
-preserve it pure, enjoy it thankfully, and transmit
-it, unimpaired by hasty and hazardous experiments,
-to the generations to come?</p>
-
-<p>If to these, and other questions of the like
-sort, we can answer to our satisfaction, it is
-well. If we cannot, we should lay hold on the
-present occasion of recollecting the miscarriages
-and the miseries of past times, and of regulating
-our conduct by the instructive lessons,
-which they read to us. We shall see, in
-every instance I have suggested to you, how
-the abuse of religious and civil liberty kept
-operating in those days, till it produced the
-ruin and the loss of both—the <i>irreparable</i> loss,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-if it had not pleased a gracious Providence to
-be much kinder to us than we deserved, or
-had reason to expect.</p>
-
-<p>Not to profit by this experience would be
-inexcusable; especially, when the date of it is
-so recent, and when this solemn day of humiliation
-(for that purpose kept up by authority)
-so affectingly reminds us of it. We cannot, if
-we reflect on what it sets before us, but see in
-the most convincing manner, that, to reap the
-benefits of the best government, we must, ourselves,
-be moderate and wise; and that <i>to use
-our liberty for a cloak of maliciousness</i> is, at
-once, the greatest impiety in those who profess
-themselves <i>the servants of God</i>, and the greatest
-folly in those who are, and would continue to
-be, a <i>free</i> and happy people.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="SIX_CHARGES">SIX CHARGES<br />
-<span class="medium">DELIVERED TO THE CLERGY.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_CHARGE_1"><small>A</small><br />
-CHARGE<br />
-<span class="medium">DELIVERED TO THE CLERGY</span><br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">DIOCESE OF LICHFIELD AND COVENTRY,<br />
-AT THE BISHOP’S PRIMARY VISITATION<br />
-IN 1775 AND 1776.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A CHARGE, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reverend Brethren</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">It</span> having pleased God to call me to the care
-of this large Diocese, I thought it became me
-to take the first opportunity, which the established
-course of Visitation afforded, of meeting
-my brethren, the Clergy: that so we might
-be the sooner acquainted with each other; and
-that, by means of their prudent advice and
-information, I might be the better enabled to
-sustain the weighty office imposed upon me.</p>
-
-<p>I may, hereafter, as occasion serves, be more
-<i>particular</i> in my directions to you. At this
-time, it will be sufficient to lay before you
-some <i>general</i> considerations on our common
-<small>PASTORAL DUTY</small>, and to animate myself and
-you to a faithful discharge of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span></p>
-
-<p>When our blessed Lord and Master sent
-forth his favoured servants to labour in that
-ministry to which he had called them, he addressed
-them in these memorable words—<i>I
-have chosen and ordained you</i>, <small>THAT YE SHOULD
-GO AND BRING FORTH FRUIT, AND THAT YOUR
-FRUIT SHOULD REMAIN</small><a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>: “That ye may go
-with this commission to plant my doctrine in
-the world; and that, by your cultivation of it,
-it may take such root as to bring forth a fruitful
-harvest of believers, and continue to do so
-through all ages.”</p>
-
-<p>But what, then, is this <i>mature and perpetual
-harvest</i>, which is here proposed to the Disciples,
-as the end of their labours? Is it a harvest of
-such believers, as shall barely give their name
-to Christ? Certainly, not; but of such as
-shall be found worthy of him. It is a harvest,
-then, of <i>well-informed</i>, <i>pious</i>, and <i>righteous</i>,
-believers. This is the precious everlasting <i>fruit</i>,
-which it was entrusted to their office to produce:
-and this fruit, the due discharge of their
-office, under the blessing of God, makes them
-<i>capable</i> of producing.</p>
-
-<p>In these affecting words, then, of our divine
-Master (the more affecting, because among the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-last that were uttered by him) the <i>Apostles</i>,
-first, and, after them, <i>all</i> succeeding ministers
-of the Gospel, are called upon to bring forth,</p>
-
-<p>1. The fruit of a <small>RIGHT FAITH</small> in their hearers;
-as resulting from the soundness of their
-doctrine. 2. The fruit of <small>PIETY</small> in their flocks;
-in consequence of a diligent ministration in all
-the offices of their sacred function. And, 3.
-The fruit of <small>CHARITY</small> in their Christian brethren;
-as springing out of their godly exhortations
-and blameless examples.</p>
-
-<p>Such, my reverend brethren, is the end for
-which <small>WE</small> are <i>chosen and ordained</i> to serve in
-the church of Christ. And though, in setting
-this end before you, I shall but reflect your own
-thoughts: yet, in doing this, I may be a no
-unuseful, certainly, no ungrateful, remembrancer;
-since it is the duty, the desire, and
-the glory of us all, that we <i>bring forth fruit</i>,
-and that <i>our fruit remain</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I. The <small>FIRST</small> object of our ministry is, to
-instruct our hearers in the <small>RIGHT FAITH</small>: and to
-this end, we are required to <i>take heed to our
-doctrine</i><a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span></p>
-
-<p>The Religion of Jesus claiming to be from
-God, the <i>doctrines</i>, it delivers, are as well to be
-believed, as its <i>precepts</i> to be observed. Thus,
-a <i>dogmatic theology</i> becomes essential to Christianity;
-its professors are equally bound
-by a certain rule of <i>faith</i>, and of <i>manners</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When the Scriptures of the New Testament
-were made public, these were that Rule of
-faith to the whole church of Christ. And, if
-that Church had <i>agreed</i> in the interpretation of
-them; or, if peace and charity could have consisted
-with its <i>disagreement</i>, no other provision
-for the maintenance of the faith had been
-thought needful. But the Scriptures, like all
-other writings, being liable to a different construction,
-according to the different views and
-capacities of uninspired men; and it being presently
-found that such difference of construction
-produced the most violent animosities
-among Christians, while each sect pretended
-a divine authority for its own fancies; no remedy
-occurred for these disorders, but that the
-<i>catholic</i> church should be held together by one
-and the same confession, received and acknowledged
-by all its ministers; or, when, afterwards,
-this extensive project was found impracticable,
-that those, who agreed in the same
-interpretation of the sacred oracles, should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-allowed to separate from all others, and unite
-themselves into one distinct and <i>subordinate</i>
-church.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, <i>Schism</i>, though it be always an evil,
-and may be a crime, was introduced into the
-church, and was even tolerated there, to prevent
-other and greater evils, as well as crimes,
-from flowing into it. For, though a diversity
-of interpretation, in consequence of this liberty,
-prevailed in <i>different</i> Christian communities,
-which yet acknowledged the same common
-Rule, <i>the Scriptures of God</i>; still, peace
-was, by this means, preserved in <i>each</i> particular
-community; and, by virtue of that general
-principle of mutual toleration, which the expedient
-itself implied, it was, or might be, in
-good measure, preserved through <i>all the quarters</i>
-of the Catholic church.</p>
-
-<p>This, in one word, is the <span class="smcap">Origin</span>, and,
-at the same time, the <span class="smcap">Justification</span>, of
-Creeds and Confessions; which are only a bond
-of union between the members of each Christian
-society. For the purpose of them is not
-to set up human decisions against the word of
-God; but, by larger comments, and more explicit
-declarations, in such points of doctrine
-as have been differently apprehended, and much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-controverted, to express and ascertain the sense,
-in which <small>THEY</small> interpret that word, who communicate
-together in the same Church.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the case stands, before the State gives
-a preference to any particular Church. Thenceforth,
-indeed, the State concurs with the
-Church to enforce one common Confession, by
-confining the emoluments, which it provides
-for the encouragement of Religion, to the peculiar
-doctrines of the favoured Church. This,
-the State does, in <i>equity</i> towards that religious
-society, with which it is now so closely connected:
-it does it, too, in <i>prudence and good
-policy</i>; because it conceives its own true interests
-to be concerned in maintaining those
-peculiar doctrines.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, whether we regard the <i>Church</i>, before
-it acquires the countenance of the State, as
-intent on truth and orthodoxy, and only meditating
-how best to preserve that truth in the
-bosom of <i>peace</i>; or, whether we regard the
-<i>State</i>, after it affords that countenance to the
-Church, as studious to provide for its own great
-object, <i>General Utility</i>, of which the preservation
-of peace makes so considerable a part;
-either way we understand why an agreement of
-opinion is required in the appointed Guides<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-and Teachers of Religion. But, as such agreement
-cannot be expected, or not maintained,
-where every Teacher is left to inculcate what
-doctrines he thinks fit, hence some <i>common
-formulary</i> of faith (not in opposition to that
-delivered in the Scriptures, but by way of more
-precise explanation of what is believed to be
-its true meaning) is reasonably proposed to the
-assent of those Guides and Teachers, before
-they exercise their office in any particular
-Christian society; as a <span class="smcap">Test</span> of their opinions;
-and as a <span class="smcap">Rule</span>, by which, in subordination to
-the general Rule of Christians, they undertake
-to frame their public instructions.</p>
-
-<p>This Confession, or formulary of faith, with
-us, is <span class="smcap">the Thirty-nine Articles</span>: to which a
-subscription is required from every candidate
-of the Ministry. So that <span class="smcap">the Scripture</span>, interpreted
-by <i>those articles</i>, is the proper rule of
-doctrine, to every Minister of our Church.</p>
-
-<p>It follows from what has been said, that
-such, as cannot honestly assent to this formulary,
-<i>must</i> (if they aspire to be public Teachers
-of Religion) unite themselves with some other
-<i>consentient</i> Church. This compulsion may,
-sometimes, be a <i>hardship</i>; but can, in no case,
-be an injury: or, if some may chuse to consider<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-it in the light of an <i>injury</i>, it is such an one as
-must be suffered by individuals for the general
-good of that Society, to which they belong.</p>
-
-<p>It is nothing, that some object to these articles,
-as <i>improper</i>, or <i>ill-drawn</i>. The Church
-will judge for itself of these points. Societies
-have surely the same right of private judgement
-as Individuals; and, till they revoke a constitution,
-it should, methinks, be presumed that
-they see no cause to do it: just as it is very fitly
-presumed, on the other hand, that such individuals,
-as will not subscribe to this constitution,
-cannot. But it is forgotten in this dispute,
-that, although <i>truth</i> can only be on one
-side, <i>good faith</i> may be on either.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it may be said—“<i>These articles are
-themselves liable to various interpretations</i>.”
-Without doubt, they are: and so would any
-other, which could be contrived. Yet, with
-all the latitude of interpretation of which they
-are capable, they still answer, in a good degree,
-the main end of their appointment; as may
-be seen from the animosity expressed by some
-against them, as too strict. And, if we only
-use <i>that</i> latitude, which the expression fairly
-admits, and which the Church allows, they
-will continue to answer the <i>great</i> end, hitherto<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-effected by them, of preserving, among the
-members of our Church, <i>an unity of the spirit
-in the bond of peace</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Such then is the fruit of a <i>right faith</i>, which
-the ministers of our Church are required to
-bring forth, by the <i>soundness of their doctrine</i>.</p>
-
-<p>II. They are, in the next place, ordained to
-produce the fruit of <span class="smcap">Piety</span>, in their several congregations,
-by a faithful discharge of the sacred
-offices, committed to them.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Liturgy</span> of the Church of England, in
-which these offices are contained, is composed
-with so much wisdom, and is animated, at the
-time, with so true a spirit of piety, that
-impartial men have generally agreed in the
-commendation of it. That the <i>forms</i>, prescribed
-by it, may be lawfully used, few at this time
-of day will dispute. That <i>other</i> forms, more
-complete and perfect, <i>may</i> be devised, <i>as</i> it is
-not denied by <i>us</i>, who hold those forms, however
-excellent, to be of human composition
-only; <i>so</i>, that any such forms of greater perfection
-are likely to be devised by those who
-are the readiest to find fault with our Liturgy,
-will hardly be expected by reasonable and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-knowing men. Much indeed, abundantly <i>too</i>
-much, has been said and written on this subject.
-Most of the defects, which some have
-pretended to find in our Ritual, are purely imaginary:
-the rest are certainly unimportant. So
-that our concern is plainly to submit all deliberations
-of this sort to the wisdom of the
-Church itself; and, in the mean time, to give
-all the effect, that depends on <i>us</i>, to the ministration
-which it requires.</p>
-
-<p>And to this end, it must be our duty to perform
-the sacred offices with <i>regularity</i>, <i>decency</i>,
-and <i>fervour</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1. By <i>regularity</i>, I mean such an observance
-of times and seasons, and of all the modes of
-performance, as the Church hath thought fit to
-prescribe. To this observance we are, indeed,
-constrained by ecclesiastical penalties: but I
-mention it as a fit testimony of respect to public
-authority; and as the means of promoting
-the true interests of Religion. For what is
-<i>punctually</i> performed by the Minister will acquire
-a due consideration with the people: and
-the uniformity of <i>our</i> service will make the
-attendance on religious offices more acceptable,
-more convenient, more edifying to <i>them</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span></p>
-
-<p>2. Nor is it enough that these offices be performed
-regularly, or according to stated rules:
-they must also be performed <i>decently</i>, or with
-due grace and propriety in the <i>manner</i> of discharging
-them. For it is not, perhaps, enough
-considered, how much a becoming celebration
-of the sacred offices contributes to make men
-delight in them, and profit by them: or, on
-the contrary, how much any degree of negligence
-in the <i>posture</i>, or of impropriety in the
-<i>accent</i>, or indifference in the <i>air</i>, of the officiating
-Minister, sinks the credit and authority
-of his ministration, and deadens the attention
-and devotion of his flock.</p>
-
-<p>3. Still, this regular and decent discharge of
-our duty, how useful soever, is but an <i>outward</i>
-thing, and may, to a degree at least, be counterfeited
-by those who are, otherwise, very
-unfit to be employed in this service. To enliven,
-to animate, to consecrate our ministry,
-we must bring to it all the zeal of <i>internal</i> devotion;
-such as is sober indeed, but real,
-active, and habitual; such as flows from a religious
-temper, and is wrought into the very
-frame and constitution of our minds. For to
-this end, more especially, are we set apart from
-secular pursuits, to give ourselves up to reading,
-to meditation, to all spiritual exercises;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-that so we may be thoroughly penetrated and
-informed with pure affections and heavenly
-dispositions. When these prevail in us, they
-will naturally break forth and express themselves
-in all our ministrations; they will be
-seen and felt by all who partake of them, and,
-by a kind of sympathy, will force the hearts of
-others to <i>consent</i> with our own.</p>
-
-<p>III. The <i>last</i> and best fruit we are to produce,
-is the fruit of <span class="smcap">Charity</span>, or a good life, in
-those committed to our charge; which is more
-especially cultivated and matured by our <i>godly
-exhortations</i>, and <i>blameless examples</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1. As to our public exhortations, and discourses
-from the Pulpit, such an audience as
-this cannot want to be instructed in the manner
-of preparing them. Permit me only to say,
-“<i>That your Sermons cannot well be too plain;
-and that they ought to be wholly Christian</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The word of God is designed for the edification
-of all sorts and degrees among us, and
-should be so dispensed as to reach the hearts
-and understandings of all. And I need not
-say to you who hear me, that to frame a discourse
-in this manner, as it is the usefullest
-way of preaching, so it will afford full scope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-and exercise for all the talents which the ablest
-of us may possess.</p>
-
-<p>But, further, you will allow me to observe,
-that the topics and principles, on which we
-form our discourses, must be <i>wholly Christian</i>.
-I do not mean to exclude natural Reason from
-our public exhortations, but to employ it in
-giving force to those best and most efficacious
-arguments for a good life, which the Gospel
-supplies. I would only say, That we are not
-to preach morality, in exclusion of Christianity:
-for that would be to incur the guilt of <i>preaching
-ourselves</i>, and not <i>Jesus Christ</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The various motives to virtue and all goodness,
-which may be drawn from the great doctrines
-of the Christian Revelation, as they are
-infinitely more persuasive and affecting than all
-others; so they should be constantly and earnestly
-impressed on our hearers. To live as
-becometh the Gospel, is the duty of Christians:
-and therefore to preach that Gospel must be
-the proper duty of Christian Ministers.</p>
-
-<p>For that <i>other</i> requisite of a <i>good example</i>,
-the case is too plain to require more than one
-word. Our blessed Master has told us, that
-we are <i>the salt of the earth</i>: and we remember<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-what he pronounces of that salt, <i>when it hath
-lost its savour</i>. This warning may suffice to
-guard the minister of the word from gross vice
-and immorality. But much more is expected
-from him. He is to <i>excell</i> in all virtue, and in
-such sort as to make it amiable in the eyes of
-men. He is to take care, that even <i>his good be
-not evil-spoken of</i>, and that <i>the ministry be not
-blamed</i>. For there are certain decencies, which
-must be ranked by us in the place of virtues.
-To be wanting in <i>these</i>, is to scandalize the
-brethren, and dishonour ourselves. Our profession
-is so sacred, that even our Christian
-liberty must be abridged on many occasions;
-and we must deny ourselves an <i>innocent</i> amusement,
-when we have reason to conclude that
-others will take offence at it.</p>
-
-<p>How far, and in what respects, this sacrifice
-must be made to the decencies of our profession,
-is a matter of great <i>prudence</i> and <i>charity</i>; and
-can only be determined, in particular cases, by
-an honest exertion of those <i>two principles</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Ye have now, my reverend Brethren, presented
-to you a brief sketch of our ministerial
-duties. And our encouragement, for the performance
-of them, is, That hereby <i>we shall
-bring forth fruit</i>, and that <i>our fruit will remain</i>:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-that is, we shall be instrumental in producing a
-<small>RIGHT FAITH</small>, a <small>PIOUS OBSERVANCE OF RELIGION</small>,
-and a <small>TRULY CHRISTIAN LIFE</small>, in our several
-charges and congregations; and we shall, likewise,
-be the means of transmitting these blessings
-to Posterity, and of perpetuating these
-good fruits to the end of the world. Thus, that
-which is the <i>end</i> of our ministry, is also the
-reward of it. Nor will the recompence of our
-labours end here. In saving others, by the
-means now recommended, we shall assuredly
-save ourselves. For, by giving this full proof
-of our ministry, we shall be <i>sincere, and without
-offence till the day of Christ; being filled with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-all the fruits of righteousness, which are by
-Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God</i><a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>.
-<span class="smcap">Amen.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_CHARGE_2"><small>A</small><br />
-CHARGE<br />
-<small>TO THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">CLERGY</span><br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">DIOCESE OF WORCESTER,<br />
-DELIVERED AT THE BISHOP’S PRIMARY<br />
-VISITATION IN 1782.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A CHARGE, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reverend Brethren</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">On</span> this first occasion of our meeting, you
-will think it agreeable to the relation I have
-the honour to bear to you, if I take leave to
-remind you of such of your Clerical Duties as
-tend more immediately to your own credit, and
-to the good order of this Diocese: Not, as if
-I suspected you of being, in any peculiar degree,
-deficient in them; but as, from the general
-state of the <i>present</i> times, and from the singular
-importance of them at <i>all</i> times, these Duties
-deserve to be frequently and earnestly recommended
-to you.</p>
-
-<p>The Clergy of the Reformed Church of
-England have always distinguished themselves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-by the soundness of their learning, by the integrity
-of their manners, and by a diligent discharge
-of the pastoral office. But these virtues
-could not have flourished so much and so long,
-had it not been for the <small>PERSONAL RESIDENCE</small>
-of the Clergy. Hence that leisure which enabled
-them to excell in the best literature:
-hence those truly clerical manners, unadulterated
-by too free a commerce with the world:
-and hence that punctuality in performing the
-sacred offices, so edifying to the people, and,
-from their being always upon the spot, so easy
-to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Now this Residence, which the very institution
-of Parishes supposes, and the Common
-Law intends, has, from early times, been bound
-upon us by ecclesiastical canons, and, from
-the Reformation, also by express Statute. So
-that, in the style of Law, and even in common
-language, <i>Incumbent</i> is the proper name of
-every Parochial Minister.</p>
-
-<p>I know, indeed, what exceptions there are
-to the Statute, and needs must be in a Constitution
-like our’s, founded on a principle of
-Imparity and Subordination. I know, too,
-how many more exceptions must be made on
-account of the poverty of very many Cures, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-the necessity there unfortunately is of having
-several churches served by the same person.
-Lastly, I do not forget that, in the case of ill
-health, and doubtless in other cases that may
-occur, there will sometimes be good reason for
-the Incumbent to desire, and therefore for the
-Ordinary to grant, an occasional suspension, or
-relaxation, at least, of the general Rule. But,
-when these cases are allowed for, no Clergyman,
-who considers the nature of his office,
-and the engagements he is under, or who respects
-as he ought, either the esteem of others,
-or the satisfaction of his own mind, will suffer
-himself to solicit, or even to accept, an exemption
-from Residence.</p>
-
-<p>And even they, who have to plead the privilege
-of the Statute, or can alledge any other
-just and reasonable excuse, will endeavour to
-compensate for their absence, <i>by</i> occasional
-visits to their benefices; <i>by</i> diligent inquiries
-into the conduct of their assistants; <i>by</i> acts of
-benevolence, hospitality, and piety; in short,
-<i>by</i> such means as testify a readiness to do all the
-good they can under their circumstances, and
-manifest a serious consideration of the duties
-which, in some degree or other, are inseparable
-from the Pastoral Care.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span></p>
-
-<p>In short, the reason of the thing speaks so
-strongly for the incumbency of Parochial Ministers,
-that they, who have the best excuse to
-make for themselves, will lament their absence,
-and accept the leave granted to them with regret.
-And the rest of the Clergy will not allow
-themselves to desert their charge, and forfeit
-the dignity and almost the use of their destination,
-for such slight and frivolous reasons as
-can neither satisfy themselves nor others: for
-the convenience, suppose, of living in a better
-air or neighbourhood; of seeing a little more,
-or, what is called, <i>better</i>, company; or sharing
-in the advantages and amusements, be they
-ever so innocent, of the larger and more populous
-towns.</p>
-
-<p>Pretences of this sort are nothing, when they
-come in competition <i>with</i> the decency and utility
-of being where we ought to be, and among
-those whom we ought to serve; <i>with</i> the obligation
-that lies upon us to make ourselves acquainted
-with the spiritual and temporal wants
-of our people, and, as far as we can, to relieve
-them; <i>with</i> the precious opportunities, which
-a personal residence affords, of knowing their
-characters, and of suiting our publick and private
-applications to them; <i>of</i> watching over
-their lives, and contributing to reform or improve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-them; <i>of</i> guarding them against the attempts
-of those who lie in wait to pervert their
-minds, and indispose them to our Communion;
-<i>with</i> the heart-felt satisfaction of being beloved
-by our flocks, or of meriting, at least, to be so;
-of knowing, in short, that we discharge our
-duty towards them; and, while we approve
-ourselves faithful ministers of the Church in
-which we serve, are promoting the noblest ends
-which a mortal can propose to himself, The
-salvation of souls, and the honour and interest
-of our divine Religion.</p>
-
-<p>These considerations are so animating, that
-they cannot but make a deep impression upon
-every serious mind; and are so obvious at the
-same time, that just to have mentioned them
-to you must be quite sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>I return, therefore, to the duty of those who,
-on several accounts, may very reasonably excuse
-themselves from a constant personal residence.
-And with regard to such of you as
-may be in this situation, I must,</p>
-
-<p>II. In the second place, recommend it to
-you, in most particular manner, that you be
-careful in looking out for proper persons to
-supply your place, and that you faithfully co-operate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-with me in appointing none but <i>regular</i>,
-<i>well-qualified</i>, and <i>exemplary Curates</i>.</p>
-
-<p>By <small>REGULAR</small> Curates, I mean such as lie
-under no legal disabilities, and have received
-episcopal ordination. You will perhaps think
-it strange that these cautions should be thought
-necessary. But in our licentious times there
-are those who will presume to offer themselves
-to you to be employed as Curates, although
-they have incurred the public censure of their
-superiors, or have not perhaps been admitted
-into holy Orders. You will be careful, therefore,
-before you allow any one to officiate for
-you, though for a short time, and on a pressing
-occasion, to inform yourself of his general character,
-and to inspect his Letters of Orders.</p>
-
-<p>But, if you mean to take him for your settled
-Curate, you must do a great deal more. You
-must send him with a <i>Title</i> and <i>Testimonial</i> to
-be examined and allowed by me. And then I
-shall have it in my power, not only to prevent
-your being imposed upon by <i>irregular</i> persons,
-but to see that you take for your assistants only
-such as are in all respects <small>WELL QUALIFIED</small>:
-including under this term <i>a competent degree of
-knowledge for the service of the Cure to which
-they are nominated; a good report of their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-moral and religious conduct by credible and respectable
-witnesses; and a willing conformity
-to the discipline and doctrine of the Church of
-England</i>.</p>
-
-<p>With these qualifications, it is to be presumed
-that your Curates will represent you
-not unworthily, and will instruct and edify
-your people as you yourselves would endeavour
-to do, if you lived amongst them. And the
-rather, as both you and I are concerned <i>to take
-care, as much as possible, that whosoever is admitted
-to serve any Cure</i> <small>DO RESIDE IN THE
-PARISH WHERE HE IS TO SERVE</small>: <i>especially in
-livings that are able to support a resident Curate;
-and, where that cannot be done, that he do
-reside at least</i> <small>SO NEAR TO THE PLACE</small>, <i>that he
-may conveniently perform all the duties both in
-the Church and Parish</i><a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it is not enough that an officiating Minister,
-whether principal or substitute, be of no
-ill fame, and under no disability, nay that he
-possess the <i>qualifications</i> and the <i>means</i> of discharging
-his duty. It is further expected of
-all who are commissioned to minister in holy
-things, and therefore of Curates as well as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-others, that they execute their important trusts
-with fidelity and zeal, that they be <small>EXEMPLARY</small>
-in their whole conduct and conversation.</p>
-
-<p>To merit the application of this term to himself,
-a Clergyman will not only perform the
-duties of his Church with becoming seriousness,
-and with exact punctuality, but he will
-be ready at fit seasons to advise or exhort, to
-comfort or rebuke, as occasion requires, such
-of his parishioners, whether in sickness or
-health, as may stand in need of his charitable
-assistance. He will spend much of his leisure
-in reading and meditation, particularly in
-the study of the sacred Scriptures, that he
-may adorn and purify his mind, and qualify
-himself the better for his spiritual ministrations.
-He will even take care that his very amusements
-be inoffensive, and not pursued with an
-eagerness or constancy that may give occasion
-for censure or misconstruction. He will be so
-far from drawing upon himself the imputation
-of any gross vice (which it would be dreadful
-for a minister of the Gospel to deserve), that
-he will not be suspected of levity or dissipation;
-<i>but</i>, as the Canon directs, <i>will always be doing
-the things which shall appertain to honesty, and
-endeavouring to profit the Church of God; having
-always in mind that the ministers of religion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-ought to excell all others in purity of life, and
-should be examples to the people of good and
-Christian living</i><a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the conduct which the Church requires
-of those whom you employ in the care
-of your parishes. I hope therefore I shall not
-be thought too severe, if I give a particular attention
-to the appointing and licensing of Curates,
-and if I expect of the beneficed Clergy
-that they chearfully and heartily concur with
-me in this necessary circumspection.</p>
-
-<p>To this end, and that the Church may be
-served with reputable and useful ministers, I
-must,</p>
-
-<p>III. Further make it my earnest request
-(and this is the <i>last</i> particular I have at present
-to give in charge to you), that you take especial
-care <i>what persons you recommend to me on
-all occasions</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is my duty, and if it were not, it would
-be my inclination, to rely much on your advice
-in all things; much more, to lay the greatest
-stress on your opinion and sentiments, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-presented to me under your hands in the solemn
-way of a Testimonial. No consideration,
-therefore, I hope will ever prevail with you,
-no bias of acquaintance, neighbourhood, civility,
-or compassion (for I shall never suspect
-my brethren of any worse motive), to give the
-credit of your testimony to any person whatever
-that is unworthy of it, whether for the
-purpose of obtaining holy Orders, or my License
-to a Cure, or Institution to a Benefice.
-The most scrupulous good faith must be observed
-in all these cases; or it will be impossible
-for me to prevent those scandals, which an unqualified
-Clergy will be sure to give to the world,
-and the infinite mischiefs they do to Religion.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever you set your hand to a testimonial,
-consider, I beseech you, that the honour of the
-Church is concerned in what you are doing;
-that the edification of the people, the integrity
-of their lives and purity of their faith, the salvation,
-in short, of their souls, depends on your
-signature. When such momentous interests as
-these are at stake, inattention is something
-worse than <i>neglect</i>, and the easiness of good-nature
-the greatest <i>cruelty</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And now, my reverend brethren, by observing
-these few plain directions—by residing on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-your benefices when you can, and by improving
-that residence to its proper uses—or, when
-you cannot reside yourselves, by employing
-only resident and respectable Curates—and,
-lastly, by a scrupulous use of your credit with
-me in recommending none but fit persons for
-the several departments of the Ministry.—By
-complying, I say, with my earnest request, in
-these several instances, you will render the government
-of this Diocese easy and pleasant to
-me. I reckon so much on your kindness to
-me as to believe that <i>this</i> consideration will be
-some inducement to you. But there are <i>others</i>
-of more importance. For you will consult your
-<i>own</i> honour, and that of your <i>Order</i>: You
-will rejoice the hearts of your <i>friends</i>, and stop
-the mouths of your <i>enemies</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I said, <i>of your enemies</i>; for enemies you will
-always have, so long as there are bad men.
-And, while we endeavour to lessen the number
-of these, it should be our utmost care that none
-but <i>such</i> be ill-affected towards us. God forbid
-that the friends of virtue and religion should
-have so much as a pretence to speak or think
-ill of us! They cannot have this pretence, but
-through our own fault. Be we therefore strictly
-observant of our duty: Let us be seen, where
-the world will naturally look for us, in our proper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-places, intent on our proper business; and acting
-in our proper characters; and we shall infallibly
-secure the esteem of <i>good</i> men, and till it
-please God to touch and convert their hearts,
-we may defy the malice of <i>bad</i> ones.</p>
-
-<p>The truth is, my reverend brethren, it depends
-very much on ourselves, whether the
-world shall conceive well or ill of us. Licentious
-and unbelieving as that world is, a learned and
-prudent and pious Clergyman will force respect
-from it. The more it may be inclined to blame,
-the greater must be our diligence and circumspection.
-And to animate myself and you to
-this care, is the whole end and purpose of this
-friendly address to you.</p>
-
-<p>It only remains that <i>I pray</i>, with the holy
-Apostle, <i>that we may abound in knowledge and in
-all judgment; that we may approve things that
-are excellent; that we may be sincere and without
-offence till the day of Christ; being filled with
-the fruits of righteousness, which are by Him
-to the glory and praise of God</i><a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the
-love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy
-Ghost, be with us all evermore. Amen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_CHARGE_3"><span class="medium"><i>The Use and Abuse of Reason in Matters of Religion</i>:</span><br />
-<small>A</small><br />
-CHARGE<br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">BISHOP OF WORCESTER</span><br />
-<small>TO THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.<br />
-<br />
-DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1785.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A CHARGE, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reverend Brethren</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">Without</span> the use of Reason in Religion,
-we are liable to be imposed upon by others.
-With the immoderate or indiscreet use of it,
-we impose upon ourselves. Both extremes are
-to be carefully avoided: but the <i>latter</i>, being
-that into which we are most in danger of falling
-in these times, will possibly deserve your first
-and principal attention.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed the great Apostle of the Gentiles,
-foreseeing the mischiefs which the pride of
-human reason would produce in the Church of
-Christ, gave a timely warning to the Roman
-converts, <i>not to be wise in their own conceits</i><a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-And whoever considers the history of the
-Church from that time to this, will find that
-nothing has been so injurious to it as the affectation
-of being wise <i>above</i>, or <i>beside</i>, what is
-written; I mean, in opposing our own sense of
-things to the authority of Scripture, or (which is
-the commoner, because something the modester
-way of the two) in forcing it out of the sacred
-text by a licentious interpretation. In either
-way, we idolize our own understandings; and
-are guilty of great irreverence towards the word
-of God.</p>
-
-<p>It infinitely concerns the preachers of the
-Gospel to stand clear of these imputations; and
-therefore it may not be unsuitable to the occasion
-of our present meeting, if I set before
-you what I take to be the whole office of
-REASON on the subject of revealed Religion;
-what it has to do, and what it should forbear to
-attempt; how far it may and should go, and
-where it ought to stop; and lastly, how important
-it is for a Christian teacher, and indeed
-for every Christian man, to confine his curiosity
-within those bounds.</p>
-
-<p>I. The first and principal office of Reason
-on this subject is to see whether Christianity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-be a divine Religion; in other words, whether
-the Scriptures, especially those of the New
-Testament, which contain the religion of Christians,
-be written by inspiration, or have no
-higher authority than the compositions of mere
-fallible men.</p>
-
-<p>Now, for this purpose, you will collect and
-examine the numerous proofs, <i>external</i> and <i>internal</i>,
-which have been alledged as the proper
-grounds of assent to the truth of Christianity:
-The proof <small>EXTERNAL</small>; first, from <i>Prophecy</i>, involving
-in it an incredible number of probabilities,
-some less striking than others, but all of
-them of some moment in your deliberation; secondly,
-from <i>Miracles</i>, said to have been purposely
-wrought to attest the truth of Christianity;
-recorded by persons of the best character,
-who themselves performed there miracles,
-or saw them performed, or had received
-the accounts of them immediately from the
-workers and eye-witnesses of them; and not
-questioned, as far as we know, by any persons
-of that time, or for some ages afterwards. In
-the next place, you will consider the <small>INTERNAL
-PROOF</small>, from the history and genius, from
-the claims and views and pretensions of this
-Religion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span></p>
-
-<p>Under this <i>last</i> head, you will particularly
-attend to the promises said to have been made
-by Jesus to his disciples; and to the manner
-in which those promises appear to have been
-made good: the promise of inspiration to the
-Apostles, and the evidence they afterwards
-gave of their being actually so inspired.</p>
-
-<p>Above all, you will carefully inspect those
-books which contain the account of these and
-other momentous things, as well as the doctrines
-of Christianity itself; and you will see
-whether the <i>facts</i> they relate be, any of them,
-contradicted by authentick history, or the <i>doctrines</i>
-they deliver be repugnant to the first and
-clearest principles of human knowledge. You
-will next inquire whether these books, containing
-nothing but what is credibly or supposeably
-true, were indeed written by the persons
-whose names they bear, and not by persons
-of later times, or by persons of that time,
-whose authority is more questionable. You
-will, further, consider what <i>degree</i> of inspiration
-these writings claim to themselves, and whether
-their claims have, in any instance, been
-discredited and confuted. You will, lastly,
-take into your account the <i>event</i> of things, and
-will reflect how far the success of so great an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-undertaking has corresponded to the supposition
-of its having been divinely directed; if,
-in short, you can any way account for what
-you know and see to be clear and evident <i>fact</i>
-on any other supposition.</p>
-
-<p>Such, I think, is the outline of what must be
-thought the duty of a reasonable inquirer into
-the pretensions of Christianity. To fill up this
-sketch would require a volume: but you see
-from these hints that here is room enough for
-the exercise of the understanding, for the full
-display, indeed, of its best faculties. If Christianity,
-which invites, will stand the test of this
-inquiry, you cannot complain that Reason has
-not enough to do, or that your reception of it,
-as a divine revelation, is not founded on reason.
-Only, let me caution you against coming
-hastily to a conclusion from a slight or summary
-view of the particulars here mentioned.
-You must have the patience to evolve them
-all; to weigh the moment of each taken separately,
-and to decide at length on the united
-force of these arguments, when brought to bear
-on the <i>single</i> point to which you apply them,
-the <small>DIVINE AUTHORITY</small> of your religion.</p>
-
-<p>To grasp all these considerations in one view
-will require the utmost effort of the strongest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-mind: And, when you have done this, you
-will remember that very much (so widely
-extended and so numerous are the presumptions
-on this subject) has probably, nay, has
-certainly, escaped your best attention.</p>
-
-<p>However, on these grounds, I will now suppose
-that a serious man, who would be, and is
-qualified to be, a believer on conviction, has
-fully satisfied himself that Christianity is true,
-and that the Scriptures, in which the whole
-of that religion is contained, are of divine
-authority.</p>
-
-<p>II. A second and very momentous use of
-Reason will then be, To scrutinize these Scriptures
-themselves, now admitted to be divine;
-that is, to investigate their true sense and
-meaning. For, whatever their authority be, as
-they were written for the use of men, they must
-be studied, and can only be understood, as
-other writings are, by applying to them the
-usual and approved rules of human criticism.</p>
-
-<p>I have already supposed, that you have
-seen enough of these Scriptures to be satisfied
-of their containing no contradictions to the
-clear intuitive principles of human knowledge.
-For this satisfaction must precede the general<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-conclusion, that the Scriptures are divinely revealed;
-all truth being consistent with itself,
-and it being impossible that any evidence for
-the truth of revelation should be stronger than
-that of Intuition. Still, it remains to inquire
-of doctrines taught in these books, and apparently,
-as to the general sense of them, not inadmissible,
-what is their precise and accurate
-interpretation.</p>
-
-<p>And here, besides the use of languages, antiquities,
-history, and such other helps as are
-necessary to the right understanding of all ancient
-books, you will have ample scope for the
-exercise of your sagacity in studying the character
-of the sacred writers, the genius and
-views of each, with the peculiarities of their
-style and method; in tracing the connexion of
-their ideas, the pertinence and coherence of
-their reasonings; in comparing the same writer
-with himself, or different writers with each
-other; in explaining the briefer and darker passages
-by what is delivered more at large and
-more perspicuously elsewhere; in apprehending
-the harmony of their general scheme, and
-the consistency of what they teach on any particular
-subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span></p>
-
-<p>In all these ways, and if there be any other,
-your Reason may be and should be employed
-with all the attention of which ye are capable.
-And when this task is now performed, and you
-have settled it in your own minds what the
-true genuine doctrines of Christianity are;
-what our religion teaches of divine things, and
-what it prescribes to us in moral matters;
-What more remains to be done? Clearly, but
-this—To <small>BELIEVE, AND TO LIVE</small>, according to
-its direction.</p>
-
-<p>But, instead of acquiescing in this natural
-and just conclusion, the curiosity of the human
-mind is ready to engage us in new and endless
-labours. “<i>The wise in their own conceits</i> will
-examine this Religion, and see if it be <small>REASONABLE</small>:
-for surely nothing can proceed from
-Heaven but the purest and brightest reason.”</p>
-
-<p>Here, <i>first</i>, they perplex themselves and
-others, by the use of an ambiguous term: for,
-by <i>reasonable</i> is meant, either what is <i>not contrary</i>
-to the clearest principles of reason, or
-what is <i>clearly explicable</i>, in all respects, by
-those principles. In the <i>former</i> sense, it must
-be maintained that Christianity is a <i>reasonable</i>
-Religion, and that no such contrariety to reason<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-is to be found in it. In the <i>latter</i> sense, it
-may be true that Christianity is <i>not reasonable</i>,
-I mean, that the reasons on which it is founded
-are not always apparent to us: but then this
-sense of the word is not pertinent to the case
-in hand; and we may as well pretend that the
-constitution of the natural world is <i>unreasonable</i>,
-as that the system of Revelation is so,
-because we are in the same ignorance, for the
-most part, of the grounds and reasons on which
-either fabrick is erected.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>next</i> place, supposing that, by intense
-pains, and a greater sagacity than ordinary, we
-are enabled to see, or guess at least, in some
-instances, on what principles of reason the
-great scheme of revelation or some of its doctrines
-at least are founded, what do we get by
-the discovery? Only, the addition of a little
-speculative knowledge, which does not make
-us at all <i>wiser</i> to salvation, than we were before,
-and possibly not <i>so wise</i>; since <i>knowledge</i>, we
-know, <i>puffeth up</i>, and <i>God giveth grace to the
-humble</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But, <i>lastly</i>, how do we arrive at this supposed
-pre-eminence of wisdom? Generally, by
-forcing the word of God to speak <i>our</i> sense of
-it, and not his; by taking advantage of some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-difficult texts, and by wresting many plain
-ones; by making every thing bend, in short,
-to our presumptuous fancies and preconceived
-opinions.</p>
-
-<p>You see, then, what my meaning is—“That
-the <small>EVIDENCE</small> of Christianity, and not its
-<i>rationale</i> (which, however justly conceived and
-ably executed, cannot extend so far as curious
-men require, because Reason itself is so limited);
-I say then that the <i>evidence</i> of our
-religion is the proper object of inquiry;” and
-“that the <i>Scriptures</i> are to be admitted in that
-sense which they obviously bear, on a fair unforced
-construction of them, although that
-sense appear strange to us, or be, perhaps, inexplicable;”
-in a word, that the <small>AUTHORITY</small>
-and <small>RIGHT INTERPRETATION</small> of Scripture are
-what we ought to look after, and not the <small>REASONABLENESS</small>
-of what it teaches.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The truth</span> is (for I would now, in conclusion,
-point out to you the mischievous <i>effects</i>
-of this curious theology, which has so much
-engaged the minds of Christians), the truth, I
-say, is, That we know not what we do, when
-we take heaven, as it were, to task, and examine
-a confessedly divine Revelation by the
-twilight of our Reason.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
-<p>1. One effect is (and can there be a more
-dreadful one?) that this inquisitive humour,
-thus leads directly to <i>Infidelity</i>,
-and even <i>Atheism</i>. For <i>the wise in their own
-conceits</i>, not being able to clear up many parts
-of the divine dispensations, whether of nature
-or grace, to their satisfaction, hastily conclude
-that there <i>is</i> no fitness or wisdom, where they
-<i>see</i> none, and make their inapprehension an
-argument for their rejection of both. A perverse
-conduct, indeed! but so common, that I
-doubt whether there be any <i>other</i> so fruitful
-source of irreligion. But</p>
-
-<p>2. When the mischief does not proceed to
-this extreme, still it is no small evil, that heresies
-arise, and must for ever arise, among
-believers themselves, from this way of subjecting
-the word of God to the scrutiny of our
-reason. For this faculty, being a different thing,
-under the same name, in every pretender to it,
-and, in its most improved state, being naturally
-incapable, where the revelation itself is silent or
-obscure, of deciding on what is fit and right in
-the divine counsels, must needs lead to as
-many different views and conclusions, as there
-are capacities and fancies of curious men. And,
-as every man’s reason is infallible to himself, because
-his <i>own</i> reason, his zeal in the propagation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-of what he calls <i>truth</i>, will keep pace with his
-presumption, till all is noise and dissonance
-and discord; till peace and charity forsake the
-world; till Religion herself disappears; and
-what is left to usurp her name and place is only
-an art, or rather a fit, of disputation. Then
-consider</p>
-
-<p>3. How immense a sacrifice we make to the
-indulgence of a wanton curiosity. The Gospel
-was given to fix our faith and regulate our
-practice; to purify our hearts and lives, and to
-<i>fill us with all joy and peace in believing</i>. Instead
-of these substantial fruits, we reap I know
-not what phantom of self-applause for our
-ingenious speculations: we lose our precious
-time in reasoning, when we should act, and
-hardly ever come to an end of our reasonings:
-we grope on in these dark and intricate paths
-of inquiry, without ever attaining the heart-felt
-joy of conviction: we are so intent on <i>trying</i>
-all things, that we <i>hold fast</i> nothing: we spend
-a great part of our lives, some of us our whole
-lives, in suspense and doubt: and are so long
-examining what our <i>faith</i> is, and whether it be
-reasonable or no, that, with a divine directory
-in our hands, we drop into our graves before
-we come to a resolution of those questions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span></p>
-
-<p>These are the sad effects of this intemperate
-wisdom, which therefore we shall do well to
-exchange for a little modest piety. And such
-has been uniformly the advice of the ablest and
-wisest men, from the foundation of Christianity
-down to this day. It would be endless to refer
-you to particular instances in their writings.
-Their sentiments on this subject are concisely
-and forcibly expressed in the following passage
-of as great a master of reason as hath appeared
-in the Christian world since the revival of letters,
-which I will therefore leave with you, and
-would recommend to your most attentive consideration.</p>
-
-<p>“Rationibus humanis scrutari divinæ naturæ
-(and what he observes of the <i>divine nature</i>,
-is equally true of the divine councils) cognitionem,
-temeritas est: loqui de his, quæ nullis
-verbis explicari queunt, dementis est: definire,
-impietas est.” And again—“Satis est ad
-consequendam salutem æternam, ea de Deo
-credere, quæ palam ipse de se prodidit in sacris
-literis, per selectos ad hoc viros, spiritu suo
-afflatos; quæque post versans in terris ipse
-discipulis aperuit: ac demum per spiritum
-sanctum iisdem in hoc selectis discipulis patefacere
-dignatus est. Hæc simplici fide tenere,
-Christiana philosophia est: hæc puro corde<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-venerari, vera Religio est: per hæc tendere ad
-cœlestis vitæ meditationem, pietas est: in his
-perseverare, victoria est: per hæc vicisse, summa
-fœlicitatis est. Cæterum <small>HOMINEM ULTRA
-HÆC HUMANIS RATIONIBUS DE REBUS DIVINIS
-VESTIGARE, PERICULOSÆ CUJUSDAM ATQUE IMPIÆ
-AUDACIÆ EST</small><a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_CHARGE_4"><small>A</small><br />
-CHARGE<br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">BISHOP OF WORCESTER</span><br />
-<small>TO THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.<br />
-<br />
-DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1790.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A CHARGE, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reverend Brethren</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">It</span> has been observed, that men of sense and
-parts are not always on the side of Christianity:
-And it is asked, how the unbelief of such men
-can consist with the honour of that Religion?</p>
-
-<p>We find this topic insisted upon, or insinuated
-at least, with much complacency, in all
-the free writings of these times. And some of
-them, however offensive for their impiety, being
-composed with vivacity, and delivered in a
-popular style, gain more credit with unwary
-readers than they deserve.</p>
-
-<p>It behoves us to be on our guard against
-those insinuations, and to prevent their having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-an effect upon others. It will not therefore be
-unsuitable to the design of our meeting, if I
-suggest to the younger part of you (for the
-elder and more experienced have no need of
-my instruction), if I expose in few words the
-<i>folly</i> of inferring the falshood of religion from
-the rejection of it by a few plausible or learned
-men. And to give what I have to say the
-greater weight with you, I shall deliver my
-sentiments on the subject in a short comment
-on a remarkable text of St. Paul; who has indeed
-long ago obviated this prejudice, and fully
-accounted for the supposed <i>fact</i>, without derogating
-in any degree from the honour of our
-divine Religion.</p>
-
-<p>For no sooner was Christianity published to
-the world, than it was opposed by all the wisdom
-of that age, which was, in truth, distinguished
-by its wisdom. But then it was <i>human</i>
-wisdom only, confiding in itself, and wholly
-unacquainted with <i>divine</i> wisdom. These were
-often at variance, and sometimes irreconcileable
-with each other. No wonder then, that <i>not
-many wise men after the flesh</i>, as the Apostle
-expresseth it, <i>were called</i>, i. e. converted to
-Christianity, and that the wisdom of Revelation
-was deemed <i>folly</i> (as it is in our days, and as it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-always will be) by the idolaters of their own
-<i>carnal</i> wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>This early and popular prejudice, therefore,
-against the religion of Jesus, the great Apostle
-of the Gentiles found it expedient to remove.
-And he does it effectually in that oracular sentence
-delivered by him in the first Epistle to
-the Corinthians, in these words;</p>
-
-<p>“<i>The natural man receiveth not the things
-of the spirit of God; for they are foolishness
-unto him: neither can he know them; because
-they are spiritually discerned<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The meaning of the words is clearly this:
-“That no man can, by the force of his natural
-understanding, however improved, discover the
-doctrines of the Gospel; nor even relish them,
-when they are proposed to him, so long as he
-judges of them by the light of his reason only:
-and that upon this account, <i>because</i> those doctrines
-are solely derived from the wisdom of
-God, which is superior to our wisdom; and
-will even seem <i>foolishness</i> to such a man, <i>because</i>
-those doctrines are not such as his natural
-reason, or wisdom, would suggest to him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span></p>
-
-<p>The text therefore, you see, consists of two
-distinct <i>affirmations</i>, with a <i>reason</i> assigned for
-each. 1. That the natural man receiveth not
-the things of the spirit of God, <i>for</i> they are
-foolishness unto him: and 2. that he cannot
-know them, <i>because</i> they are spiritually discerned.</p>
-
-<p>I begin with the <i>last</i> of these assertions.
-I. That the natural man cannot <i>know</i>, i. e.
-discover, the doctrines of the Gospel, is so clear,
-that this assertion hardly requires any proof;
-or, if it do, the reason given in the text is decisive—<i>because
-they are spiritually discerned</i>—i. e.
-because the knowledge of them is derived
-from the spirit of God. For, how can
-man’s understanding penetrate the secrets of
-divine counsels? Or, as the Apostle himself
-manages the argument much better, <i>What man
-knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of
-man which is in him? Even so, the things of
-God knoweth no man, but the spirit of God.</i></p>
-
-<p>II. His other assertion—<i>That the natural
-man receiveth not the things of God</i>, i. e. is indisposed
-to receive them—is more interesting
-to us, and will require a larger illustration.
-His reason for this assertion is, <i>For they are
-foolishness unto him</i>. The reason is very general,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-and therefore obscure: for you ask how or
-whence is it, <i>that those things are foolishness
-unto him</i>?</p>
-
-<p>I answer then, 1. because, <i>he could not
-discover them</i>. It is argument enough, many
-times, with the natural man, to reject any doctrine,
-which his own sagacity was unable to
-find out. For, taking for granted the all-sufficiency
-of human reason, and that what is
-knowable of divine things is within the reach
-of his own faculties, he concludes at once that
-such doctrines as he could not have discovered
-are therefore false. If it be only in matters of
-human science, a discovery, which very much
-transcends the abilities of common inquirers,
-is for that reason ill-received and slighted by
-many persons. Much more may we suppose
-this prejudice to be entertained against discoveries
-which no human abilities whatever could
-possibly have made.</p>
-
-<p>But 2. a further reason why such things are
-thought <i>foolish</i> by the natural man is, because
-they are widely different from his notions and
-apprehensions. He was not only unable to
-<i>invent</i> them himself; but, when proposed to
-him, he cannot see how they should merit his
-regard, being so little suited, as they are, to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-previous conclusions of his own understanding.
-Now this prejudice is of great extent; and is
-almost natural to the pride of human reason.</p>
-
-<p>For, supposing a divine Revelation to be
-given at all, men form to themselves certain
-notions of what it must needs be; and finding
-that it does not correspond to those notions,
-<i>they receive it not</i>, i. e. they conclude it to be
-unreasonable.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, <i>one</i> man imagines that the Gospel
-could be only a republication of the law of
-nature. He finds it is much more; and therefore,
-without further search, infers its falshood.
-<i>Another</i> man admits that the Gospel might be
-an extraordinary scheme for the advancement
-of human virtue and happiness: but then he
-presumes that these ends could only, or would
-best, be answered by a complete system of
-moral truths, and by making the future happiness
-of man depend upon moral practice
-only. He understands that the Gospel proposes
-to reform mankind by <i>faith</i>, and holds
-out its rewards only to such as are actuated
-by that principle. He rejects then a scheme
-of religion which so little accords to his expectations.
-A <i>third</i> person allows that <i>faith</i>
-may be the proper object of reward, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-a faith in <i>God</i> only: to his surprize he perceives
-that this faith is required to be in Jesus,
-the son of God indeed, but the son of man too,
-and in him <i>crucified</i>; that the Gospel supposes
-mankind to have been under the curse of mortality,
-and to be redeemed from it only in virtue
-of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross. This strange
-dispensation is nothing like that which he
-should have planned himself: it is therefore
-disbelieved by him.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears how the <i>natural man</i> is disposed
-to think unfavourably of the Gospel, because
-its doctrines are not such as he should
-previously have expected. But another and
-more fatal prejudice misleads him. For</p>
-
-<p>3. The things of the spirit seem <i>foolishness</i>
-to the natural man, because on the strictest
-inquiry he cannot perhaps find out the reasons
-of them; and must admit them, many times,
-upon trust, as we say, or, in the language of
-Scripture, on a principle of <i>faith</i> only. This
-experienced inability to search the deep things
-of God hurts his pride most of all. That the
-divine counsels are <i>beyond</i> his discovery, may
-be true; that they should be <i>besides</i> his first
-hasty expectations, may be digested: but that,
-when discovered and considered, they should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-yet elude his grasp, and not submit to be comprehended
-by his utmost capacity, this disgrace
-is insupportable to him. Yet such are the
-fundamental doctrines of the Christian Revelation.
-“The forfeiture of life and immortality,
-for all mankind, in consequence of one man’s
-disobedience,” implies a degree of rigour in the
-divine justice, of which he cannot understand
-the reason. On the other hand, “The restoration
-of that lost inheritance by the transcendent
-humiliation of the Son of God,” is an abyss
-of mercy which he can still less fathom. These
-two principles, on which the whole scheme of
-the Gospel turns, are not to be scanned by
-human wisdom, and must be admitted on the
-authority of the Revelation only. The natural
-man finds his reason so much discountenanced
-and abased by its fruitless efforts to penetrate
-these mysteries, that he has no disposition to
-<i>receive</i>, nay, he thinks the honour of his
-understanding concerned in <i>rejecting</i>, such
-doctrines.</p>
-
-<p>4. The <i>fourth</i> and last reason I shall mention
-(and but in one word) for the natural
-man’s unfavourable sentiments of revealed religion,
-is, That the wisdom of this scheme, so
-far as it may be apprehended by us, can only
-appear from considering the harmony of its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-several parts, or, as St. Paul expresses it, by
-<i>comparing spiritual things with spiritual</i><a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>; a
-work of time and labour, which he is by no
-means forward to undertake. So that, as, in
-the former instances, his indisposition arose
-from the <i>pride</i> of reason, it here springs from
-its <i>laziness and inapplication</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I omit other considerations, which indispose
-men for the reception of the Gospel; such I
-mean as arise from the perversity of the human
-<i>will</i>; because I confine myself at present to
-those only which respect the exercise of human
-<i>Reason</i>. Now it has been shewn, that this
-faculty, as it is commonly employed by those
-who pride themselves most in it, is unpropitious
-to Revelation—<i>because</i>, it cares not to admit
-what it could not discover—<i>because</i>, it willingly
-disbelieves what it did not expect—<i>because</i>,
-it is given to reject what it cannot at all,
-or cannot, at least, without much pains, comprehend.
-So good reason had the Apostle for
-asserting, that <i>the natural man receiveth not the
-things of the spirit of God</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Very much of what his been here observed of
-<i>Unbelief</i>, might be applied to what is so prevalent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-in our days, and is termed <i>Socinianism</i>:
-which, though it do not disown altogether the
-authority of revealed religion, yet takes leave
-to reduce it to a small matter, and to explain
-away its peculiar doctrines, by a forced and irreverend
-interpretation of Scripture. So that
-the difference is only this: the <i>unbeliever</i> rejects
-revelation in the gross, as wholly inconsistent
-with <i>human</i> reason; the <i>Socinian</i> admits
-so much of it as he can bend, or torture into
-some conformity with his <i>own</i> reason.</p>
-
-<p>But I have considered this species of <i>Unbelief</i>
-on a former occasion.</p>
-
-<p>At present, I conclude, on the authority of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-the text now explained and justified, that no
-abilities whatsoever of the professed unbeliever
-bring any the least discredit on Christianity,
-because we know that the two inherent defects
-of the natural man, <i>pride</i> and <i>indolence</i>, very
-fully account for his unbelief, without supposing
-any want of evidence or reasonableness in the
-Christian Religion.</p>
-
-<p>Let it then be no discredit to the Gospel,
-that it requires <i>faith</i>, which is but another
-term for <span class="smcap">Modesty</span>, in its professors. With this
-amiable, and surely not unreasonable, turn of
-mind, the sublimest understanding will not
-scruple to receive the things of the spirit of
-God; without it, the natural man cannot receive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-them: <i>for</i>, as the Apostle declares, and
-this whole discourse testifies, <i>they are foolishness
-unto him</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_CHARGE_5"><small>A</small><br />
-CHARGE<br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">BISHOP OF WORCESTER</span><br />
-<small>TO THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.<br />
-<br />
-DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1796.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A CHARGE, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reverend Brethren</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">The</span> Christian Church has, in no age, been
-exempt from trials. The <i>faith and patience of
-the Saints</i> have been successively exercised by
-persecution, by heresies, by schisms, by superstition,
-by fanaticism, by disguised or avowed
-infidelity, and sometimes by downright atheism.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of these perpetual changes, the
-duty of <small>US</small>, the Ministers of the Gospel, is one
-and the same, <span class="smcap">To preach the word</span>, <i>in season
-and out of season</i>, that is, whether the circumstances
-of the time be favourable to us or not<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Concerning the <i>evidences</i> of the Gospel, or
-the grounds on which our belief of it is founded,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-I say no more at present, than that they have
-been accurately considered, and set forth at
-large, by ancient and modern writers, and are
-in themselves abundantly satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>Taking for granted therefore, as we well may,
-the divine authority of our holy Religion, there
-can be no dispute about the obligation we are
-under to <small>PREACH</small> it with diligence. But this
-may be done in several <i>ways</i>: and it may be of
-use to consider in <small>WHAT</small> way we shall most
-effectually discharge that duty.</p>
-
-<p>The Apostle delivers the whole secret in one
-word, when he ordains—<span class="smcap">If any man speak,
-let him speak as the oracles of God</span>. And
-my present business will be to unfold the meaning
-of this text, or rather to deduce the <i>consequences</i>
-which naturally flow from it.</p>
-
-<p>We are to <i>speak as the Oracles of God</i>: that
-is, as men, who have it in charge to deliver
-the will and word of God.</p>
-
-<p>I. It follows then, <small>FIRST</small>, that we are to preach
-the Gospel <small>SIMPLY AND PLAINLY</small>; i. e. 1. to deliver
-Scripture truths, in opposition to merely
-human tenets and positions: And 2. cogent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-and immediate inferences from those truths, in
-exclusion of far-fetched and fanciful deductions.</p>
-
-<p>1. Having a <i>message</i> to deliver, our business
-is to report it with fidelity, and, as a message
-coming from <i>God</i>, with all imaginable reverence.
-Human ingenuity may be employed in other
-compositions, but has no place here. Our own
-fancies, and even persuasions, so far as they
-rest on our own discovery, must be kept distinct
-from revealed truths; and <i>the two sorts of
-learning, philosophy and divinity</i> (as the wisest
-man<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> of the last age advised), <i>are on no account
-to be blended together</i>. The reason is, that
-they stand on different foundations; the one,
-on the use of our natural faculties, the other,
-on supernatural illumination only. The latter
-we call <i>Faith</i>; the former, <i>Opinion</i>, or, as it
-may chance, <i>Knowledge</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Some regard must be had to this distinction,
-in discoursing on Christian <i>morals</i>, where Reason
-can do most. But, as to articles of <i>faith</i>,
-that is, the sum and substance of Christianity,
-properly so called, the rule is to be observed
-universally and inviolably.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span></p>
-
-<p>2. It follows also, from our speaking as the
-<i>oracles of God</i>, That we take great care how
-we deviate from the sacred text, either in our
-conclusions from it, or in our glosses upon it.
-Our <i>conclusions</i>, unless immediate and direct,
-and even countenanced by the inspired writers
-themselves, may easily mislead us. For the
-nature of the subject being not at all, or very
-obscurely, known, we have but a dim view of
-the truths necessarily connected with it. Great
-caution, then, is in this respect necessary. It
-is not less so, in <i>explaining</i> the sacred text. An
-oracle of God should be delivered either in its
-own words, or, at least, in words clearly, and
-according to the best rules of interpretation,
-explicatory of them. The contrary practice is
-evidently irreverent, rash, and even prophane.
-Had this circumspection in reasoning <i>from</i> revealed
-truths, and in commenting <i>upon</i> them,
-been strictly observed, all those heresies which
-have corrupted, and still corrupt the faith, had
-been prevented; and the Church of Christ had
-happily enjoyed the great blessing we daily
-pray for, <i>The unity of the spirit in the bond of
-peace</i>.</p>
-
-<p>II. It follows, in the next place, from our
-being instructed to <i>speak as the Oracles of God</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-that we preach the truths of the Gospel <small>AUTHORITATIVELY</small>,
-in exclusion of doubt or hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>This is a consideration of great weight, and
-puts a wide difference between the Christian
-preacher and the theoretical discourser. When
-weak men have no ground to stand upon in
-their moral or religious enquiries but their own
-industry and ingenuity, they may well suspect
-the soundness of their conclusions, and had
-need deliver them with distrust and caution.
-But the word of God is unquestionable. What
-is built upon it is certainly true. Our modesty
-therefore suffers nothing from announcing
-truths, so derived, with perfect assurance<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The advantage of this mode of preaching
-must be obvious to every body. It was observed
-by the Jews in the case of our Lord
-himself; who, <i>speaking as the oracles of God</i>,
-and as <i>God</i>, astonished his auditory, for that
-<i>he taught them as one having authority, and not
-as the Scribes</i><a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>: as having <i>authority</i>, because
-he uttered nothing but infallible truth, which
-he had received from God, and had even a right<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-to deliver in his own name; and not as the
-<i>Scribes</i>, who might indeed have spoken with
-authority, if they had duly respected the Law
-of Moses, which was the Law of God; but had
-forfeited this advantage by the liberty they took
-of mixing with it their own glosses and traditions<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>.
-A perpetual and awakening admonition to the
-Christian preacher never to forget or betray his
-high privilege of speaking with that tone of
-authority which becomes his office, and commands
-attention<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>This authoritative mode of preaching requires
-that we carefully avoid, in our public discourses,
-whatever has the air of <small>CONTROVERSY</small><a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>. Our
-business is to speak undoubted truths, not to
-dispute about uncertain opinions. There are
-many points, no doubt, relative to the Christian
-Religion, besides the evidences of it, that may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-be properly inquired into, but not in our
-Churches. We are to press <i>there</i> only what
-we know to be true, and to press it <i>for that
-reason</i>. Let such persons, then, as are curious
-to pry into abstruse questions, have recourse to
-the <i>Schools</i>, where such discussions are in their
-place; or to <i>Books</i>, where they may be regaled
-with this sort of entertainment to satiety. But
-let them not carry this sceptical humour into
-that <i>Chair</i>, whence oracles only should proceed.</p>
-
-<p>The preacher will indeed say, his design is
-to recommend and illustrate the truth by the
-use of reason. It may be so: but let him remember,
-that <i>the plainest truths lose much of
-their weight when they are rarefied into subtleties</i><a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>;
-and that what is readily admitted on the
-authority of God’s word, becomes doubtful to
-the common hearer, when we would prove it
-by ingenious argumentation.</p>
-
-<p>To compleat the character of a Christian
-Preacher, it follows as a</p>
-
-<p>III. Third inference from the Apostle’s rule
-of <i>speaking as the oracles of God</i>, That he inculcate
-his doctrine with <small>EARNESTNESS</small> and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-<small>ZEAL</small>, and not with that indifference which is
-usually found, and cannot be much wondered
-at, in a teacher of his own inventions.</p>
-
-<p>The Christian preacher should, I say, speak
-with <i>earnestness</i>; that is, with a solicitous concern
-to instruct and persuade, such as the
-known truth of his doctrine warrants. This
-earnestness must also be attended with <i>zeal</i>;
-by which I mean nothing extravagant or fanatical;
-but such a fervour of application as must
-become an Instructor, who, besides the certainty,
-knows the <i>moment</i> of what he utters.</p>
-
-<p>These rules, it is true, were not unknown to
-the ancient masters of Rhetoric, who told their
-scholars, That to <i>convince</i>, and, much more, to
-<i>persuade</i>, they were to speak with force and
-warmth. But to do this, they were first to be
-convinced and persuaded <i>themselves</i><a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>; which,
-in their case, was no easy matter. For the
-principles they went upon in their reasoning on
-moral or religious matters, were frequently such
-as they could not confide in; or the end they
-aimed at, in applying to the passions, was in
-no high degree interesting. In spite of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-rule, then, their discourses were often feeble
-and unimpressive. It is quite otherwise with
-the Christian preacher. For we are not recommending
-a scheme of notions which we have
-framed out of our <i>own heads</i>, or which we think
-in some <i>small</i> degree conducive to the benefit
-of our hearers. But we speak that which is
-<i>indisputably</i> true; and inforce that which, out
-of all question, concerns us most, “The salvation
-of our souls, and eternal happiness.”
-The coldest heart must be touched with sure
-truths, and cannot impart them without vehemence.</p>
-
-<p>I intimate, rather than express, my meaning
-to you in few words; both because the time
-allows me to do no more, and because I know
-to whom these hints are addressed. For your
-experience in the ministry of the word must
-have prevented me in all I have <i>said</i>, and will
-readily supply what I have <i>omitted</i> to say. I
-assure myself, therefore, you will come with
-me to this short conclusion, “That in our sermons
-we should execute our commission with
-<small>FIDELITY</small>, because it is <i>a commission</i>—in the
-way of <small>AUTHORITY</small>, because it is a <i>divine</i> commission—and
-lastly with <small>ZEAL</small>, as knowing the
-<i>end</i> of our commission, and the infinite importance
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span></p>
-
-<p>By this method of instruction (of which there
-is no want of examples, or even <i>models</i>, in the
-sermons of our best preachers<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>), by this Apostolic
-mode of preaching, I say, we shall do
-justice at once to our ministry and ourselves.
-By speaking as <i>the oracles of God</i>, we shall
-speak as we ought to speak; and we shall speak
-with an energy that can rarely fail of effect.
-We shall alarm the careless, instruct the ignorant,
-confirm the weak, reclaim the perverse,
-disconcert the wise, and silence the prophane.
-We shall do this, and more, in the strength of
-him who bade us <i>teach all nations</i>. And if we
-teach them in the <i>way</i> which the Holy Spirit
-enjoins, we may confidently expect the completion
-of that gracious and animating promise—<span class="smcap">Lo,
-I am with you always, even to the
-end of the world</span><a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_CHARGE_6"><small>A</small><br />
-CHARGE<br />
-<small>OF THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">BISHOP OF WORCESTER</span><br />
-<small>TO THE</small><br />
-<span class="medium">CLERGY OF HIS DIOCESE.<br />
-<br />
-DELIVERED IN THE YEAR 1800.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A CHARGE, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Reverend Brethren</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">I found</span> it necessary to defer my Visitation
-of you somewhat longer than the usual time;
-and have even now no pressing occasion to
-trouble you with many words of advice or pastoral
-exhortation.</p>
-
-<p>For it is with great satisfaction I observe that,
-in the present eventful crisis, the clergy in general,
-and those in particular committed to my
-charge, have zealously performed their duty in
-those instances, that have chiefly called for their
-exertions.</p>
-
-<p>If the unprecedented <i>expences</i> of a just and
-unavoidable war, against an enemy the most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-outrageous that has ever alarmed Christendom,
-have been felt by all; you have not only supported
-your share of them with becoming alacrity,
-but have done your utmost to infuse into
-others the same ready obedience to the authority
-of Government, and the same zeal for the
-support and maintenance of our invaluable
-Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>If, again, for the punishment of our sins,
-and to recall us to a due sense of sobriety and
-piety, it has pleased God to visit us with <i>inclement
-seasons</i>, and with the usual effect of them,
-an extraordinary scarcity; you have every where
-come forth to assist the poor out of your own,
-not always affluent, incomes, and to solicit the
-contributions of your parishioners with such
-effect, as demonstrates <i>their</i> Christian temper,
-as well as your own watchful care and diligence.</p>
-
-<p>If, lastly, the <i>portentous libertinism</i> of the
-times hath menaced the destruction of all civil
-subordination, and even set at defiance all the
-sacred ties of our holy Religion; you have not
-been wanting, in your respective spheres, to
-admonish the people of their duty; to revive
-in them that veneration of God’s word and will,
-which had been their support and safety in
-former ages; and, agreeably to your solemn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-engagements at your Ordination, <i>to banish and
-drive away all erroneous and strange doctrine</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Having then so much to approve in your
-conduct, little remains but to put you in mind
-of those standing duties of our ministry, which
-should never be omitted, and cannot be too
-frequently recollected by us. And, of these,
-one is so particularly called for in the present
-moment, that I shall make it the subject of my
-address to you.</p>
-
-<p>I mean the duty of <i>Catechizing</i> the children
-of your respective parishes. For, since the
-enemies of all goodness are unwearied in their
-endeavours to corrupt the young and unwary,
-and to eradicate from their minds, as far as they
-can, the first principles of religion and virtue,
-the Christian minister cannot by any means so
-effectually counteract their designs, as by a contrary
-conduct. In other words, he must labour
-incessantly to instruct the rising generation in
-the first grounds and elements of Christianity,
-contained in that excellent summary of faith
-and practice, which the Church has enjoined to
-be taught in its <span class="smcap">Catechism</span><a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span></p>
-
-<p>Now the uses of discharging this part of the
-pastoral care with persevering industry are evidently
-very great in respect, 1. To the Catechumens;
-2. To the congregation present at
-these exercises; And, 3. lastly, To the officiating
-clergy themselves, the younger part of
-them especially.</p>
-
-<p>1. The Catechumens themselves cannot but
-be greatly benefited by this regimen. For the
-intention of the Church is, that, by the care of
-their parents, and by means of those little
-schools which are set up in all places, young
-children should be taught, as soon as they are
-able to attend to any thing, the Church Catechism.
-And when, by some practice in this
-discipline, they can repeat it well, they are to
-be sent to the Minister of the parish, to be by
-him publicly in the Church, at appointed seasons,
-proved and examined before the Congregation.
-This usage being continued for some
-years, not only the responses to the interesting
-questions in the Catechism must be deeply infixed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-in their memories, but something of the
-sense and meaning of what they have learned,
-will be gradually apprehended by them. So
-that, by the time they appear before the Bishop
-for Confirmation, if their respective masters
-and teachers be not wanting to them, they
-must have acquired a competent knowledge of
-those important doctrines and precepts, which
-are contained in it. Add to this, that, though
-at the time of learning their Catechism their
-knowledge of it be not considerable, yet it is of
-the highest importance that it be learnt, and
-that they can readily recite it. For, this foundation
-being laid, they will, in maturer years,
-and as their understandings open, the more
-easily call to mind the rules of their duty, and
-profit the more by any future instructions conveyed
-to them in sermons, in the use of the
-Liturgy, and otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>Such will especially be the case, if the children
-be accustomed, as they should be, to make
-their answers distinctly and deliberately; and,
-if the Minister intermix some short hints and
-observations of his own, tending to make the
-sense of those answers easy and familiar to them.
-So much for the <i>Catechumens</i>; I observe,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span></p>
-
-<p>2. Further, that the whole <i>Congregation</i>
-present at these exercises must be specially
-edified by them.</p>
-
-<p>The parents and friends of the catechized
-children will, for obvious reasons, take a lively
-interest in this public trial of their sufficiency.
-They will listen themselves, more attentively
-perhaps than they had ever done before, to the
-<i>questions</i> and <i>answers</i>, and will enter further
-into the drift and use of them. Nay, the whole
-congregation will be put in mind of those fundamental
-lessons of piety, which they had heretofore
-learnt and repeated themselves, and be
-now capable of reflecting more deeply upon
-them. So that the old will carry away with
-them much solid instruction, while the young
-are training up to smaller degrees of it.</p>
-
-<p>There is no doubt, then, of the benefit which
-the Congregation would derive from this practice
-of Catechising. But it would rise still
-higher, if the Catechizers, besides interrogating
-the children, and trying their memories, would
-further take this opportunity of teaching all
-present the momentous truths contained in this
-breviary: I mean, if, during the season of Catechizing,
-they would make the several parts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-of the Catechism the subject of their Sermons.
-And, to induce them the rather to do this,
-I add,</p>
-
-<p>3. Lastly, that, by exerting their industry
-and talents in this way, the Clergy themselves
-will derive no small use from this Catechetical
-institution.</p>
-
-<p>From the earliest times of Christianity, care
-has been always taken to provide <i>Confessions</i>,
-<i>Creeds</i>, and <i>Catechisms</i>, for the use of Converts
-and the newly baptized. These were so contrived
-as to contain in few words the fundamental
-doctrines and commands of our Religion;
-that so they night be easily understood
-and remembered. Of these summaries, several
-were drawn up by our Reformers; and, after
-some changes and improvements, were reduced
-at length into our present <i>Church Catechism</i>,
-the most convenient and useful, because the
-simplest and shortest, of all others.</p>
-
-<p>All these, whether of earlier or later date,
-are well known to the Clergy, and without
-doubt are studied by them.</p>
-
-<p>Besides, some of the most eminent of our
-Divines have applied themselves particularly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-to write comments on these Catechisms, to
-explain their meaning more fully, and to give
-the most accurate expositions of them. These
-expositors are so numerous, and so well
-known, that I should scarce have mentioned the
-names of any, if two of them, I mean Bishop
-Pearson and Dr. Barrow, did not deserve to be
-specially recommended to the student in Divinity,
-for their superlative excellence.</p>
-
-<p>Now then, by the use of our protestant Catechisms,
-and of the many learned Commentators
-upon them, the younger clergy, as well as
-the more advanced, will have such abundant
-materials before them, that they may, with no
-great trouble, and with extraordinary benefit to
-themselves, draw up a set of Sermons and Lectures
-to accompany their Catechetical examinations.
-I say with extraordinary benefit to
-<i>themselves</i>; because it is certain that he who
-takes due pains to teach others, teaches himself:
-nor can the least prepared of our brethren
-be at a loss to furnish his mind with a competent,
-indeed a sufficient, degree of knowledge;
-so as to instruct his congregation in all the
-Articles of the Church Catechism, that is, in
-all the necessary points of Christian faith and
-practice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span></p>
-
-<p>In contemplation therefore of these benefits,
-I recommend this mode of catechizing, and of
-expounding the Catechism in occasional concomitant
-discourses, to all my brethren very
-particularly. The children will be trained up
-for Confirmation in the knowledge of the first
-principles of their religion; those of riper years
-will be confirmed in what they had before
-learnt; and the teachers of both will advance
-their own skill and ability by this course of
-theological study.</p>
-
-<p>We shall be told perhaps by some, that this
-way of catechizing is the way to fill the minds
-of the Catechumens with <i>prejudices</i>. And,
-without doubt, what is taught them in this
-way is <i>pre-judged</i> for them. But by whom?
-Not by weak, or unskilful, or dishonest persons;
-but by men, the ablest, the most learned, and
-the holiest, that have appeared in the Christian
-world. Such doctrines, so derived, and, let
-me add, clearly sanctioned by apostolic authority,
-may surely deserve the name of <i>truths</i>,
-and not of prejudices.</p>
-
-<p>I am persuaded, therefore, that a Regimen,
-so reasonable and so salutary, will recommend
-itself to your special notice, as the likeliest
-means of putting some stop to the licentious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-principles of the times. I will not suppose
-that your zeal to do good can be, at such a
-juncture, less operative, than that of others to
-do mischief. In a word, by adapting a set of
-clear, plain, earnest, and scriptural sermons to
-the authorized office of catechetical examination,
-we shall provide, at once, that our Congregations
-be <i>instructed</i> in the right way; the
-way which the wisdom of the Church prescribes;
-and that we ourselves be duly qualified
-to <i>impart</i> that instruction.</p>
-
-<p>The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and
-the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy
-Ghost, be with you all. Amen<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="APPENDIX">
-APPENDIX:<br />
-<small>CONTAINING</small><br />
-<span class="large">FOUR OCCASIONAL TRACTS</span><br />
-<small>ON</small><br />
-<span class="medium">DIFFERENT SUBJECTS AND OCCASIONS.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span></h2>
-
-<h2 id="CONTROVERSIAL_TRACTS">OCCASIONAL TRACTS,<br />
-<small>CHIEFLY</small><br />
-<span class="medium">CONTROVERSIAL.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span></h2>
-
-<h2 id="ADVERTISEMENT"><i>ADVERTISEMENT.</i></h2>
-
-<p><i>The controversial Tracts, which make up
-this Volume, were written and published by the
-Author at different times, as opportunity invited,
-or occasion required. Some sharpness of style
-may be objected to them; in regard to which he
-apologizes for himself in the words of the Poet</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i4">——Me quoque pectoris<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Tentavit in dulci juventâ<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Fervor——<br /></span>
-<span class="i4">——nunc ego mitibus<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Mutare quæro tristia.<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="author">R. W.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="REMARKS_ON_A_LATE_BOOK">
-REMARKS<br />
-<small>ON</small><br />
-<span class="large">MR. WESTON’S “ENQUIRY</span><br />
-<small>INTO</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE REJECTION OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="large">CHRISTIAN MIRACLES</span><br />
-<span class="medium">BY THE HEATHENS.”</span><br />
-<br />
-<small>FIRST PRINTED IN 1746.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span></h2>
-
-<h2>ADVERTISEMENT<br />
-<small>IN 1746.</small></h2>
-
-<p>The following Remarks were drawn up
-within a few weeks after the publication of
-Mr. Weston’s Book; but without any intention
-of printing them at that time, when it was
-conceived not unlikely that some more elaborate
-Answer might come out. But nothing of
-that kind appearing, and it being now no longer
-probable that there is in fact any such design,
-the Author has been induced to review his
-papers, and to give them, with some small additions
-and alterations, to the Public. How
-far that <i>Public</i> will esteem itself obliged to him
-for having suppressed them thus long, he presumes
-not to say; but believes himself well
-intitled to the thanks of the learned <i>Inquirer</i>,
-as having <i>still</i> this merit, that he is the <small>FIRST</small>
-who has paid his respects to him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">
-REMARKS<br />
-<span class="medium">ON A LATE BOOK, ENTITLED,</span><br />
-<span class="large">AN ENQUIRY</span><br />
-<small>INTO</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE REJECTION OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="large">CHRISTIAN MIRACLES</span><br />
-<span class="medium">BY THE HEATHENS.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span></h2>
-
-<h2>REMARKS ON A LATE BOOK, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">The</span> Writer of the <i>Inquiry into the Rejection
-of the Christian Miracles by the Heathens</i><a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>
-having, as he is well assured<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>, an undoubted
-claim to one of the two reasons for making a
-work public, <i>that what it contains</i> <small>SHOULD</small> <i>be
-new</i>, and not willing that so uncommon a merit
-should be thrown away upon his reader, is
-careful to advertise us of this point himself,
-and accordingly flourishes upon it with much
-apparent alacrity and satisfaction through a
-great part of his Preface. For, not content
-with this bare assertion of his claim, he grows
-so elate, as to wonder this important theme<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-should be reserved for him<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>, and that no sagacity
-of former times had been blessed in the
-discovery. Nay, lest his very Patron should
-neglect him, or as if he suspected my Lord
-might look no farther than the Dedication, he
-scruples not to mention even there the excellency
-of his work; and is very frank in declaring
-his own <i>good opinion</i> of it<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>An exordium like this, we know, is generally
-inauspicious. However, it may serve to one
-end, not the least considerable, it may be, in
-an author’s views, to engage the public attention.
-For it is indeed but natural to inquire
-into the peculiar merit of a work that could
-inspire its writer with such boasts, and fill a
-place in it, till now sacred to a real or pretended
-modesty, with such unusual confidence and
-triumph. And this, we are told, consists in
-<i>the discovery of a new solution of a difficulty
-about miracles<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>, which had long perplexed the
-Inquirer more than all the rest put together</i>. For,
-taking into his consideration the argument for
-the divinity of our holy Religion, as arising<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-therefrom, <i>he could not help thinking it extremely
-odd, that such numbers of men, for so long a
-time, could reject what to Christians in general,
-and himself in particular, seemed to be of so
-great weight</i><a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>. And the embarras he was under
-from this difficulty put him <i>upon looking for
-some solution of it amongst the variety of authors
-on this subject, both ancient and modern</i>; but
-to no purpose, it seems, till the felicity of his
-own genius had struck out a new route, and
-led him to seek it <i>in the low opinion which the
-heathens entertained of miracles</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And now the whole discovery is out; and,
-to say the truth, is every way so surprizing,
-that an author of less modesty than ours had
-assumed a still farther merit upon it. For,
-wherefore else should he rest in the honour of
-a new <i>solution</i>, when the <i>objection</i> itself is <i>his</i>?
-And surely at this time of day, when every
-species of hostility has been tried, and the
-whole armoury of the enemy been exhausted
-in the service, it must be deemed a higher
-praise of <i>invention</i> to have furnished new arms,
-than to counteract the use of them. Nor do I
-pay the author too great a compliment in supposing
-the objection <i>his</i>, since he fairly owns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-<i>it has always been passed over</i><a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>, which, in an
-age like this, when every difficulty relating to
-Revealed Religion has been sedulously urged,
-and honestly examined, is in effect saying it
-was never <i>started</i>. And, indeed, this is so much
-the case, that, instead of dreaming of any objection
-from this quarter, Christian writers have
-universally agreed in representing the quick
-and speedy conversion of the heathen world, as
-an undeniable evidence of its divinity. And,
-for the truth of the fact, they appeal to the
-testimony of the heathens themselves complaining
-of the enormous growth of the <i>new
-sect</i>; which had spread itself over at orders
-and degrees of men, insomuch that their altars
-were neglected, and the temples of their gods
-left in a manner desolate<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>. Nay, the Christian
-apologists, we know, braved them to their very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-face with the incredible progress of Christianity<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a>.
-And thus, instead of its being true, as the Inquirer
-candidly insinuates, <i>that there was something
-so exceedingly perplexed and intricate in
-the subject itself, or something so critical and
-dangerous in the solution of it, that it was always
-thought proper to be kept from view</i><a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>, nothing,
-on the contrary, can be more evident than that
-there is no difficulty to be accounted for at all;
-or, if some more forward projector should affect
-to make one of it, the pretence might easily,
-and without any danger, admit a <i>solution</i>. So
-that, upon the whole (if a dealer in novelties
-were not too much disgraced by so <i>stale</i> an
-allusion), one should be apt to regard the
-learned writer as having been pushed on to this
-Inquiry by much the same spirit as, in an evil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-hour, led the valorous Knight of <i>Manca</i> out
-upon his rambles. For, struck with the conceit
-of his own superior prowess, and considering
-withal the loss the world might sustain by his
-not appearing in it, he marched forth into the
-land of Religious Disputation, in quest of adventures;
-where, finding no <i>real</i> objections to
-encounter, he was determined however to create
-<i>imaginary</i> ones, and so, converting the next
-innocent thing he came at into a monster, laid
-out his whole strength and force in the combat.
-Where too the success of the adventurers is
-not unlike. For the difficulty, if it be one, is
-much too hard for the abilities of our Inquirer;
-as, whatever his antagonist was, the unlucky
-Knight had always the worst of it. For, in
-examining the other part of the author’s discovery,
-his answer to the supposed objection,
-we shall find that as he set out with a difficulty
-without grounds, so he will salve it by a fact
-without proof. And this, it will be owned, consistently
-enough: for, where a phantom only is
-to be engaged, the hero but exposes himself
-that goes against it in <i>real armour</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">——Frustra <i>ferro</i> diverberet <i>umbras</i>.<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>But let us hear the fact itself. It is maintained
-then as the basis of the Inquirer’s whole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-work, <i>that the heathens in general had a very
-low opinion of miracles; and that this was not
-put on by them to serve some particular purposes,
-but was really a principle that influenced
-their actions on the most interesting and trying
-occasions</i><a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>. The Inquirer has more than once<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>
-expressed his apprehensions that the <i>novelty</i> of
-his doctrine would, at least with many of his
-readers, be a prejudice against its reception;
-but not once, that I can find, does he appear to
-have entertained any the least distrust or concern
-about the truth of it. And yet the public
-will be apt to think this the fitter object of his
-fears. For, allowing the utmost weight and
-force to the several testimonies he has put together,
-the whole amount of their evidence is
-this:—<i>that a few particular persons, many of
-them under inveterate prejudices against Christianity,
-expressed but a low opinion of miracles,
-which they knew to be</i> <small>FALSE</small>, <i>or of certain</i> <small>REAL</small><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-<i>ones, which they did not believe</i>. And where is
-the wonder? Or how has the Inquirer, with
-all his sagacity, been able to collect a proof of
-the <i>low opinion of miracles amongst the heathen
-in general</i> from the unavailing evidence of
-such witnesses? For, is it strange that the
-Roman præfects<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> were not the immediate converts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-of Jesus and Paul, on account of the
-wonders said to have been done by them? If
-the Inquirer believes such testimonies to his
-purpose, I will engage to furnish a long list of
-them, even as many as there were unconverted
-heathens, who had the means and opportunity
-of informing themselves of the truth of his
-history. Is it remarkable that the miracles of
-one impostor<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> are not spoken of with <i>much</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-esteem by writers, who were not delivering the
-popular opinion concerning them, and who had
-plainly too much sense to believe them themselves?
-Or is it so much as <i>true</i>, either of
-him, or the others he mentions, that they were
-then negligently treated by their professed admirers
-and encomiasts<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>? Or, were it <i>true</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-could any thing more be collected from it than
-that the miracles imputed to them were too<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-trifling in themselves, or too weakly supported,
-to be believed?</p>
-
-<p>But we have not yet done with the writer’s
-negative testimonies. For he thinks <i>that</i> of
-<i>Marcellinus</i> should not be passed over; though
-the most he can make of it is, that the historian
-<i>dissembles</i> a miracle<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> wrought to the utter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-confusion of his Master, and <i>relates an event,
-which he was not at liberty to confute</i>.</p>
-
-<p>What comes next is indeed <i>positive</i>, but still
-less to the writer’s purpose. We can scarce
-think him serious, when he would urge the
-testimony of Hierocles, Celsus, and Julian, the
-avowed and virulent opposers of Christianity<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>,
-as an evidence of a general contempt of miracles
-in the heathen world. Nor has he better
-luck with his philosophers. For, is the opinion
-of a few atheistical speculatists<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>, and perhaps
-one or two more of better fame, of the least
-weight in deciding this matter; especially when
-it is plain, from the very passage referred to<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-that they saw through the imposture of the
-heathen miracles; and rejected them <i>merely</i> on
-that account? Can his Ægyptian Gymnosophists,
-piqued, as they were, at the reputation
-of the Indian miracles<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a>, and yet, in effect,
-confessing their esteem of them by pretending
-to work such themselves, can these witnesses
-be thought deserving the least credit? Above
-all, is the wonder-working <i>Apollonius</i> brought
-in to disclaim miracles, and that too in a passage
-intended only to express his contempt of some
-fooleries in witchcraft<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>? But what the <i>philosophers</i>
-could not do for him, the <i>law-givers</i>
-he resolves shall, and therefore brings in a long
-list of sages<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>, all of them, as he thinks, concurring
-to establish this point. But how?
-Why, in his <i>negative</i> way of witnessing, <i>in
-their making no pretence to miracles</i>—that is,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-as every body sees, in their making no pretence
-to what they <i>durst not</i> counterfeit, or <i>did not</i>
-want; and when it is certain they <i>did pretend</i>
-to them in the only safe way of a secret intercourse
-and communication<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>. But the cause
-is growing still more desperate. For, are the
-Christian Apologists to be charged with this
-<i>evil principle</i><a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>? and that only for maintaining,
-in their occasional disputes with the heathens;
-what the ablest Divines have ever done, and
-still continue to maintain, the insufficiency of
-miracles <i>alone</i>, and if taken <i>by themselves</i>, to
-establish the divinity of any revelation? an
-opinion founded, as it should seem, on the express
-testimony of Jesus Christ<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>; or, if <i>false</i>,
-which has not been made appear, excusable
-enough in their situation, when <i>real</i> miracles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-were owned to be in the power of evil spirits,
-or when at least the general prevalency of this
-persuasion amongst their heathen adversaries
-might render it expedient for the Christian
-writers to argue on the concession of it. But,
-ill as this treatment is, the venerable Apologists
-have no cause of complaint. They share but
-the same fate, as <small>ONE</small> much their better. For,
-the <i>dignity</i> of the writer’s witnesses, whatever
-becomes of their <i>evidence, is still increasing</i><a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>;
-and having made free with the <i>Fathers</i> of the
-Church (for I say nothing of his <i>Jews</i>, not only
-because he confesses them nothing to his purpose<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>,
-but because, if their evidence has any
-weight at all, it <i>determines</i> the contrary way<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a>),
-having, as I said, made free with the <i>Fathers</i> of
-the Church, he next claims the sanction of an
-<i>Apostle</i>. Has then the Inquirer one <i>sure</i> and
-<i>certain</i> retreat? And is his novelty at last, all
-spent and wearied as it is, to elude our hopes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-by finding refuge in the sacred writings<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>? So
-indeed he would persuade himself or his readers.
-And this, it must be owned, is <i>no novel practice</i>.
-It is ever the last expedient of a sinking cause,
-when forsaken of all human help, and fearing
-the just vengeance of indignant reason, to strive
-to support itself by laying hold on the altar.
-But the Scriptures are no <i>sanctuary</i> for falshoods.
-We shall therefore esteem it no irreverence
-to approach the holy place, and, as we
-are instructed in a like case, to take the <i>fugitive</i>
-from it. The case appears to have been this:
-In the Apostle’s design of breaking an unchristian
-faction in the Church of Corinth,
-which had arose, it seems, from a vain ostentation
-of human science, his business was to
-discredit their misapplied learning with the
-people, and to check the arrogance of these
-<i>perverse disputers</i> themselves. To this end, he
-sets himself to shew that it was not on account
-of any advantage of skill in human learning or
-eloquence that God was pleased to make choice
-of the preachers of the Gospel; but that, on
-the other hand, he rather chose the <i>foolish</i>, i. e.
-the illiterate and uneducated, the better to expose
-the weakness of human wisdom, and to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-display, with greater force, the power and excellency
-of the <i>Cross of Christ</i><a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a>. And this,
-he proceeds to observe, is but agreeable to the
-general œconomy of God’s providence, which
-doth not conform itself to our views of fitness
-or expediency; but most commonly by the
-choice of such instruments and means as to us
-seem <i>unfit</i> or <i>inexpedient</i>, <i>destroys the wisdom
-of the wise, and brings to nothing the understanding
-of the prudent</i><a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>. A remarkable example
-of which method of dealing with mankind,
-continues the Apostle<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a>, we have in the
-dispensation of the Gospel, <i>introduced</i> in such
-a manner, and <i>established</i> by such means, as
-both to <i>Jew</i> and <i>Gentile</i> appear absurd and
-unaccountable. <i>For the Jews ask after a sign</i>,
-i. e. look for an outward ostentatious display
-of worldly power and pre-eminence going along
-with, and attending on the Messiah; and,
-under the influence of such prepossession,
-make that a <i>sign</i> or test of his coming, and
-even refuse to acknowledge his Divine mission
-without it<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a>. Whilst the Greeks, on the contrary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-seduced by the charms of a studied eloquence,
-or inslaved to the tenets of a conceited
-philosophy, require the Gospel to be preached
-in agreement to their notions and prejudices;
-and reject a Redeemer, whose method of salvation
-is not conformable to the conclusions of
-their schools, and whose doctrine is unadorned
-by the graces of their learning. Whereas, in
-fact, proceeds the Apostle, our commission is
-to publish, in all plainness, a religion to the
-world, fundamentally opposite to the prejudices
-of both. For its main doctrine, and on which
-hangs all the rest, is that of a <i>crucified Saviour</i>;
-which therefore, as being offensive to the fond
-hopes and expectations of the Jew, and not
-suited to his ideas of the <i>Divine power</i> and
-greatness, is to him a <i>stumbling-block</i>: And
-being a method of salvation neither agreeing
-to their conceptions of the Divine <i>wisdom</i>, nor
-set off with the colours of heathen wit, is to
-the Greeks <i>foolishness</i>. Though yet it is to
-both these <i>Jews and Greeks</i>, when rightly instructed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-in the ways of God’s Providence, <i>both
-the power of God and the wisdom of God</i><a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-Thus we see, at length, what the writer’s
-sacred authority is come to; which, having no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-foundation but in the groundless comment
-a mistaken passage is thus easily overturned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-and confuted. For from hence it appears, that
-the Apostle, far from attesting his whimsy of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-<i>the low opinion of miracles amongst the heathens</i>,
-does not so much as of Miracles
-at all: or, if he must be made an evidence in
-the cause, gives judgment against him; as
-plainly enough expressing his opinion, that it
-was not a <i>contempt of miracles</i>, but the <i>conceit
-of wisdom</i>, which made the great difficulty
-to converting the Pagan world.</p>
-
-<p>And now having dispersed his <i>cloud of witnesses</i>
-(which, unlike the <i>sacred</i> one it would
-seem to resemble, instead of illustrating and
-reflecting a fuller light on the <i>fact</i> it surrounds,
-serves only to obscure and conceal it)
-having shewn, I say, if not the falshood of his
-<i>fact</i>, at least the insufficiency of his <i>evidence</i> to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-support it, I might fairly dismiss the remainder
-of his book without any confutation; the following
-chapters, as he tells us, being intended
-to account for this fact, which he presumes to
-have fully established. But, as he appears unwilling
-to rest the whole of his cause on the
-merit of so slight an evidence, and has therefore
-engaged for a further confirmation of it in
-the following pages<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a>, it will be proper to
-collect in a few words, what additional evidence
-may arise from that quarter: And in
-doing this, I shall think it sufficient to examine,
-not his premises, but conclusion; and
-so, leaving him in full possession of his <i>facts</i>,
-to argue with him, in agreement to the design
-of these slight sheets, on the weight and force
-of his deductions. And here,</p>
-
-<p>1. Allowing him to have proved <i>the vanity
-of the heathen pretensions to miracles</i>, c. iv.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-v. vi. in the fullest sense he can wish; and
-that no <i>real wonder</i> was ever wrought, or
-<i>oracle</i> delivered, by any of the numerous pretenders
-to either, what will the author say is
-the proper inference from it?—That therefore
-the heathens <i>could</i> not but have a low opinion
-of miracles? That, indeed, would be to his
-purpose; but nothing can be less supported.
-For were not such miracles and oracles at
-least generally believed? Or, if several impostures
-were detected, does the author imagine
-that such detection would utterly sink the
-credit of all future miracles<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a>? A writer, so
-skilled in the workings of superstition, and
-who appears to have taken much pains to pry
-into the dark corners of humanity, ought to
-know, that the passion for wonder is a foible
-too <i>intimately</i> connected with our nature to be
-thus easily driven out from it. And the history
-of mankind gives the strongest confirmation
-of this, in relating, as it does, notwithstanding
-the presumed effect of such discoveries,
-the very ready reception, which Miracles
-have ever met with. The truth is, the Inquirer
-might as well have set himself to prove <i>the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-vanity of the Popish pretension to miracles</i>,
-and then have inferred, from the frequent detection
-of impostures amongst them, that
-therefore the Papists cannot but have <i>a very
-low opinion of miracles</i>. This, I say, had
-been as logically inferred; and yet, I believe
-the first traveller from Rome, or next account
-he should look into of Italy, or Spain, would
-infallibly spoil the argument, and confute his
-conclusion. And, to do the author justice,
-he seems not unconscious of this, when, after
-all the learned pains he had taken to establish
-this point, he allows, <i>that though his argument
-had shewn, what little reason the heathens had
-to think, that miracles had ever been wrought
-amongst them at all, yet it does not of consequence
-follow, that they would certainly make
-use of the light, that was held out to them</i>; but
-observes, <i>that whether they did or not, their
-esteem of miracles will be but little increased;
-for if ever they were alarmed by an appearance,
-which they could not tell how to account for, or
-over-borne by the weight of such testimony, as
-they could not tell how to invalidate, the principle
-of magic was one general recourse</i>.</p>
-
-<p>2. His strong-hold, then, we see, at last, is
-Magic. We shall follow him therefore one
-step further, and try if we cannot dislodge him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-from it. The fact conceded to him is, <i>that
-the persuasion was pretty general in the heathen
-world, that by means of magic, that is,
-of certain superstitious rites, and sacrifices, and
-by certain words and invocations of dæmons,
-many things could be done exceeding the power
-of man; and that accordingly many seeming
-miracles, wrought amongst them, were imputed
-to this power of magic</i>. But then to infer
-from hence, as the Inquirer would have us,
-that therefore the heathens under the persuasion
-of these principles, must necessarily
-entertain a very low opinion of <i>all</i> miracles,
-is sure concluding too fast. For, though I
-could admit this to be a tolerable reason for the
-rejection of <i>some Pagan</i> miracles, it does not,
-we see, at all affect the <i>Christian</i>; which <i>only</i>
-are, or ought to be, the concern of his book.
-So that the argument, fairly stated, confutes
-itself. For it stands thus: The heathens conceived
-many miraculous appearances, produced
-for some <i>trifling</i> or <i>noxious</i> purpose, to be in
-the power of certain persons, acting under the
-power of <i>bad dæmons</i><a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>, and by the means of
-certain <i>magical, and superstitious rites</i>.—<span class="smcap">Therefore</span>
-they of necessity entertained a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-low opinion of <i>all</i> miracles, though wrought by
-pawns, claiming their power and pretensions
-from <i>God</i> himself, for purposes the most <i>momentous</i>
-and <i>benevolent</i>, and without the interposition
-of <i>any</i> sacrificial or superstitious rites<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>.
-But this is not all: We learn from the history
-of the propagation of Christianity, that in certain
-places (and who can doubt in all where
-the pretended powers of magic were opposed
-to the genuine workings of the Spirit of God?)
-such methods were used by Christ and his
-Apostles, as were sufficient to manifest the
-difference of their miracles from those of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-magicians, and to assert the divinity of their
-mission, in the very judgment of the magicians
-themselves<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a>. And this, as it seems,
-always with such illustrious evidence, as to
-render it inexcusable in those, who had the
-opportunity of seeing and examining the difference,
-to remain unsatisfied of it. For I
-cannot but think it worthy the Inquirer’s regard,
-though no <i>novelty</i>, that the Heathen charge of
-<i>magic</i>, was but in other words the Jewish
-accusation of <i>Beelzebub</i>; either of them the
-genuine result of pure unallayed malice, and,
-concerning which, our Saviour’s determination
-is well known. And therefore when the
-learned writer contends, that the Heathens
-had a low opinion of miracles in general, on
-account of the supposed power and efficacy of
-charms, and magical incantations, he might
-with equal reason here have taken upon him
-to shew, that the Jews also had it low opinion
-of miracles in general on account of the supposed
-power of their diviners, and sorcerers,
-of which we likewise bear much amongst
-them, and from their ascribing, as we know
-they did, many miraculous effects and operations
-to them: an opinion, which, I presume,
-the learned writer will not find it to his purpose
-to maintain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
-<p>3. As to the author’s argument from the
-<i>multiplication of the Heathen Gods</i> (which is
-the only remaining part of his book I think
-myself concerned in<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a>) if he means to conclude<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-from it, that in consequence of the multitude
-of pretended miracles, flowing from such belief,
-miracles themselves must of necessity
-<i>lose their force, and sink in their esteem</i><a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a>, it is
-very frivolous, and admits an easy answer.
-For, besides its inherent weakness of bad logic,
-in concluding from a cause of possible efficiency
-to a <i>certain</i> effect, it has the misfortune,
-in common with his other reasonings on this
-subject, to be confuted by plain matter of fact.
-And, for his satisfaction in this point, I refer
-him once more to the case of the Romanists;
-who, notwithstanding the multiplicity of their
-saints, all of them dealers in miracles, and
-swarming in such numbers as to equal, if not
-exceed, the rabble of Pagan divinities, do not
-yet appear to have contracted from thence and
-disrelish, or disesteem for miracles. The
-truth is, the whole additional evidence arising
-from the main of his book in confirmation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-his pretended fact, <i>that the Heathens entertained
-a low opinion of miracles</i>, is so very
-inconsiderable, that, as we now see, it hardly
-amounts to a bare probability. For, after all,
-the reader will perhaps incline to think, contrary
-to what the learned writer directs him,
-that such prevalency of magic, and multiplicity
-of gods, is no bad proof of the esteem
-and credit, that miracles were in amongst
-them. At least, ’tis no unfair presumption,
-that a people could not be so averse to miracles,
-as the author pretends, nor generally be possessed
-by a thorough contempt of them, when,
-notwithstanding the frequent detection of <i>false</i>
-miracles, and more than one degrading solution
-at hand for the <i>true</i>, they should yet be
-able to maintain their ground, and take such
-footing in the popular belief, as to be continually
-affording fresh occasion to imposture,
-and fresh encouragement to the dealers in this
-traffic to practise on the wonder and credulity
-of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>2. And whoever sets out with this surmise,
-(which is apparently not ill-founded) will find
-it greatly strengthened in observing, that of all
-the reproaches cast upon the Heathen world,
-and of all the prejudices objected to them by
-the first propagators of Christianity, this of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-contempt of miracles was not so much as once
-mentioned, there not being the least hint, or
-remotest intimation in the sacred writings of
-their labouring under any peculiar prepossession
-of this kind. A circumstance perfectly
-unaccountable, if what the Inquirer contends
-for be true, since such prepossession could not
-but greatly obstruct the Apostolic labours, and
-make it necessary for them to bend their first
-care and application that way.</p>
-
-<p>3. And it raises the wonder still higher to
-observe, that whilst the Heathens escape uncensured
-in this respect, the Jews are severely
-rebuked for their incredulity and disregard
-miracles<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a>; where too, by the very cast and
-turn of the reproof, the Heathens are to be
-understood as less chargeable on this head, than
-the Jews.</p>
-
-<p>4. But, what has still the worst aspect on
-the writer’s scheme, is, that whilst the
-Apostles are quite silent as to this charge upon
-the Gentile, nor appear once to rank it in the
-list of such impediments, as retarded the conversion
-of the Pagan world, they are at the
-same time very express in declaring to us,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-what the chief of those <i>impediments</i> were.
-They in part have been already suggested<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a>,
-and were, if St. Paul may be credited, in
-reality, these: 1. <i>A conceit of superior wisdom</i>
-amongst the men of letters and education<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a>.
-And, 2. <i>The corruptions and gross idolatries</i>
-of the people at <i>large</i><a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>5. But what! it will after all be asked, Is
-there then no truth in what the leaned writer
-has advanced concerning the Heathen contempt
-of miracles; and in particular, is his
-long detail of principles and circumstances,
-concurring, as it should seem, to produce
-such contempt, utterly without all force or
-meaning?</p>
-
-<p>This has no where been said; and the contrary
-is what I am now ready to affirm. For,
-to do the Inquirer justice, it was upon the
-basis of a good, old truth, that this wondrous
-novelty was erected. A fine writer<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> will tell
-us what it was. “We may observe,” (says
-he, in accounting for the silence of Pagan
-writers in respect of our Saviour’s history)
-“that the ordinary practice of <small>MAGIC</small> in those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-times, with the many pretended <small>PRODIGIES</small>,
-<small>DIVINATIONS</small>, <small>APPARITIONS</small>, and <small>LOCAL MIRACLES</small>
-amongst the Heathens, made them
-less attentive to such news from Judæa, till
-they had time to consider the NATURE, the
-OCCASION, and the END of our Saviour’s
-Miracles, and were awakened by many surprizing
-events to allow them any consideration
-at all.” We see here the ground-work
-of our author’s performance, and have determined
-to our hands with great accuracy, how
-far his general position is true, and to what
-extent the particular circumstances and situation
-of the Heathens would in <i>reality</i> affect
-their opinion of miracles. Had the learned
-writer confined himself within these limits, he
-would, I conceive, have had reason and history
-on his side, and, whatever alarm he may
-be in <i>from the froward and contentious spirit
-of party in religion</i>, no <i>enemies</i> to oppose him.
-But then this, it must be owned, had been
-saying nothing <i>new</i>: The world had lost the
-benefit of a discovery, and the author, what
-of all things he would most regret, the glory
-of INVENTION.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="THE_OPINION_OF_AN_EMINENT_LAWYER">
-<small>THE</small><br />
-OPINION<br />
-<small>OF AN</small><br />
-<span class="medium">EMINENT LAWYER, &amp;c.</span><br />
-<br />
-<small>FIRST PRINTED IN 1751.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">
-<small>THE</small><br />
-OPINION<br />
-<small>OF AN</small><br />
-<span class="large">EMINENT LAWYER,</span><br />
-<small>CONCERNING</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE RIGHT OF APPEAL</span><br />
-<small>FROM THE VICE-CHANCELLOR OF CAMBRIDGE, TO THE SENATE;</small><br />
-<span class="medium">Supported by a short historical Account of
-the <span class="smcap">Jurisdiction</span> of the <span class="smcap">University</span>.<br />
-In Answer to a late Pamphlet, intitled,<br />
-“<i>An Inquiry into the Right of Appeal from
-the Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor of the
-University of Cambridge</i>,” &amp;c.</span></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>Is ne erret, moneo, et desinat lacessere.</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>Habeo alia multa, nunc quæ condonabitur;</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>Quæ proferentur post, si perget lædere.</i><br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<h3>BY A FELLOW OF A COLLEGE.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></h3>
-
-<h2>THE OPINION OF AN EMINENT LAWYER<a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a>, &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">The</span> dispute <i>concerning Appeals</i>, which at
-present engages the attention of the University
-of <i>Cambridge</i>, is apparently of such importance
-to the peace and welfare of that great body;
-that it could not but be expected from any
-one, who proposed to deliver his thoughts
-upon it to the world, that he should at least
-have taken care to inform himself perfectly of
-the merits of the question, before he presumed,
-in so public a manner, to concern
-himself in it.</p>
-
-<p>It must, therefore, surprize the reader of a
-late <i>Inquiry into the Right of Appeal, &amp;c.</i> to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-find, that the writer of it, whoever he be (for
-as he chuses to conceal name, I shall not
-take the liberty to conjecture of it) should adventure
-to treat a matter of this consequence,
-without any distinct knowledge of the state of
-the case itself, or indeed without appearing to
-possess one single qualification, which is required
-to do justice to it. For the question,
-discussed, is of such a nature, that it cannot
-be determined, nor indeed tolerably treated by
-any one, who hath not a pretty exact knowledge
-of the <i>History</i>, <i>Customs</i>, and <i>Statutes</i>, of the
-University; and who is not, besides, at least
-competently skilled in the <i>Civil and Ecclesiastical
-Laws</i>. And yet this writer, as though
-nothing else was required of him, besides a
-confident face, and willing mind, boldly undertakes
-to decide upon it, under a perfect
-incapacity in all these respects. Instead of an
-accurate acquaintance with the Practice and
-Usages of the University, it appears he had
-no further knowledge of them, than what a
-few hasty and ill-considered extracts from the
-Register had supplied him with. So far is he
-from being conversant in the Statutes of the
-University, that he blunders in every attempt
-to explain the very easiest of them. And, as
-to his <i>Law</i>, he has only skimmed the surface
-of it for a few frothy terms, without giving the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-least proof of his being possessed, in any degree,
-of the sense and substance of it. This utter
-inability to discuss a point, he had voluntarily
-undertaken, must be thought the more extraordinary
-in a person, who, throughout the
-whole, assumes an air of authority; and
-though he professes modestly in his title page
-to <i>enquire</i>, yet, in effect, <i>prescribes and dictates</i>
-from one end of his <i>pamphlet</i> to the other.
-The tone of this disputer, whatever becomes
-of his reasoning, is all along decisive; and he
-<i>does and must insist</i>, as if he thought his very
-word of force enough to bear down all the
-reason and argument, that could be opposed
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed the superior airs he gives himself,
-on all occasions, are not without their use.
-For persons unacquainted, as the generality of
-his readers must needs be, with the question
-itself, are readily enough inclined to believe,
-that a person so <i>assured</i>, cannot be so entirely
-<i>ignorant</i> of the merits of it, as in fact he is.
-And they who know better, cannot but apprehend
-somewhat from the assumed authority
-of a writer, who talks so big; however
-his total insufficiency might, in other respects,
-provoke their contempt. For my own part,
-I could not help considering him as a person<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-of eminent dignity in the University; whose
-rank in it might give him a right to dictate to
-the school-boys of the place; for so he gives
-us to understand, he conceives of <i>the Members
-of the University Senate</i><a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>. In pursuing my
-conjectures further about him, I was sometimes
-inclined to think, from the very reverend
-regard he every where professeth for the Heads
-of colleges, that he must, himself, be one of
-that illustrious body and was led to excuse
-the superiority of his manner from reflecting,
-that a habit of governing absolutely in his own
-college (for so he thinks Heads of colleges have
-a right to govern<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a>) had insensibly inspired
-that despotic style and language, which were
-so disgustful, and had looked so ungracefully,
-in any other. But then, again, my profound
-respect and esteem of that venerable order, and
-my actual knowledge of the great talents, with
-which these reverend personages so worthily
-preside in their high places, would not suffer
-me to imagine, that any of their number could
-be <i>so</i> unqualified to treat a matter of a merely
-academical nature, as this writer had shewn
-himself to be; and especially, as it immediately
-concerned their own authority, which
-they so assiduously study, and so perfectly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-understand. On the whole, I was forced to
-dismiss this conjecture, as having no reasonable
-foundation to rest upon, and, in perfect
-civility and good manners towards a set of
-men, for whom I have so sincere an honour,
-could only conclude him, at last, to be some
-weak and shallow pedant; unknown and uncountenanced
-by <i>them</i>; whose vanity had
-done him an ill turn; and thrust him unadvisedly
-on a weighty office, which he had no
-warrant, as he had no abilities, to discharge.</p>
-
-<p>Under this opinion, both of the writer and
-his performance, which, as the reader sees, I
-took not up upon slight grounds, it was not
-likely I should ever think of giving myself the
-least trouble about either; much less that I
-should believe it worth the while to undertake
-in form, the examination of a foolish pamphlet,
-which indeed, I had hardly patience enough
-to peruse. The truth is, it had lain for ever
-unnoticed by me among the rubbish, which
-of late hath so oppressed the publick, on the
-subject of our academical disputes; or, at
-least, had been left for some future <span class="smcap">Academic</span>
-to discourse of, at his leisure; had it not been
-for the <i>Opinions</i> of two truly learned and respectable
-Lawyers; which the <i>Inquirer</i> had
-thought fit to intersperse, as a little needful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-seasoning, in his insipid performance; and
-which, indeed, give it all the real weight and
-authority, it can possibly carry with it to men
-of sense.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Inquirer</i>, as supposing these gentlemen
-to afford some countenance to the good cause,
-he is maintaining, thinks fit, on the mention
-of their names, to drop his crest a little; and,
-in a lower tone of voice than usual, affects to
-treat them even with some appearance of respect.
-Yet this he does in so aukward a
-manner, as shews it was not usual or familiar
-to him, to descend to such submissions; for,
-as the height of that civility, which he was
-willing to express towards them, he chuses
-to distinguish them only by the title of the
-<i>Gentlemen of the</i> <span class="smcap">Long Robe</span>. What impression
-the idea of a sweeping train may possibly
-make on the phantasy of this writer, I know
-not; but I, who am more concerned about
-the <i>heads</i> than the <i>tails</i> of these learned gentlemen,
-should have thought it an apter compliment
-to have turned our attention the other
-way. Unless, perhaps, he was secretly conscious,
-that by a little unfair dealing in the
-proposal of the <i>Queries</i>, in relation to which
-their opinions were asked, their Answers themselves
-did no real honour to the more essential<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-part of a great lawyer, and so far willing to
-pin the credit of them intirely on their <i>gowns</i>.
-In plain truth this was the very case, as will
-appear from the <i>Queries</i> themselves, and the
-<i>Answers</i>; together with a few observations,
-which I shall beg leave to subjoin to them.</p>
-
-<p>“After stating the <i>42d</i> and <i>48th</i> of Queen
-<i>Elizabeth’s</i> Statues, some circumstances of
-Mr. <i>A—’s</i> behaviour, and that an appeal
-of the same nature with his was not quite
-unprecedented, the two following Queries
-were put, [<i>Inq. p. 28.</i>]</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“Qu. I. Whether, in this case, the Vice-Chancellor
-and his assessors have not
-acted solely under the <i>42d</i> Statute; <i>de
-Cancellarii Officio</i>; and whether any appeal
-can lie against the suspension of <i>A.</i>
-by virtue of that Statute? or whether this
-case must be deemed one of the <i>causæ
-forenses</i>, and of consequence subject to
-an appeal by virtue of the <i>48th</i> Statute, <i>de
-Causis Forensibus</i>?</p>
-
-<p>“Qu. II. Whether, if in the case above stated,
-the said <i>A—</i> hath a right to appeal from
-his suspension; the same right of appeal
-will not follow to every delinquent scholar,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-who shall be punished a trifling mulct or
-piece of exercise by the Vice-Chancellor?”</p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><i>After stating</i>, says he, <i>the 42d</i> and <i>48th
-Statutes</i>, &amp;c. Whence it appears, that no
-other evidence was laid before the Lawyers,
-with regard to the right of appeals, than certain
-extracts from Q. <i>Elizabeth’s</i> Statutes:
-Which was not the most certain method of
-obtaining an accurate decision. For, though
-the Queen’s Statutes alone, as we apprehend,
-afford <i>sufficient</i> evidence of our right, yet they
-are by no means, as will presently be seen,
-the <i>whole</i> evidence.</p>
-
-<p>But, waving this consideration, let us come
-directly to the <i>Queries</i> themselves. The <i>first</i>
-is a master-piece in its kind, and may be of
-use to instruct future querists, how to propose
-their doubts in the most convenient manner.</p>
-
-<p>For instead of asking the Lawyers, whether
-the powers, given in the <i>42d</i> Statute, are subject
-to appeal, the question is put to them,
-whether in suspending Mr. <i>A—</i> they had
-acted under that Statute? Again; instead of
-inquiring whether the <i>jurisdiction</i> given in the
-<i>two Statutes</i> be the same or different, the
-Query is (on supposition of a difference) to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-which class of tryals Mr. <i>A—’s</i> case belonged?
-In short, the Lawyers were made to believe,
-that this was the main point in dispute, whether
-the case before them was of a <i>criminal</i>
-or (as the <i>Inquirer</i> expresses it) of a <i>forensic</i>
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been hard indeed if a design
-so well laid, and so artfully conducted, had
-failed of success. Accordingly, we find both
-the Lawyers expressly declaring, that the case in
-question belonged to the 42d <i>Statute</i>, and from
-thence seeming to infer, that an appeal is not to
-be allowed.</p>
-
-<p>Answers to the Queries.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“To Q. I. I am of opinion, the Vice-chancellor’s
-authority in the case above stated
-is well founded by the 42d Statute, <i>de
-Cancellarii Officio</i>, and that the Vice-chancellor
-and his assessors acted under
-that Statute; and that this case does not
-fall under the 48th Statute. And I am of
-opinion that an appeal does not lie in the
-present case.</p>
-
-<p>“To Q. II. This in effect is answered by
-what I have said upon the first Question.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-And if an appeal might be allowed in the
-present case, it would be of most fatal
-consequence to all discipline in the University;
-since it would take away all distinction
-between the two Statutes; and
-every scholar, who should fall under any
-censure or punishment inflicted by the
-Vice-chancellor, might have his appeal;
-and the 42d Statute would be entirely of
-no effect.</p>
-
-<p class="author">“<i>Dec. the 12th, 1750. W. N—.</i>”</p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“To Q. I. Upon consideration of the two
-Statutes above recited, it seems to me that
-the first was calculated to give a jurisdiction
-and power to the Chancellor, or, in
-his absence, to the Vice-chancellor, to interpose
-in criminal matters, <i>i. e.</i> in matters
-relating to discipline: the latter gives a
-jurisdiction or cognizance in civil matters,
-<i>i. e.</i> matters of controversy concerning civil
-rights: and therefore the first gives power,
-<i>contumaces, &amp;c. suspensione graduum, carcere,
-aut alio leviori supplicio judicio suo
-castigare</i>: by the latter, power is given to
-determine <i>causas et lites</i>, <i>viz.</i> <i>causas forenses</i>,
-for that is the title of the Statute. As
-to the first, I think that the jurisdiction is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-final in the first instance: for his power is
-<i>judicio suo castigare</i>; and it must necessarily
-be so, for immediate imprisonment
-seems to be one of the punishments which
-he may inflict against which there can be
-no appeal, for it may be executed before
-there can be any appeal. As to the other,
-<i>viz.</i> the civil jurisdiction, there the statute
-requires speedy determinations; but gives
-an appeal from his sentences in <i>foro</i>, and
-prescribes the manner of appealing. Upon
-these principles, I think that no appeal can
-lie, the suspension of <i>A—</i> being grounded,
-I think, on the Statute <i>de Cancellarii Officio</i>;
-and that this is not <i>causa forensis</i>
-within the latter Statute.</p>
-
-<p>“To Q. II. If all offences against the Statutes
-are punishable by this Statute, the
-punishments for the <i>minora</i>, as well as
-the <i>majora delicta</i>, would be appealable;
-which I think would be absurd.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><i>Linc. Inn, Dec. the 13th, 1750. R. W—.</i>”</p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>It is seen that both these opinions rest on
-one common foundation, <i>viz.</i> that the 42d <i>Statute</i>
-gives authority in none but <i>criminal</i>, the
-48th in none but <i>civil</i> causes. Now if this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-support shall appear to be wholly imaginary,
-all that is built upon it must fall to the ground.
-Let us proceed then to examine the Statutes
-themselves; or rather simply to represent what
-is contained in them. We shall have no occasion
-for nice distinctions, or remote inferences;
-the plain literal sense of the passages
-to be cited will overthrow at once the principle
-we are opposing; will afford such an evidence
-as cannot be resisted, until a method of interpreting
-shall be found out, wholly independent
-on the received rules of Criticism and Grammar.</p>
-
-<p>The 42d Statute is entitled <i>De Cancellarii
-Officio</i>, and contains an enumeration of the
-various powers conferred on him by the University.
-It gives him a right <i>to hear and decide
-controversies</i>; <i>to call congregations</i>; <i>to give
-and refuse degrees</i>; <i>to punish the transgressors
-of the Statutes</i>; <i>to see that the University officers
-do their duty</i>; <i>to inflict censures on some
-particular sorts of offenders therein named, in
-some cases with, in others without, the consent
-of the Heads</i>; <i>to give or refuse leave to Members of
-the Senate to go out of a Congregation
-before it is ended, and to impose a mulct on those
-who depart without leave</i>; <i>to require the presence
-of regents and non-regents at Congregations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-and</i> Conciones ad clerum, <i>and to punish
-the absent</i>; and, lastly, <i>to make new Statutes,
-with the consent of the University</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Now I think I may safely refer it to any
-reader, whether the single design of this Statute
-was to convey authority in <i>criminal causes</i>?
-or, whether it be not manifestly an enumeration
-of the various branches of the Chancellor’s
-power, intended to give, at once, a general view
-of the whole?</p>
-
-<p>If any one shall think that the administration
-of <i>civil</i> justice is not here included, I must
-desire him to read again the very <i>first</i> clause.
-<i>Cancellarius potestatem habebit ad</i> <small>OMNES</small>—<i>controversias—tum
-audiendas tum dirimendas</i>.
-Nothing sure but the most outrageous zeal for
-a desperate cause can make any one affirm that
-the word <i>controversias</i> is necessarily confined
-to the <i>trials of offenders</i>. But, if not, then
-the Statute gives jurisdiction of both sorts, in
-civil as well as criminal causes.</p>
-
-<p>With as little foundation has it been asserted
-that the jurisdiction given in the 48th Statute
-relates only to <i>civil causes</i>. The single ground
-of this assertion is the title of the Statute, <i>viz.
-De Causis Forensibus</i>. It happens that a certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-set of men, by endeavouring for a long
-time to deceive others, have in the end deceived
-themselves. For I would, in charity, suppose
-them to be sincere, when they translate <i>causæ
-forenses</i>, <i>causes between party and party</i>. It
-is true, no such use of the words can be found
-in ancient authors, or, in what might have been
-more convincing to them, modern Dictionaries.
-But what then? Admitting that a school-boy
-would have construed these words <i>trials in
-court</i>, or <i>public trials</i>, yet this sure cannot be
-alledged as a precedent to grave and wise men:
-much less can it be expected they should reverence
-quotations drawn from heathen writers,
-who had no idea at all of the ways of supporting
-discipline in an University.</p>
-
-<p>But if the <i>title</i> of the 48th <i>Statute</i> will not
-confine the jurisdiction it gives, what shall we
-say to the Statute itself? It begins with these
-plain words, never afterwards restrained or limited,
-<small>OMNES</small> <i>causæ et lites, quæ ad Universitatis
-notionem pertinent, tam Procancellarii
-quam Commissarii judicio subjiciantur</i>. If this
-clause be not general, I should be glad to know
-whether a general clause be possible? whether
-any words can be invented of sufficient extent
-to include trials of every sort? But it is not
-indeed to be thought strange that the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-profound critics, who would confine <i>omnes controversiæ</i>
-to <i>criminal</i> causes, should confine
-<i>omnes causæ et lites</i> to <i>civil</i> causes only.</p>
-
-<p>After all, I have a good mind to give up this
-point, for the sake only of trying the experiment,
-what advantage can be made of it: Let
-it, then, be supposed that the jurisdiction given
-in the 48th <i>Statute</i>, and the appeals allowed in
-it, belong only to <i>civil</i> causes; and let it be
-further supposed that the 42d Statute relates
-merely to <i>criminal</i> causes. What will follow?
-That the Queen’s <i>Statutes</i> allow no appeals,
-for <i>that the omission in this Statute amounts
-to a prohibition</i>? Nothing can be wider
-from the truth than this conclusion. For, 1st,
-the powers given to the Chancellor may not be
-exercised in an arbitrary manner, but in strict
-conformity to the customs and privileges of the
-University: If this restriction were not always
-to be understood, the Chancellor might confer
-<i>degrees</i> by his <i>sole</i> power; for no mention is
-made in the Statute of the consent of the University.
-The powers, then, here given to the
-Chancellor are to be <i>limited</i> by the known
-rights of the <i>Senate</i>; and among these rights
-no possible reason can be given why that of
-<i>appeals</i> should not be included: a right (as
-will presently appear) of very great antiquity,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-perhaps not less ancient than the University
-itself. 2dly. The very same clause which impowers
-the Chancellor to judge <i>omnes controversias
-Scholasticorum</i>, that is (as we are now
-to render the words) <i>all offences committed by
-Scholars</i>, requires him to judge <i>secundum jus
-civile et eorum privilegia et consuetudines</i>; and
-consequently to judge not finally, but under
-an obligation of having his sentence <i>re-examined</i>
-on an appeal made to the University.</p>
-
-<p>There is another argument in Mr. <i>W—’s</i>
-opinion, which seems indeed at first sight, to
-be more specious. He observes that the Chancellor
-is to punish <i>contumacy</i> and some other
-<i>offences judicio suo</i>, and seems to think these
-words might be intended to prevent <i>appeals</i>.
-But the learned person must excuse my differing
-from him also upon this head. The Queen’s
-Statute <i>De Off. Cancell.</i> is copied, with some
-alterations, from a Statute upon the same subject
-in the <i>first</i> collection, she gave the University;
-as that was <i>verbatim</i> from one of King
-<i>Edward’s</i>. In this Statute the Chancellor was
-empowered to punish <i>judicio suo et assensu
-majoris partis præfectorum collegiorum</i>; that
-is, he was appointed <i>judge</i>, they <i>assessors</i>. But
-the latter Statute of Queen <i>Elizabeth distinguished</i>
-these punishments into two sorts, regard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-being had to the importance of the punishments
-themselves, and to the rank and condition
-of the offender. In causes of less moment,
-and towards offenders of inferior rank,
-the Chancellor was to proceed <i>judicio suo</i>; in
-others, <i>non sine consensu præfectorum collegiorum</i>.
-These <i>two</i> clauses being so manifestly
-<i>opposed</i>, we cannot surely mistake, if we interpret
-the former <i>by his sole judgment</i>, or <i>by
-his single authority</i>; and suppose that nothing
-further was intended than to enable him to
-pass sentence, <i>without</i><a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> the concurrence of the
-Heads; a circumstance which will never shew
-that his decision ought to be <i>final</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
-<p>There is one point more in which I cannot
-help dissenting from the gentleman last named.
-He seems to think there can be no appeal from
-a sentence of imprisonment; because such
-sentence is to be executed <i>immediately</i>. But
-I need not observe to so good a judge, that
-an appeal <i>apud acta</i> may suspend this execution;
-and he has not favoured us with his
-reasons why this manner of appealing may not
-be allowed (as it always has been allowed) in
-the University.</p>
-
-<p>As to the <i>second Query</i>, it is a doubt altogether
-superfluous; and seems to have been
-proposed for no other reason than to obtain
-opinions concerning the <i>expediency</i> of appeals;
-which is not surely a point of <i>law</i>. The learned
-gentleman, who has declared his sentiments on
-the question, must therefore pardon us if we
-do not receive them with the same deference,
-as if the subject had fallen within the proper
-limits of his profession.</p>
-
-<p>But I think it unnecessary to dwell any
-longer on these <i>Queries</i>, or the <i>Answers</i> to
-them; since it is clear that the learned persons
-were abused by a partial and unfair representation
-of the case; of which had they been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-fully informed, as they should have been, by
-laying before them a just view of the question
-in debate, and by furnishing them with the
-proper materials for decide upon it; there is
-no reason to doubt that persons, so eminently
-qualified to judge of all disputes of this nature,
-would have given much more satisfactory opinions
-about it, and such as the University
-might safely admit, as decisive in the present
-case. And I think myself authorized to say
-this the more confidently, as it luckily happens
-that the <i>proper</i> Queries concerning this very
-point were, some years ago, put more honestly
-by a very excellent person, at that time Vice-chancellor
-of the University; and therefore
-answered very <i>differently</i> by the greatest Lawyer<a id="FNanchor_100" href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
-of this or any age; from whose decision
-though there lies an appeal, yet his sentence
-never <i>was</i>, as indeed no good man had ever
-cause to wish it <i>should</i> be, reversed.</p>
-
-<p>These Queries, together with the Answer
-of this great person to them, I purpose laying
-before the Reader, as a full and perfect confutation
-of all that has been yet advanced
-against the <i>right of appeal to the University</i>;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-and carrying with it more authority than any
-thing which the most knowing academical advocate
-could possibly say for it. But, that the
-reader may come the better prepared to judge
-of the merits of his determination, and as some
-further support to it, for the satisfaction of such
-as are unacquainted with the state of the case
-itself, I have judged it not improper, in the first
-place, to draw together <i>a brief historical account
-of the jurisdiction of the University</i>; collected
-from authentic monuments, which are well
-known to such as are versed in academical
-matters; and which, if there shall be occasion,
-will be produced at large in a more proper
-place.</p>
-
-<p>The University of <i>Cambridge</i> was possessed
-of a jurisdiction over its own members, as
-<i>clerici</i>, many years before <i>any</i> was granted to
-it by charter from the Crown. This jurisdiction,
-being ecclesiastical, seems to have been originally
-derived from the Bishop of the diocese.
-The causes cognisable by the University were
-chiefly causes of correction; the rule of proceeding
-in the Court was the ecclesiastical law,
-and Statutes of their own making, consonant to
-that law. The censures inflicted upon offenders
-were either ecclesiastical, <i>viz.</i> <i>excommunication</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-<i>suspension</i>, &amp;c.<a id="FNanchor_101" href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> or such as were appointed by
-the Statues for particular crimes; and the
-names of <i>places</i>, <i>offices</i>, <i>pleaders</i>, the same as
-are used in Ecclesiastical Courts to this day.</p>
-
-<p>This jurisdiction was not usually exercised
-by the University in its <i>collective</i> capacity. But
-a particular officer was empowered to exercise
-it, under the name of <i>Chancellor</i>; who as
-<i>official</i><a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a>, acted by an authority derived to him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-from the University, was accountable to them
-for the use of it, and liable to have his acts
-annulled at their discretion; every person who
-thought himself aggrieved by the Chancellor
-being at liberty to apply to the Body for redress.</p>
-
-<p>When an <i>Appeal</i> was brought before the
-University, they usually authorized Delegates
-to hear and judge it, as was agreeable to the
-practice in other Ecclesiastical Courts.</p>
-
-<p>The jurisdiction here described was not originally
-independent; for no academical decision
-appears to have been <i>final</i>. An Appeal
-always lay from the judgement of the University
-by their Delegates to the Bishop of the diocese,
-till the University was exempted from his authority,
-and their jurisdiction made <i>final</i> by
-Royal Charters, confirmed by Act of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>In the reign of <i>Henry</i> III. attempts were
-made to carry Appeals <i>directly</i> from the Chancellor
-to the Bishop, and so to pass over
-the Appeal to the University, which ought to
-have been an intermediate step. But <i>Hugh de<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-Balsam</i>, Bishop of <i>Ely</i> (the founder of <i>Peter-House</i>),
-by a rescript, dated Dec. 1264, entirely
-frustrated all such attempts.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, the Appeals to the University had
-been from <i>causes of correction and censure</i>.
-The University was not as yet possessed of
-jurisdiction in civil causes. Scholars were first
-allowed to implead the burgesses and other
-laics of the town of <i>Cambridge</i>, in all kinds of
-personal actions, before the Chancellor of the
-University, <i>anno</i> 33 <i>Ed.</i> I. From that time,
-the University began to acquire a civil jurisdiction,
-which, by degrees, was inlarged and
-established by grants from the Crown in succeeding
-reigns. And now, in consequence of
-this jurisdictions, Appeals were extended from
-criminal to civil causes. Accordingly, in a
-rescript of <i>Simon de Montacute</i>, Bishop of <i>Ely</i>,
-which bears date <i>16 cal. April, anno 1341</i>,
-there is express mention of Appeals to the
-University in causes of <i>both</i> kinds. For the
-design of this <i>rescript</i> is to commission the
-University to determine <i>finally</i> in all <i>civil</i> causes,
-without a further Appeal to his Court; and to
-prevent frivolous and vexatious Appeals from
-the University to him in <i>criminal</i> causes, by
-laying the Appellant under the obligation of an
-oath.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span></p>
-
-<p>This addition of <i>civil</i> power did by no means
-abrogate or lessen the <i>spiritual</i>. We find, in
-the reign of <i>Hen.</i> VI. that all sorts of ecclesiastical
-authority were adjudged to belong to the
-University, by the Prior of <i>Barnwell</i>, the Pope’s
-delegate; and it was then made appear, that
-all these branches of power had both been
-claimed and exercised time out of mind. It is
-certain, the <i>probate of wills</i> hath at all times
-belonged, and still belongs, to the University.
-The power of <i>excommunication</i> was exercised
-as late as the reign of <i>Hen.</i> VIII. and the power
-of <i>absolution</i> is exercised at this day. This
-ceremony is constantly performed on the concluding
-day of each term. And here, to observe
-it by the way, gentle Reader, a goodly
-and reverend spectacle it is, to behold the spiritual
-Head of our University spreading his paternal
-hands, like another Pope, over his erring
-and misguided flock, who, in all humility, receive
-his ghostly absolution on their knees.</p>
-
-<p>It is true, the new objects of litigation, introduced
-by the royal charters, occasioned an
-alteration in the <i>Law</i> of the University. For
-the ecclesiastical laws did not suffice for the
-decision of controversies about civil rights, particularly
-contracts between scholars and townsmen,
-and breaches of the peace. From the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-time, therefore, that these new causes came
-before the Chancellor, to the reign of <i>Edward</i>
-VI. his Court was directed, as our Spiritual
-Courts are now, by a mixed kind of law,
-made up of canon and civil law<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a>. Yet this
-must not be understood without restriction.
-For the University, like other corporations, had
-all along a power of making <i>local Statutes</i>;
-and not unfrequently particular <i>usages</i> acquired
-the force of Statutes, from long continuance.</p>
-
-<p>But whatever changes were made, either by
-express Statute, or in consequence of a more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-extended jurisdiction, the practice of appealing
-from the Chancellor to the University still continued;
-only, as was observed, with this difference,
-that it now was allowed in civil, as before
-it had been in criminal causes.</p>
-
-<p>The right of appeal which then subsisted
-received a fresh confirmation from the Statutes
-made by the University itself. In these Statutes
-the right is not only referred to and presupposed,
-but directions are given in regard to the manner
-of exercising it<a id="FNanchor_104" href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a>; which directions, till cancelled
-by succeeding Statutes, established the
-right as effectually as if it had been originally
-introduced by Statute. The times when many
-of these Statutes were made cannot be fixed;
-but it is certain they were collected and transcribed
-into the Proctors’ books between the
-year 1490 and 1500.</p>
-
-<p>In the reign of <i>Edward</i> VI. a body of new
-Statutes was given in a Visitation under an ecclesiastical
-commission; which enjoined, among
-other things, that the jurisdiction of the
-University should be directed by the <i>Civil Law</i>;
-that is, as every one understands, a mixture of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-the Civil and Canon Law; or what <i>Oughten</i> calls
-<i>Jus Ecclesiastico-Civile</i>; the same which prevails
-in all Ecclesiastical Courts to this day.
-And, in the first year of Queen <i>Elizabeth</i>,
-Statutes were again given to the University in
-a Visitation under a like commission; which
-were almost an exact transcript of those before
-given in the reign of <i>Edward</i> VI. The right
-of appealing from the Chancellor to the University
-received no alteration from these Statutes.
-For there is no change in either of them
-by which such Appeals are forbidden or even
-restrained. Accordingly, the practice appears
-to have continued to the time when Queen
-<i>Elizabeth</i> gave her <i>second</i> body of Statutes
-(under the broad seal indeed, but not by Visitors
-under ecclesiastical commission), which
-was in the year 1570. What alterations have
-been made by these, or by the practice of later
-times, remains to be considered.</p>
-
-<p>It is plain from several passages in Queen
-<i>Elizabeth’s</i> new Statutes, that many of the
-ancient Statutes and customs of the University
-were designed to be continued; and in Stat.
-50 we have a direction given, by which we
-may understand what Statutes and customs
-were to be preserved, and what not. Those
-only she declares to be taken away, <i>quæ Scripturis<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-Sacris, institutis nostris, istis Statutis adversari
-videbuntur</i>; of which number the practice
-of appealing from the Chancellor to the
-University was not one.</p>
-
-<p>There is, besides, the less reason to imagine
-this practice was abolished, because, in Stat. 42,
-the Queen requires all causes to be heared and
-determined <i>secundum jus civile</i>; and in her
-Charter to the University, confirmed by act of
-Parliament, <i>secundum leges et consuetudines
-suas, ante tunc usitatas</i>, which, as appears,
-were agreeable to the <i>Civil Law</i>. This <i>law</i>
-allows Appeals in cases of correction and censure;
-and therefore it is <i>certain</i> that Appeals
-were allowed by Queen <i>Elizabeth</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, nothing but a clear and express prohibition
-could make us imagine, that the right
-of appealing, a right of particular importance,
-was designed to be either wholly abolished, or
-restrained only to civil causes. And such prohibition,
-had it been the Queen’s intention to
-forbid Appeals in any case, might the rather
-have been expected, as, in the 48th Stat.
-where several directions are given concerning
-Appeals, <i>one</i> ancient usage of the University<a id="FNanchor_105" href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-in relation to them is expressly forbidden: <i>nec
-secunda provocatio omnino admittatur</i>. Yet she
-gives not the least hint of restraining Appeals
-to any particular sorts of causes; which surely
-were an unaccountable omission in this place,
-had she actually intended to lay them under
-any such restriction. And, indeed, it is evident
-from a <i>MS.</i> of unquestioned authority,
-that neither the Body of the University, nor
-the Heads themselves (some of them supposed
-to have been concerned in compiling the Statutes),
-had the least imagination of such restraint.
-What I mean is, a <i>MS.</i> in <i>C. C. C.
-Library</i>, containing <i>some Complaints of several
-of the Body of the University, in the year 1572,
-against Queen</i> Elizabeth’s <i>second edition of Statutes,
-and the Answers of the Heads, &amp;c.</i> One
-of their complaints is <i>the frustrating</i> Appellations,
-by transferring the power of nominating
-Delegates from the <i>Proctors</i>, in whose hands
-it was before lodged, to the <i>Caput</i>; and by
-encreasing <i>the forfeit of Appeals</i>, from a very
-inconsiderable sum to 20<i>s.</i> with an addition of
-2<i>s.</i> to be paid to the Proctor; an expence
-which, as was then urged by the Body, would
-prevent <i>poor scholars injured from the benefit
-of appealing, having not so much money</i>. What,
-now, is the answer of the Heads to this complaint?
-Why, that, <i>for the stay of the quietness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-of the University</i>, it was necessary to lay
-Appeals under these restrictions. Not a syllable
-is said against the right of appeal itself in any
-case; though the complainants had expressly
-set forth the importance of having Appeals unincumbered
-by these limitations, for the <i>redress
-of wrongs</i> in <i>general</i>. Nay, the wrongs they
-apprehended are even specified; such as punishments
-<i>of a regent in the regent-house, for
-modestly asking a question; or of a disputer,
-for modestly disputing</i>; which, if we are to call
-them <i>causes</i> at all, are surely <i>causes of correction</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Nay, so far are these Statutes from <i>prohibiting</i>
-Appeals, that they have actually given
-the strongest sanction to this practice, by admitting
-the right in very general terms, and
-prescribing rules for the exercise of it. <i>Stat.</i> 48.</p>
-
-<p>The subsequent practice till of late years
-cannot now be known, either from the neglect
-or corruption of the University <i>Registers</i>, who
-have not taken care to record the proceedings
-before Courts of Delegates. Only a few loose
-papers have been accidentally preserved, from
-which it appears that Appeals were allowed in
-<i>civil</i> causes, and there is no reason to imagine
-they were discontinued in causes of <i>correction</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-as no distinction was made by the Statutes on
-trials between civil and criminal causes.</p>
-
-<p>But if it were true in fact, that no Appeals
-had been heared between 1570 and 1725, in
-causes of correction and censure, yet this would
-not affect the right, any more than the want of
-Appeals from a censure of a <i>peculiar</i> sort would
-render that single kind of censure unappealable.
-For, a right extending to various particulars
-will not surely be lessened from want of opportunity
-or inclination to exercise it in <i>every one</i>
-of them. And such disuse would be the less
-strange in the instance before us, because the
-discipline of the University hath been chiefly
-supported by censures inflicted in particular
-Colleges. Little of this business is left to the
-Vice-chancellor; and they who know the
-University, and wish well to it, will not, perhaps,
-desire to see more of it in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>If the supposed disuse of Appeals in criminal
-causes shall yet be thought to have abolished
-the <i>right</i>, the opinion now to be produced will
-at once remove such suspicion; even though
-it should not be insisted, as it may, that this
-pretended prescription itself is already destroyed,
-by <i>three</i> instances of Appeals in <i>causes
-of correction</i>, the first of them in the year 1725.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span></p>
-
-<p>But, before I proceed any further, I would
-beg leave to make one <i>general</i> observation on
-what hath been now advanced. It is this:
-A great Civilian had expressly affirmed, “<i>that
-Appeals are always admitted in those Courts
-where the civil and ecclesiastical Laws are in
-force, where penance, suspension, deprivation,
-or any censure is inflicted as the punishment
-of a fault</i><a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>To all which the writer of <i>the Inquiry</i> gives
-his entire assent: <i>The observation</i>, says he, <i>is
-undoubtedly just</i>. Now the capable and impartial
-reader is left to judge, whether it be not
-most evident, from the <i>facts</i> here offered to
-his consideration, that the jurisdiction of the
-University is, in the properest sense of the
-word, <i>Ecclesiastical</i>; and further, whether the
-<i>Civil</i> and <i>Ecclesiastical Laws</i> be not <i>of force</i>
-in the University Court. The dispute then is
-brought to a short issue. <i>Appeals are</i>, by the
-full consent Of the Inquirer himself, <i>to be
-admitted</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to the <small>OPINION</small> itself; of which
-I will only say, further, that it was not given
-by the great person hastily or negligently, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-with all the care and deliberation which so important
-a matter deserved: as is clear, not only
-from his diligence in calling for and inspecting
-the <i>Commissary’s Patent</i>, which, he clearly
-saw, was of moment to the determination, but
-from the time he took to consider it. For the
-<i>Queries</i> appear to have been put some time
-before <i>Christmas</i>; and this Opinion bears date
-the 18th of <i>March</i> following.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><i>Qu.</i> I. “Whether Appeals to Delegates by the
-Statute <i>de causis forensibus</i> are restrained
-to <i>civil causes</i>, in which two parties are
-litigant?”</p>
-
-<p><i>Ans.</i> The Statute <i>de causis forensibus</i> is penned
-in such general terms, that I think the Appeal
-to Delegates thereby allowed cannot be
-restrained to civil causes only, wherein two
-parties are litigant, but doth extend to causes
-of correction and censure; the rather because
-the Appeal from the Commissary to
-the Vice-chancellor is given in the same
-clause, and in the same manner, with the
-Appeal from the Vice-chancellor to Delegates;
-and the words of the Commissary’s
-Patent extend as well to causes of correction
-and censure as to civil causes. Now there
-can be no doubt but that an Appeal lies from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-the Commissary to the Vice-chancellor in
-all cases. The entry in Mr. <i>Tabor’s</i> Register
-imports that, even in causes of correction,
-an Appeal lies from the sentence of the Vice-chancellor,
-when he doth not act jointly
-with the major part of the Heads of houses.</p>
-
-<p><i>Qu.</i> II. “Whether by the Statute <i>de Cancellarii
-officio</i>, which binds the Vice-chancellor
-to proceed <i>secundum jus civile</i>, an
-Appeal to Delegates can now lie in a criminal
-cause against a prescription of 200
-years to the contrary, excepting only the
-case of <i>Campbell</i>, <i>anno</i> 1725?”</p>
-
-<p><i>Answ.</i> There can be no prescription in this
-case, because the question depends on Statutes,
-given within such a space of time, as
-the Law calls, <i>time of memory</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Qu.</i> III. “In case the Delegates should receive
-an Appeal, from the Vice-chancellor’s
-court in a cause of this kind, and
-cite the Vice-chancellor to appear before
-them, what the Vice-chancellor should
-do? Whether appear before them, and
-appeal from the sentence of the Delegates
-to his Majesty in council; or not appear,
-but apply immediately to his Majesty by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-petition; praying a prohibition, to stop
-the proceedings of the Delegates?”</p>
-
-<p><i>Answ.</i> Supposing that there is a right of
-appealing to Delegates, from the sentence
-of the Vice-chancellor, in a cause of correction
-or censure, no authority can be interposed
-to stay the Delegates from proceeding.
-But if the Delegates should not
-have a jurisdiction, his Majesty in council
-cannot grant a prohibition to them: and if
-upon an incident of this kind, the Vice-chancellor
-should think fit to bring the point
-to a judicial determination; the only proper
-method, is by applying to some of the courts
-at <i>Westminster</i>, for a prohibition to the
-Delegates proceeding.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><i>18 March 1730.</i></p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The reader sees, by this determination, that
-the question turns entirely upon this point;
-whether, supposing there had been no Appeals
-in cases of discipline from the year 1570 to
-1725, as is asserted, but without proof, the
-intermission of the exercise of this right for so
-long a space, could amount to a legal abolition
-of it. To which the great Lawyer, whose
-Opinion has been recited, replies expressly, NO.
-If any should then ask, what evidence there is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-of such a <i>right</i> subsisting at that time? Besides
-the Statutes themselves, insisted on in the
-Opinion, I can now refer him to the brief hints
-which compose the preceding account of the
-jurisdiction of the University; and which the
-reader may be assured, are advanced on the
-best grounds. Much more might, indeed,
-have been said; for what I have thought fit to
-deliver at present on the subject, is but a small
-part of that evidence, which can and will be
-produced, if it be found expedient to do it.
-In the mean while, I may well excuse myself
-from this trouble. For to talk further on
-these matters to a person, who appears so
-wholly ignorant of the History of the University,
-as the <i>Inquirer</i>, were a vain waste of
-time; and to take the pains of confuting particular
-objections, founded on that ignorance,
-a still vainer. Only I will condescend to put
-him in mind of one essential defect in his argument
-which runs through his whole pamphlet.
-It is, that he all along goes on the
-supposition, that the <i>express</i> authority of Statute,
-is required to make good the claim to
-Appeals. And he therefore very idly lays out
-his whole strength, in attempting to prove,
-that no such express authority is to be found,
-either in the <i>old</i> or <i>new</i> Statutes. I own, I
-could not but smile, at first, to observe the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-Inquirer addressing himself, with so much importance,
-to this task. But, when afterwards
-I came to consider, the labour and difficulty,
-with which he was forced to make his way,
-for this wise purpose, through the <i>discouraging</i>
-δυσνόητα (for so I presently saw, he found
-them to be) of the <i>old Statutes</i>, I could not,
-upon second thoughts, but pity his unnecessary
-sufferings about them; and was even
-tempted in my own mind, to blame the waggery
-of <i>the Fellow of a College</i>, whose request
-had drawn him into all this trouble, and who,
-to divert himself with him, had plainly put him
-on so wrong a scent. The truth is, I could
-not think this usage fair in his <i>good friend, to
-request him to draw out his sentiments, on such
-a point</i>; especially, as he tells us, his time
-was <i>so precious</i>, and that he had so little of it
-to spare, amidst <i>the variety of his necessary
-avocations</i><a id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a>. It had, surely, been more kind
-to inform him at once, as I shall have the
-goodness to do, that no body, who understood
-the matter in debate, ever pretended to found
-the right of Appeal on <i>express</i> Statute; it
-being well known, that the <i>right</i> stands entirely
-on the nature of our <i>jurisdiction</i>; in consequence
-of which, there has been a continued<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-immemorial practice of appealing in the University;
-supposed indeed, and admitted in
-both the <i>old</i> and <i>new</i> Statutes, and authorized
-by the prescription of various rules, for the
-exercise of it; but neither expressly commanded,
-nor prohibited in either.</p>
-
-<p>And now, having done this act of charity
-towards the <i>Inquirer</i>, which may prevent his
-future pains, in puzzling and perplexing himself
-with the study of the old Statutes; I shall
-have reason to expect, in return, his good
-leave to expostulate with him pretty freely on
-the use, he proceeds to make of this unhappy
-blunder. For, plumed with the vain conceit
-of the University’s resting their claim on the
-sole express authority of Statute, he goes on,
-to insult so considerable a body of men, in the
-most opprobrious manner; as guilty of the
-most absurd and irreverent behaviour, as well
-towards our illustrious Chancellor himself, as
-the Vice-Chancellor, and his brethren, the
-Heads of Colleges. What I mean, is in relation
-to the <i>Grace</i>, which the assertors of the
-right of appeal thought fit to propose, in order
-to refer the decision of this point to the arbitration
-of the Senate. He harangues, for several
-pages, on what he calls, the irregularity
-and indecency of this proceeding; and affects<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-besides, to cavil at the substance of what was
-proposed in it. But, good Sir, where was the
-<i>irregularity</i> of the Senate’s presuming to confirm,
-by their own authority, a <i>right</i>, essential
-to their constitution, authorized by immemorial
-prescription; and which no single
-Statute, they act under, in any degree contradicts?
-Or, where was the <i>indecency</i> of opposing
-the exercise of that power in the Vice-Chancellor,
-which is inconsistent with the
-very nature of our jurisdiction; for which, he
-can plead the sanction of <i>no</i> Statute; and of
-which he was never rightfully possessed?</p>
-
-<p>As to the <i>Grace</i> itself, the substance of what
-it proposed, was to this effect: “That the
-right of appeal, from the sentence of the
-Vice-Chancellor to the University in all
-cases, should be confirmed to every member
-of the <i>University</i>; but that this <i>right</i>, with
-regard to persons in <i>statu pupillari</i>, should
-be exercised only by the tutor of each person,
-interposing in his name.” This, it
-seems, gives great offence to the <i>Inquirer</i>;
-who, in his tender concern for the authority
-of the supreme magistrate, is perfectly shocked,
-to think of the consequences of such a right
-being acknowledged; and is prophet enough
-to foresee, that it would bring the lowest disgrace<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-upon his office, by <i>warranting the arraignment
-of him</i>, as he puts it, <i>before Delegates,
-upon no very important occasions</i><a id="FNanchor_108" href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a>. But his
-fears are as groundless, as the insinuation,
-which he labours to convey under them, is
-impudent and unjust. For, though an appeal
-be claimed <i>ab omni gravamine utcunque illato</i>
-(which sure is nothing but reasonable, as the
-Statutes make no distinction, and the practice,
-as well as <i>Law</i> of the University, equally
-authorizes Appeals in every case) yet, why
-should he throw himself into this unseasonable
-panic, when all <i>frivolous and vexatious Appeals</i>
-are expressly provided against, by a considerable
-pecuniary caution, and when the Delegates
-themselves are, in effect, of the supreme magistrate’s
-own appointment<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a>? Would the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-members of the Senate, does he think, appeal
-from any judicial sentence, though ever so
-just and statutable, <i>on no very important occasion</i>,
-when a certain expence is necessarily
-incurred, and when there could not be the
-least hopes of redress? Or, would any tutor
-can he imagine, who has a character to maintain,
-and who is not less concerned to support
-good order and discipline, than the supreme
-magistrate himself, interpose his claim of Appeal
-for his pupil, without, at least, some fair
-and reasonable grounds?</p>
-
-<p>But the insinuation, as I observed, is still
-more impudent, than his apprehensions are
-groundless. For what he would covertly signify
-under this impertinent sollicitude for the
-honour of the supreme magistrate, is, that the
-Delegates, who are the representatives of the
-collective body of the University, are unworthy
-to take cognizance in any case of the acts of
-their <i>officer</i><a id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a>: Nay, that the members of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-Senate itself are a company of factious, disorderly,
-licentious boys; who are impatient of
-any authority themselves, and would be sure
-to concur in all cases to countenance the irregularities
-of one another, or of the youth of
-the place; by setting them loose from all restraint,
-which the Statutes and discipline of
-the University have provided against them.
-There is something so outrageously insolent in
-this abuse of the body of the University; a
-body consisting of <i>three or four hundred persons</i>;
-the youngest of which is of the degree
-of <i>Master of Arts</i>; almost all of them <i>clergymen</i>;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-and the greater part of <i>equal age</i>, and it
-may therefore be presumed of <i>equal prudence</i>,
-as many of the Heads themselves; that I should
-be cautious of charging it upon him, if he had
-not expressed himself in terms too clear to be
-mistaken. For he has the assurance to advance
-in so many words, that “<i>if the person
-who apprehends himself to be aggrieved</i>, may
-happen to be a member of the Senate, and,
-<i>as such</i>, may possibly <i>bear with indignation
-the thought of having any part of his conduct
-judicially animadverted upon</i>; if it be further
-considered, that his <i>particular friends and
-acquaintance</i> may possibly think the same in
-his case, and that <i>all the advocates for,
-and the warm assertors of independency</i> will
-be sure to think so in every case, I do and
-must say, <i>&amp;c.</i>” And, again, in the words
-of the very provident Mr. <i>Tabor</i>, a little doting
-registrary of the University, a century or two
-ago; whose mumpings this writer has the confidence
-to oppose, to the united sense of the
-University, at this day: “What dangerous
-cure does that state hazard, when for the
-sullen distemperature of one active member,
-the ruling head must bleed, that suffereth
-enough otherwise; and all the discontented
-parts of the body must sit in judgment on it;
-nay when <i>Sense</i> must disapprove or disallow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-the <i>acts of Reason</i>? If this Appeal be suffered
-and countenanced to pass current, farewell
-the power of Chancellor and Vice-chancellor;
-<i>my young masters of the regent house</i>
-will and must judge, examine, and rule all;
-yea, <i>their</i> censures or judgments must stand
-or be disallowed at their will and pleasure.
-Good Sir! by all means labour to smother
-this <i>Hydra</i>; it will have more heads than
-we shall overcome, and breed a greater mischief
-than we are aware, in these times of
-liberty and discontent<a id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Such are the sentiments of this forward Inquirer
-of the Senate of the University of <i>Cambridge</i>:
-sentiments, which must needs create
-in the breast of any man of sense, who is a
-mere stranger to us, the strongest resentment;
-and for his public declaration of which, were
-the author known and considerable enough,
-he would judge him to deserve the severest
-censure, the University has it in its power to
-inflict. But what must those think, who have
-an opportunity of knowing the <i>characters</i> of the
-men, whom he thus vilely traduces? Almost
-all of them fellows of colleges, many of them
-tutors, whose sobriety and good behaviour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-have recommended them to places of trust and
-profit in their respective colleges: Men, who
-are under the obligation of oaths, to maintain
-and promote statutable discipline, and regularity;
-who are trained in the habit of restraining
-and correcting academical disorders
-of all kinds; and whose situations and interests
-require them to be as watchful to support just
-authority and good order, at least, as the
-Heads of Colleges, or the officers of the University
-themselves. And the censure is the
-more grievous at this time of day, when, by
-the confession of the partizans of the Heads
-themselves<a id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a>, extorted by the very evidence of
-fact and truth, there never was a time in which
-the elder part of the University were more
-sober, temperate, and regular; when fewer
-excesses of any kind were chargeable on the
-fellows of colleges; or, indeed, when they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-were more prudent and exemplary, in their
-behaviour, in all respects. But the charge is
-not only unjust, but has a direct tendency to
-discredit and destroy that reasonable authority
-in the University, which this prater, if he
-means any thing by his talk, would seem ambitious
-to support. For how is the great affair
-of education and good government in this place
-to be carried on, but by means of those very
-persons, whom he would represent in so ignominious
-a light? For, certainly, how much
-soever the University may owe to the Heads
-of Colleges, in their capacity of <i>legislators</i>,
-yet, for the <i>execution</i> of those laws which it
-seemeth good to their wisdoms to enact, they
-must still depend on the concurrence, I had
-almost said, on the sole authority of their <i>inferiors</i>.
-And how shall such authority be kept
-up, when they are thus upbraided, as abettors
-of every act of licence; and represented to the
-younger part of the University, as patronizers
-of that ungoverned independent spirit, which
-it is their office to restrain? Nor can I think
-so ill of the policy of these great lawgivers, as
-to believe that they will chuse to concur with
-this officious <i>Inquirer</i>, in representing them
-in such a light. For what will become of that
-balmy ease and quiet, in which these sovereign
-guides of youth so delight to wrap themselves,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-if the care of government must, after all, devolve
-on their shoulders; when a course of injurious
-calumnies shall have disabled their
-subordinate ministers from taking their place,
-and bearing, as at present they most commonly
-do, the full weight of it?</p>
-
-<p>But to return to the <i>Grace</i> itself, from which
-this reviler’s treatment of the whole body of
-the University has a little diverted me. He
-labours much, as I observed, to impress on the
-reader’s mind the opinion of the frightful consequences
-with which a right of Appeal in all
-cases would be attended; and to give a sanction
-to these fears, he alledges the authority of
-<i>the learned gentlemen of the long robe</i>, who, it
-seems, have pointed out the absurdity of such
-a practice, and the pernicious effects of it<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a>.
-But what is all this tragical declamation to the
-purpose? Where is the sense, as I before
-asked, in supposing the University Senate would
-concur in every attempt of its idle and disorderly
-members to get themselves relieved from
-a deserved and statutable censure? Or, how
-should those <i>learned gentlemen</i>, whose robe he
-still hangs upon, be better able to judge of the
-expediency of this practice than the Senate of
-the University itself? Indeed he thinks the
-absurdity of this right of calling the supreme<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-officer of the University to account for his judicial
-determinations the more glaring, in as
-much as, even in private colleges, <i>no act of
-discipline of the Head</i>, he fancies, <i>was ever
-liable to be reversed by any of the subordinate
-members</i>: nay, he is persuaded that his good
-friend, the Fellow of a College, for whose instruction
-all this is designed, <i>were he even authorized
-to new model the Statutes of his own
-College, would not chuse to vest in his brethren
-the Fellows such a power of controuling the acts
-of the Master</i><a id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a>. What the Colleges are which
-are here glanced at, and which leave the Master
-full power to exercise every act of discipline
-without controul, the <i>Inquirer</i> himself best
-knows. For my part, I have always understood
-that <i>acts of censure</i> in all private societies,
-such acts I mean as are of consequence to
-the reputation and interests of their members,
-are not left to the caprice of the Master, but
-are passed by the joint authority and concurrence
-of the Society itself; unless, perhaps, I
-am to except one <i>little</i> College, in which, it is
-said, the Master claims to himself this sovereign
-and uncontroulable authority. But, then, this
-is no fair precedent. For the members of the
-College have nothing to apprehend from a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-licentious and wanton abuse of <i>such power</i>; as
-well on account of the known candour, equity,
-and moderation of the worthy president of that
-society, as for that a few exertions of it would
-leave him no subjects to preside over.</p>
-
-<p>But, whatever may be the case of this <i>one</i>
-foundation, the despotic form is not, I believe,
-statutable in any other. Nay, the authority of
-the fellows to controul the acts of their Head
-in some Colleges, I have been told, goes so
-far, that they are even impowered, in case of
-an <i>utter inability</i> (such as may arise from extreme
-folly, dotage, or the like) <i>to govern prudently</i>,
-to remove him forthwith from his place.
-And surely this must be deemed a wise and
-sober institution; at least, were I <i>authorized to
-new model the Statutes of any College which
-wanted it, it is such an one as I should certainly
-chuse to vest in it</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But there is one circumstance in the <i>Grace</i>
-which, it seems, provokes his more <i>especial
-dislike</i>. And, unluckily, it is one which any
-other, who considered the tenor of it, would be
-likely enough more especially to approve; as
-shewing the singular moderation and good
-temper of the persons who proposed the <i>Grace</i>,
-and as studiously contrived to prevent all imaginable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-abuses of it. It is, that <i>the right of
-undergraduates to appeal should be exercised
-no otherwise than by the interposition of their
-tutors</i><a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a>. A provision of great prudence; and
-which the proposers of the <i>Grace</i>, in their concern
-to support authority and just government,
-purposely made to obviate the only abuses that
-could be possibly apprehended from it. For,
-if the wanton exercise of the <i>right to appeal</i>
-were to be feared from any quarter, it certainly
-must be from the inferior members; whose
-youth and inexperience might make them forward
-to appeal from any censure, however reasonable,
-and of which, therefore, the <i>tutor</i> of
-the person censured, who is under all the ties
-of interest and duty to act discreetly and warily,
-is left to judge. Yet this provision, wise and moderate
-as it is, <i>appears to the Inquirer extremely
-strange; because, by means of such a limitation,
-a tutor might prevent his pupil from appealing in
-any case, though the supreme Magistrate of the
-University would be empowered to prevent it in
-none</i>. As if the judge who passed the sentence,
-and was therefore concerned to support it, were
-as fit to determine, whether the party aggrieved
-should have the liberty to appeal from it, as an
-indifferent person who had no concern at all in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-it. Nay, the tutor, as was observed, would be
-obliged, by a regard to his own authority and
-character, and (I would add, but that the <i>Inquirer</i>
-is pleased to make no account of that
-<i>obligation</i><a id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a>) by the <i>religion of an oath</i>, to proceed
-with all imaginable caution in advising
-him to such a step.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span></p>
-
-<p>In every view, then, this objection to the
-<i>Grace</i> must appear very unaccountable. And
-the rather, when the reader understands that
-this clause was, with the greater readiness and
-pleasure, inserted into it, as this Vice-chancellor
-himself, whose goodness and candour require
-no encomiums of mine, had intimated, and
-even declared, that a provision of this kind was
-all the restriction upon <i>the liberty of appealing</i>
-which he wished to see made to it. For this
-excellent person was so much convinced of the
-propriety and expediency of this claim in general,
-that he very frankly professed his approbation
-of it, and only wanted to secure his authority,
-where indeed the only danger lay, from
-a <i>torrent of Appeals, which, as he apprehended,
-might pour in upon him from the younger sort</i>.
-So that, I think, we shall hear no more of this
-objection; and I am even not without the fond
-hopes, that, after this information, the <i>Inquirer</i>
-himself, whatever <i>displeasure</i> he might conceive
-at this part of the <i>Grace</i> before, will now grow
-into good humour with it.</p>
-
-<p>After all, one cannot but suspect, that the
-<i>Inquirer</i> must have some better reason for his
-strong antipathy to this <i>Grace</i> than any that has
-yet appeared. The violent heat it puts him
-into, whenever he touches upon it, demonstrates,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-there must still be something at the bottom of
-this matter, which is the object of just offence.
-In looking narrowly for it, I found it at last,
-half smothered under a very shrewd and indirect
-insinuation, which I shall bring to light,
-after having presented the reader with his own
-words:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“I see not how a Grace of this kind could
-be offered, consistently with the Resolution
-said to have been taken at one of your first
-meetings, to assert the right of Appeal in
-such a manner as was warranted by the Statutes
-of the University: Nor am I less able
-to reconcile it with those professions of
-deference and respect, which at the same time
-were thought proper to be made for our great
-and illustrious Chancellor. No person would
-receive a greater pleasure than myself from
-seeing all the members of the University,
-however divided in other points, agreed in
-entertaining the highest sentiments of regard
-and veneration for him; but I confess, that
-this is a pleasure I am not very likely to have;
-till one set of men shall be pleased to give
-clearer and less questionable testimonies of
-this, than by opposing every useful regulation
-he recommended, and endeavouring to lessen
-and curtail an authority, which is only vested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-in the Vice-chancellor as his representative
-and locum-tenens<a id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a>.”</p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Here, then, we have all the venom of his
-heart injected into one malignant paragraph;
-which, under the gilding of a compliment, is
-to do its office without offence. And yet, it is
-plain enough what he would insinuate. It is
-neither more nor less than that the advocates
-for this right of Appeal are an unquiet, factious
-set of persons, bent on opposing all measures
-that tend to promote the good of the University;
-and, to say all in one word, listed in a
-vile cabal to dishonour, revile, and abuse their
-Chancellor himself. The gentlemen against
-whom all this is levelled must, I am persuaded,
-hold such senseless and licentious calumnies
-in such contempt, that I should not merit their
-thanks for attempting seriously to confute them.
-And yet I cannot help saying for them, that the
-<i>Resolution</i> hinted at in this place was drawn
-up with so respectful a regard to the authority
-of the Statues, and to the honour and dignity
-of our great Chancellor, as, one should think,
-might stop the mouth of Malice itself. Yet all
-this can be overlooked by our candid Inquirer.
-And on what pretence? Why, because some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-of those persons, who came to such a <i>Resolution</i>,
-had different sentiments, it seems, of
-the expediency of the late regulations from this
-writer; and because this claim of Appeals tends
-to lessen the authority of the Vice-chancellor.
-For this he modestly calls <i>opposing the Chancellor,
-and curtailing his power</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Well, then, the crime is now out; and, to
-say the truth, if it be a crime, the University is
-deeply involved in it. For, when the late <i>regulations</i>
-were first proposed to the consideration
-of the Senate, a considerable majority
-were clearly of the same opinion as these culprits:
-and, with regard to the present claim,
-the University may be almost said to be <i>unanimous</i>
-in supporting it. But what in the mean
-time must be this scribbler’s sentiments of that
-most noble and illustrious person, for whose
-honour he here professes himself concerned;
-and of whom, it seems, he can think so unworthily,
-as to believe, that a liberty in judging
-concerning the expediency of some academical
-laws, which he had the goodness to propose to
-them, should give offence to one who has no
-other aim than to serve the University in a
-manner the most agreeable to their best judgments;
-and which, I am satisfied, they used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-the more freely, on a full persuasion that such
-liberty could not be taken as an instance of
-disrespect to him. This I should not doubt to
-call, of itself, a sufficient confutation of the
-idle calumny. But it comes with the worst
-grace imaginable from a declared enemy to <i>the
-right of Appeals</i>; who must know, if he be
-at all acquainted with what passed at that time,
-that the principal reason, which induced the
-University to oppose the <i>regulations</i>, was the
-just apprehension they were under, of an encroachment
-on this <i>very right</i>; not indeed
-from the Chancellor, who had no such intention,
-nor even any knowledge of it, but from
-certain forward directors in that affair, who
-gave the <i>clearest and least questionable</i> proofs
-of their designing to make the <i>new laws</i> the
-instruments of their own tyranny in this respect.
-So that, if any offence <i>was</i> given by
-the University on that occasion, the blame of it
-should fall elsewhere, and not on those on
-whom it is here so invidiously cast; persons,
-who on every occasion have testified the sincerest
-honour for their Chancellor, who venerate
-him as the protector and patron of the
-University, and would humbly co-operate with
-him to the attainment of those good ends,
-which it is his sole endeavour to promote.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span></p>
-
-<p>But what follows, if possible, is still worse.
-A <i>second charge</i> against the University is, that
-they are <i>endeavouring to lessen and curtail an
-authority, which is only vested in the Vice-chancellor,
-as his representative and locum tenens</i>.
-What the collective body would return
-to this accusation, I pretend not to say; I have
-no commission to answer in their name. But,
-for myself, and those whose thoughts I have the
-opportunity of knowing on this matter, I answer
-boldly thus: That we are not in the least
-apprehensive of giving offence to this great
-person, who is more solicitous for the maintenance
-of the just rights of the University than
-any other member of it, by any respectful and
-moderate endeavours to assert our own reasonable
-privileges; that we are well assured,
-he approves, and is ready to countenance, all
-such honest endeavours; and that, lastly and
-<i>chiefly</i>, we are <i>therefore</i> earnest in our endeavours
-to lessen an authority (if that must be
-called <i>lessening</i> which is but preventing its
-being usurped), because it <i>is</i> vested in, and
-must be constantly exercised <i>by his representative</i>.
-For, whatever liberties he may presume
-to take with the assertors of this claim, I will
-venture to assure him, that, were unappealable
-power itself to be exercised only by our Chancellor,
-who is too high in rank, and too noble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-in nature, to be under any temptations of
-abusing it, though we might still think the authority
-unreasonable and dangerous in itself,
-we should esteem ourselves in perfect security
-under him, and could safely trust the administration
-of it to his care. But, as the person
-who by our Constitution is vested with it, is
-and must be a very imperfect <i>representative</i> of
-the Chancellor, in this as well as other respects,
-we hope to be forgiven by every equitable
-judge, if we are not forward to <i>compliment</i>
-ourselves out of our privileges; and have little
-inclination to lodge our liberties in less worthy
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>After all, one would be glad to know a little
-more explicitly of this writer, since he professes
-himself so little satisfied with the conduct of
-the University, what those <i>clearer and less
-questionable testimonies</i> of their regard for the
-Chancellor are which he so loudly calls for,
-and the want of which, it seems, hath made
-his life so distasteful and uneasy to him.
-And, I think, I durst almost take upon me
-to guess at them. No doubt, they are such
-as these: “That the University Senate would
-be pleased to make no distinction in any case
-between the supreme Magistrate and his representative,
-nay, and his representative’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-<i>representatives</i>”—“That they would courteously
-give that honour to his <i>locum tenens</i> or <i>locum
-tenentes</i>, without perhaps one single merit to
-justify such a claim, which the illustrious rank
-and dignity of their Chancellor himself, his eminent
-virtues, and services to the University, all
-conspire to challenge and demand from them:”—In
-a word, “that the University would offer
-themselves as willing instruments to carry into
-execution every paltry project, every low and
-selfish design, which little men in office are apt
-to form for themselves; and all this under the
-notion of its being a tribute of respect to the
-supreme Magistrate, and an instance of their
-veneration for him.”</p>
-
-<p>Such as these, I can readily believe, are the
-<i>testimonies</i> of respect the <i>Inquirer</i> wishes to
-see paid to the Chancellor, and which, no doubt,
-would administer that sincere pleasure, which
-at present he divines (and, I trust, truly) <i>he is
-not very likely to have</i>. But does he think the
-Chancellor is to be abused by this thin pretence
-of respect? that true greatness is to be taken
-by this mere outside of an officious and false
-compliment? On the other hand, I dare be
-confident that nothing is more disgusting to
-him than such sycophancy; and that he is so
-far from allowing this conduct in the <i>Inquirer</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-that he even disdains to have his cause and
-dignity so defended. “For, though (to use
-my Lord <i>Bacon’s</i> words on a like occasion) I
-observe in his book many glosses, whereby
-the man would insinuate himself into his
-favour, yet I find it to be ordinary, that many
-pressing and fawning persons do misconjecture
-of the humour of men in authority; and
-many times seek to gratify them with that
-which they most dislike.”</p>
-
-<p>But the virulence of these malignant calumnies
-hath held me on a very unnecessary argument
-too long: I return again to the <i>Inquirer</i>,
-to whom I have but one word or two more to
-say, and shall then take my final leave of him.</p>
-
-<p>You have talked, Sir, very importantly of
-the pernicious consequences of a right of Appeal
-in the University. The reasons on which
-you would ground these so anxious fears have
-been examined, and exposed, as they deserve.
-But, granting that some slight, nay, that some
-considerable inconveniencies might arise from
-it; were this any good argument, think you,
-against the subsistence of such a right? What
-would become of all the liberties which just
-government leaves us, nay, of the blessings and
-privileges which indulgent nature bestows upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-us, if the accidental and occasional abuse of
-them were thought a reason sufficient to extort
-them out of our hands? Should you not have
-considered that a <i>right of Appeal</i> is one of the
-most important and valuable rights which mankind
-enjoy in society, and which, indeed, is
-almost essential to the very being of it? And
-would you have this sacred claim, <i>patronam
-illam et vindicem libertatis</i>, as a great ancient
-calls it, rudely and inhumanly wrested from us,
-on the frivolous pretence of some possible or
-even probable abuse? Had you been as conversant
-in the civil law as an <i>Inquirer</i> into such
-a question should have been, you might have
-found cause to entertain very different opinions
-of it. For the great masters in that science
-were as well aware as you can be, that such a
-right was liable to some abuse; but which of
-them ever thought this consideration of force
-enough to decry or abolish it? On the other
-hand, they <i>acknowledge the inconvenience</i>, yet
-assert and vindicate the <i>use</i>. Give me leave to
-refer you to one passage (you will find <i>L.</i> 1.
-<i>D. De Appell.</i>), very express to this purpose.
-“Appellandi usus quam sit frequens quamque
-<small>NECESSARIUS</small>, nemo est qui nesciat: quippe
-cum iniquitatem judicantium vel imperitiam
-re corrigat; <i>licet nonnunquam bene latas sententias
-in pejus reformet</i>, neque enim utique<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-melius pronuntiat, qui novissimus sententiam
-laturus est.” What will you say, now, to
-this? That <i>Ulpian</i>, who affirmed it, was a
-factious, turbulent boy? one of those whom
-you disgrace under the name of the <i>warm, assertors
-of independency</i>, and <i>who bear with indignation
-the thought of having any part of
-their conduct judicially animadverted upon</i>? I
-presume to think you would hardly venture on
-this assertion. Nay, I please myself with
-hoping, that, when you have well considered
-this so sage and venerable sentence of an ancient
-Lawyer, you will even be disposed to abate of
-your vehemence in declaiming against such as
-go on <i>his</i> principles at this day.</p>
-
-<p>Seriously, Sir, it is a bad cause you have
-engaged in; and, in mere kindness to you, I
-would wish you to relinquish it with all speed.
-The claim itself of <i>Appeals</i>, as I have had the
-honour to shew you, is of long and ancient
-date; indeed as <i>ancient</i> as the Constitution of
-the <i>English</i> government itself. Of what consequence
-you may chance to be in your political
-capacity, it is impossible for me to say; if
-you are of any, and should proceed in these
-<i>Inquiries</i>, I should go near to apprehend that
-the <i>House of Commons</i> itself might take umbrage
-at them; for the rise of that great part of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-our Constitution is not usually, I think, carried
-higher than the point from which the right of
-Appeal hath here been deduced. Or, do you
-think you may safely make free with the Constitution
-of an University, though it were dangerous
-meddling with that of the State itself?
-This may be true, indeed; but where is your
-generosity in the mean time? Why should
-the thoughts of impunity encourage you to such
-an attack on the rights and privileges of a body
-of men, who, though unable to punish such
-offences against themselves as they deserve,
-have yet been generally secured from all outrage,
-by the very regard and reverence which
-the public hath ever paid to them? In a word
-(for I would not hold you longer from your
-<i>necessary avocations</i>), it may be worth your
-<i>inquiry</i>, when you shall think fit to sally forth
-on another adventure, what the Learned of
-<i>Great Britain</i> have done, that they should have
-their liberties written and inveighed against in
-so outrageous a manner; and, amidst the securest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-enjoyment of every civil right, under the
-justest and most equal Government in the
-world, what peculiar circumstances of offence
-have so inflamed the guilt of the scholars of this
-land, that they, of <i>all</i> his Majesty’s good subjects,
-should deserve to be the only slaves.</p>
-
-<h3>FINIS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="AN_ADDRESS_TO_THE_REV_DR_JORTIN">
-<small>ON THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">DELICACY</span><br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-FRIENDSHIP<br />
-<br />
-<small>FIRST PRINTED IN 1755.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">
-<small>ON THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">DELICACY</span><br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-FRIENDSHIP.<br />
-<span class="medium">A SEVENTH DISSERTATION.</span><br />
-<small>ADDRESSED</small><br />
-<span class="medium">TO THE AUTHOR OF THE SIXTH.</span></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Si bene te novi, metues, liberrime Lolli,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Scurrantis speciem præbere, professus Amicum.<br /></span>
-<span class="author"><span class="smcap">Hor.</span><br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Nunc te <i>marmoreum</i> pro tempore fecimus: at tu,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Si fœtura gregem suppleverit, <small>AUREUS</small> esto.<br /></span>
-<span class="author"><span class="smcap">Virg.</span><br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span></p>
-
-<h2>AN ADDRESS TO THE REV. DR. JORTIN.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Rev. Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">As</span> great an admirer as I must profess myself
-of your writings, I little expected that any of
-them would give me the pleasure that I have
-just now received from the last of your <span class="smcap">Six
-Dissertations on different Subjects</span>.</p>
-
-<p>The other <small>FIVE</small> have doubtless their distinct
-merits. But in this, methinks, I see an assemblage,
-a very constellation, as it were, of
-all your virtues, all that can recommend the
-scholar or endear the friend. This last, give
-me leave to say, is so unusual a part of a
-learned mind’s character, and appears with so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-peculiar a lustre in this discourse, that the
-public will not be displeased to have it set
-before them in full view, and recommended
-to general imitation, with a frankness, which
-though it may somewhat disgust your own
-delicacy, seems but very necessary on such an
-occasion and in such times.</p>
-
-<p>I leave it to others therefore to celebrate the
-happiness of your invention, the urbanity of
-your wit, the regularity of your plan, the address
-with which you conceal the point you
-aim at in this Dissertation, and yet the pains
-you take in seeming obliquely to make your
-way to it. These and many other beauties
-which your long study of the ancients hath
-enabled you to bring into modern composition,
-have been generally taken notice of in your
-other writings, and will find encomiasts enough
-among the common herd of your readers. The
-honour I propose to do you by this address is of
-another kind; and as it lies a little remote from
-vulgar apprehension, I shall have some merit
-with you for displaying it as it deserves.</p>
-
-<p>To come to a point then, next to the total
-<i>want</i> of <small>FRIENDSHIP</small> which one has too much
-reason to observe and lament in the great
-scholars of every age, nothing hath at any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-time disgusted me so much as the gross indelicacy
-with which they are usually seen to
-conduct themselves in their <i>expression</i> of this
-virtue.</p>
-
-<p>I have by me a large collection of the civil
-things which these lettered friends have been
-pleased to say of one another, and it would
-amaze you to see with what an energy and
-force of language they are delivered. One
-thing I thought very remarkable, that the
-greater the parts and the more unquestioned
-the learning and abilities of the encomiast, just
-so much the stronger, that is to say, according
-to the usual acceptation, just so much the
-more <i>friendly</i> are his encomiums.</p>
-
-<p>I have a great example in my eye. A man,
-for instance, hath a bosom <small>FRIEND</small>, whom he
-takes for a person of the purest and most benevolent
-virtue, presently he sets him down
-for such, and publisheth him to all the world.—Or
-he hath an intimacy with an eminent
-<span class="smcap">Poet</span>: and no regard to decency restrains him
-from calling him a great genius, as Horace,
-you know, did his friend Virgil, almost to his
-face.—Or, he is loved and honoured by a
-great <span class="smcap">Lawyer</span> or two; and then be sure all the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-fine things that have been said of your <span class="smcap">Ciceros</span>,
-your <span class="smcap">Scævolas</span> on your <span class="smcap">Hydes</span>, are squandered
-away upon them.—Or, he hath perchance the
-honour of being well with a great <span class="smcap">Churchman</span>,
-much famed for his political and religious services;
-down he goes at once for a lover of his
-country, and the scourge of infidels and freethinkers,
-with as little reserve as if he had a
-<span class="smcap">Jerom</span> or a father <span class="smcap">Paul</span> to celebrate.—Or,
-once or twice in his life it hath been his fortune
-to be distinguished by great <span class="smcap">Ministers</span>.
-Such occasions are rare. And therefore a little
-gratitude, we will say, is allowable. But can
-any thing be said for abominable formal <i>dedications</i>?—Or,
-lastly, he thinks he sees some
-sparks of virtue even in his ordinary acquaintance,
-and these, as fast as he observes them he
-gathers up, and sticks, on the first occasion,
-in some or other of his immortal volumes.</p>
-
-<p>O Doctor Jortin! if you did but see half
-the extravagancies I have collected of this sort
-in the single instance of one man, you would
-stand aghast at this degree of corruption in
-the learned world, and would begin to apprehend
-something of your great merit in
-this seasonable endeavour to put a stop to its
-progress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span></p>
-
-<p>And what above all grieves me is that this
-is no <i>novel</i> invention; for then it might well
-have ranked with the other arguments of degeneracy
-so justly chargeable on the present
-times; but the all-accomplished ancients themselves
-have, to own the truth, set the example.</p>
-
-<p>I took notice just now of the <span class="smcap">Ingenium ingens</span>
-of Horace. The other poets of that time
-abound in these fulsome encomiums. But I
-am even shocked to think that such men as
-<span class="smcap">Cicero</span> and <span class="smcap">Pliny</span>, men so perfect, as they
-were, in the commerce of the world, and
-from their rank and station, so practised in all
-the decencies of conversation, were far gone
-in the folly. And yet there are, in truth,
-more instances of this weakness in their writings
-than in those of any modern I can readily call
-to mind.</p>
-
-<p>Something I know hath been said in excuse
-of this <i>illiberal manner</i>, from the <small>VIEWS</small> and
-<small>CHARACTERS</small> and <small>NECESSITIES</small> of those that use
-it. And my unfeigned regard for the professors
-of learning makes me willing that any thing
-they have to offer for themselves should be
-fairly heard.</p>
-
-<p>They say then, and with some appearance
-of truth, that as all the benefit they propose to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span>
-themselves by their labours is for the most part
-nothing more than a little <i>fame</i> (which whether
-good or bad, as the poet observes,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i20">——begins and ends<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">In the small circle of our foes or friends.)<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>they think it hard to be denied this slender
-recompence, which each expects in his turn,
-and should therefore be not unwilling to pay
-to others.</p>
-
-<p>They, further, alledge, that as they are
-generally <i>plain men</i>, much given to speak
-their mind, and quite unpractised in the arts
-of that chaste reserve and delicate self-denial,
-to which some few of their order have happily
-habituated themselves, they hope to be forgiven
-so natural an infirmity, to which the
-circumstances of their situation and character
-fatally expose them.</p>
-
-<p>But, lastly, they say, this practice is in a
-manner forced upon them by the <i>malignity of
-the times</i>. Let a learned man deserve ever so
-well of the public, none but those who are
-known to be of his acquaintance think themselves
-at all concerned to take notice of his
-services. Especially this is observed to be the
-constant humour of our countrymen, who
-rarely speak well of any but their friends, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-our polite neighbours rarely speak ill of any
-but their enemies. Now this malevolent disposition
-of the learned makes it necessary, they
-pretend, that such of them as are connected
-by any bond of friendship should be indulged
-the greater liberty of commending one another.
-Unless you will utterly exclude all intercourse
-of praise and panegyric from human society,
-which they humbly conceive may be attended
-with some few inconveniencies. To strengthen
-this last observation they even add, that the
-public is usually more shy in bestowing its
-praises on writers of eminent and superior merit
-than on others. As well knowing, I suppose,
-that posterity will make them ample
-amends for any mortification they may meet
-with at present; and that in the mean time
-they are more than sufficiently honoured by
-the constant railings and invectives of the
-dunces. Lastly, they observe, that in the
-more frivolous and easy kinds of learning, such
-for instance as are conversant about the collation
-of <small>MSS</small>, the rectification of <small>POINTS</small>, and
-the correction of <small>LETTERS</small>, the general and
-approved custom is for all professors of this
-class, whether friends or enemies, to cry up
-each other as much as they please, and that it
-is even reckoned a piece of incivility not to
-preface a citation from ever so insignificant a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-dealer in verbal criticism with some superlative
-appellation. And why, say they, should these
-nibblers of old books, “<i>These word-catchers
-that live on syllables</i>,” be indulged in this
-amplitude of expression to one another, when
-they who furnish the materials on which the
-spawn of these vermin are to feed in after-ages,
-are denied the little satisfaction of a more sizeable,
-as well as a more deserved praise?</p>
-
-<p>I have not been afraid, you see, to set the
-arguments of these unhappy advocates for
-themselves in as strong a light as they will
-well bear, because I can easily trust your sagacity
-to find out a full and decisive answer
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>first</i> place, you will refer these idolaters
-of <small>FAME</small>, for their better information, to
-that curious discourse on this subject, which
-makes the <i>fourth</i> in the present collection.
-Next you will tell them that you by no means
-intend to deprive them of their just praise, but
-that they must not set up for judges in their
-own case, and presume to think how much
-of it they have reason to look for from their
-friends. You will further signify to them that
-the truest office of friendship is to be sparing
-of commendation, lest it awaken the envy of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-malicious world; that there is a kind of fascination
-in praise which wise men have been
-justly suspicious of in all ages; and that a grain
-or two from those who are not used to be prodigal
-of this incense, is an offering of no small
-value. But chiefly and lastly, you will give
-them to understand that true honour is seated
-not in the mouths but in hearts of men; and
-that, for any thing they know, one may be
-forced to entertain the highest possible esteem
-of their virtues, though, for their sakes, and
-for other wise reasons, one has that virtuous
-command of one’s tongue and pen as not to
-acquaint them with it.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as to the <i>plainness</i> and <i>openness of
-mind</i> which is said to make a part in the composition
-of a man of letters, you will tell them
-that this is the very foible you most lament,
-and most wish them to correct: that it exposes
-them to much censure and many other inconveniencies;
-that this frankness of disposition
-makes them bestow their praises on those
-whom the world has no such esteem for, or
-whom it would rather see left in obscurity and
-oblivion; that they often disgust their betters
-by this proceeding, who have their reasons for
-desiring that a cloud may remain on the characters
-of certain obnoxious and dangerous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-writers; that by such warm and unmanaged
-commendations they become partners, as it
-were, of their ill deserts; that they even make
-themselves answerable for their future conduct;
-which is a matter of so very nice a consideration,
-that the great master of life, though he
-had not the virtue always to act up to his own
-maxim, delivers it for a precept of special use
-in the commerce of the world,</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Qualem commendes etiam atque etiam
-adspice.</span></p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>For it signifies nothing in the case before us,
-whether the recommendation be to a patron or
-the public.</p>
-
-<p>For all these reasons you will assure them
-that this ill habit of speaking their mind on all
-occasions, just as nature and blind friendship
-dictate, is that which more than any thing else
-exposes them to the contempt of knowing and
-considerate men.</p>
-
-<p><i>Lastly</i>, with regard to that other frivolous
-plea taken from the <i>malignity of mankind</i> and
-even those of their own family and profession,
-you will convince them that this is totally a
-mistake, that the world is ready enough to
-take notice of superior eminence in letters, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-it is even apt to grow extravagant in its admiration,
-and that this humour of the public is
-itself a reason for that reserve with which their
-friends, if they truly merit that name, ought
-to conduct themselves towards them: that this
-splendour of reputation, which is so generally
-the consequence of distinguished learning, requires
-to be allayed and softened by the discrete
-management of those who wish them
-well, lest it not only grow offensive to weak
-eyes, but dazzle their own with too fond an
-imagination of their own importance, and so
-relax the ardour of their pursuits, or betray
-them into some unseemly ostentation of their
-just merits. You will farther suggest, that
-great atchievements in letters are sufficiently
-recompenced by the silent complacency of self-esteem
-and of a good conscience; while lesser
-services demand to be brought out and magnified
-to public eye, for the due encouragement
-and consolation of those who would
-otherwise have but small reason to be satisfied
-with themselves. You might even observe,
-that silence itself is often a full acknowledgment
-of superior desert, especially when personal
-obligations, as well as other reasons,
-might provoke them to break through it. In
-such cases it is to be understood, that, if a
-friend be sparing of his good word, it is in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-violence to his inclination, and that nothing
-but the tender apprehension of pushing an
-acknowledged merit too far, withholds him
-from giving a public testimony to it. But, in
-conclusion, you will not omit to set them right
-with regard to one material mistake in this
-matter; that whereas they complain of the
-superior estimation in which the professors of
-verbal criticism are held amongst us, whom
-with a strange malignity they affect to represent
-as the very lowest retainers to science,
-you, and all true scholars, on the other hand,
-maintain that the <i>study</i> of words is the most
-useful and creditable of all others; and that
-this genuine class of learned men have reason
-to pride themselves in their objected, but truly
-glorious character of <small>VERBAL CRITICS</small>.</p>
-
-<p>And now, Sir, having seen how little can
-be said in justification of that offensive custom
-which the learned have somehow taken up, of
-directly applauding one another, I come to the
-more immediate purpose of this address, which
-was to shew how singularly happy you have
-been in avoiding this great vice, and to take
-occasion from the example you have now set
-us to recommend the contrary virtue to the
-imitation of others.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span></p>
-
-<p>I am sensible there are some difficulties to
-be encountered at setting out. A generous
-mind will probably feel some reluctance, at
-first, to the scheme of suppressing his natural
-feelings, and of withholding from his friend
-that just tribute of praise which many others
-perhaps are but too willing should be withheld
-from him. But all scruples of this sort will be
-got over when the full merit of your example
-hath been considered; I mean, when the inducements
-you had to give into the common
-weakness on this occasion come to be fairly
-drawn out; by which it will be clearly seen
-that you have the glory of setting a precedent
-of the most heroic magnanimity and self-denial,
-and that nothing can possibly be urged in the
-<i>case</i> of any other, which you have not triumphantly
-gotten the better of in your own.</p>
-
-<p>I observe it to your honour, Sir, you have
-ventured on the same ground in this famous
-Dissertation, which hath been trodden by the
-most noted, at least, of our present writers.
-But this is not enough. It will be of moment
-to consider a little more particularly the <i>character</i>
-of the person whom you chuse to follow,
-or rather nobly emulate, in this route. And
-lest you should think I have any design to
-lessen the merit of your conduct towards him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-by giving it in my cool way, take it from one
-of those <i>warm</i> friends who never balk their
-humour in this sort of commendations. Upon
-asking him what he thought of the learned
-person’s character, and telling him the use I
-might perhaps make of his opinion in this address
-to you, he began in a very solemn way.</p>
-
-<p>“The author of the D. L.” says he, “is a
-writer whose genius and learning have so far
-subdued envy itself (though it never rose
-fiercer against any man, or in more various
-and grotesque shapes), that every man of
-sense now esteems him the ornament, and
-every good man the blessing, of these times.”</p>
-
-<p>Hold, said I, my good friend, I did not mean
-to put your eloquence to the stretch for this
-panegyric on his <i>intellectual</i> endowments, which
-I am very ready to take upon trust, and, to say
-the truth, have never heard violently run down
-by any but very prejudiced or very dull men.
-His <i>moral</i> qualities are those I am most concerned
-for.</p>
-
-<p>“His <i>moral</i>,” resumed he hastily, “shine
-forth as strongly from all his <i>writings</i> as the
-other, and are those which I have ever reverenced
-most. Of these, his love of letters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-and of virtue, his veneration of great and
-good men, his delicacy of honour in not assuming
-to himself, or depressing, the merit of
-others, his readiness to give their due to all
-men of real desert whose principles he opposes,
-even to the fastidious, scoffing Lord
-<span class="smcap">Shaftesbury</span> and the licentious <span class="smcap">Bayle</span>, but
-above all, his zeal for religion and for truth,
-these are qualities which, as often as I look
-into his volumes, attract my admiration and
-esteem. Nor is this enumeration, though it
-be far from complete, made at random. I
-could illustrate each of these virtues by various
-instances, taken from his works, were
-it not that the person you mean to address is
-more conversant in them, and more ready, I
-may presume, to do him justice on any fitting
-occasion than myself. The liberty indeed he
-takes of dissenting from many great names is
-considerable, as well as of speaking his free
-thoughts of the writers for whom he hath no
-esteem. But the <i>one</i> he doth with that respect
-and deference, and the <i>other</i> with that
-reason and justice, and <i>both</i> with that ingenuous
-openness and candour, the characteristics
-of a truly great mind, that they,
-whom he opposes, cannot be angry, and they
-whom he censures are not misused. I mention
-this the rather on account of the clamour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-which has so frequently been raised
-against the freedom and severity of his pen.
-But there is no mystery in the case. No dead
-writer is so bad but he has some advocates,
-and no living one so contemptible but he has
-some friends. And the misfortune is, that,
-while the present generation is too much
-prejudiced to do him right, posterity, to whom
-the appeal of course lies, are not likely to
-have it in their power to re-judge the cause:
-the names and writings, he most undervalues,
-being such as are hastening, it seems, to that
-oblivion which is prepared for such things.</p>
-
-<p>“These,” continued he, “are some of the
-obvious qualities of the <small>WRITER</small>; and for the
-personal virtues of the <small>MAN</small>—But here I
-may well refer you to Dr. <span class="smcap">Jortin</span> himself,
-who will take a pleasure to assure you, that
-his private character is not less respectable
-than his public; or, rather, if the one demands
-our veneration, that the other must
-secure our love. And, yet, why rest the credit
-of <small>ONE</small>, when <small>ALL</small> of his acquaintance
-agree in this, that he is the easiest in his conversation,
-the frankest and most communicative,
-the readiest to do all good offices, in
-short the friendliest and most generous of
-men.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus far our zealous friend. And, though
-I know how much you agree with him in your
-sentiments, I dare say you cannot but smile at
-so egregious a specimen of the high <i>complimentary
-manner</i>. But, though one is not to
-expect an encomiast of this class will be very
-sensible of any defects in the person he celebrates,
-yet it cannot be disowned that this
-magnified man hath his foibles as well as another.
-I will be so fair as to enumerate some
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>As he is conscious of <i>intending</i> well, and
-even greatly, in his learned labours, he is rather
-disposed to think himself injured by malicious
-slanders and gross misrepresentations. And
-then, as he hath abundantly too much wit,
-especially for a great divine, he is apt to say
-such things as, though dull men do not well
-comprehend, they see reason enough to take
-offence at. Besides, he doth not sufficiently
-consult his ease or his interest by the observance
-of those forms and practices which are in
-use amongst the prudent part of his own order.
-This, no doubt, begets a reasonable disgust.
-And even his friends, I observe, can hardly
-restrain their censure of so great a singularity.
-“He is so much in his study, they say, that
-he hardly allows himself time to make his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
-appearance at a levee. Not considering
-that <i>illud unum ad laudem cum labore directum
-iter qui probaverunt prope jam soli in</i>
-<small>SCHOLIS</small> <i>sunt relicti</i>.” These infirmities, it
-must be owned, are very notorious in him; to
-which it might be added, that he is very indiscreet,
-sometimes, in the topics and turn of his
-conversation. His zeal for his <small>FRIEND</small> is so
-immoderate, that he takes fire even at the most
-distant reflection he hears cast upon him. And
-I doubt no consideration could withhold him
-from contradicting any man, let his quality and
-station be what it would, that should hazard a
-joke or an argument, in his company, against
-<span class="smcap">Religion</span>.</p>
-
-<p>I thought it but just to take notice of these
-weaknesses; and there may, perhaps, be some
-others, which I do not now recollect. Yet,
-on the whole, I will not deny that he may fairly
-pass for an able, a friendly, and even amiable
-man.</p>
-
-<p>This person then, such as he is, such, at
-least, as the zealots represent and you esteem
-him, you have the pleasure to call your <small>FRIEND</small>.
-Report says, too, that he has more than a common
-right to this <i>title</i>: that he has won it by
-many real services done to yourself. How<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
-doth the consciousness of all this fire you! and
-what pains do I see you take to restrain that
-impatient gratitude, which would relieve itself
-by breaking forth in the praises of such a
-friend!</p>
-
-<p>And yet—in spite of all these incitements
-from <i>esteem</i>, from <i>friendship</i>, and from <i>gratitude</i>,
-which might prompt you to some extravagance
-of commendation, such is the command
-you have of yourself, and so nicely do
-you understand what belongs to this intercourse
-of learned friends, that, in the instance before
-us, you do not, I think, appear to have exceeded
-the modest proportion even of a temperate
-and chaste praise.</p>
-
-<p>I assure you, Sir, I am so charmed with the
-beauty of this conduct, that, though it may
-give your modesty some pain, I cannot help
-uniting the several parts of it, and presenting
-the entire image to you in one piece.</p>
-
-<p>I meddle not with the argument of your
-elaborate dissertation. It is enough that your
-readers know it to be the same with that of another
-famous one in the D. L. They will
-know, then, that, among the various parts of
-that work, none was so likely as this to extort<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
-your applause. For it is universally, I suppose,
-agreed that, for a point in classical criticism,
-there is not the man living who hath a keener
-relish for it than yourself. And the general
-opinion is, that your honoured friend hath a
-sort of talent for this kind of writing. Some
-persons, I know, have talked at a strange rate.
-One or two I once met with were for setting
-him much above the modern, and on a level, at
-least, with the best of the old, critics. But this
-was going too far, as may appear to any
-that hath but attentively read and understood
-what the judicious Mr. <span class="smcap">Upton</span> and the learned
-Mr. <span class="smcap">Edwards</span> have, in their various books and
-pamphlets, well and solidly, and with great delight
-to many discerning persons, written on
-this subject. Yet still I must needs think him
-considerably above <span class="smcap">Minellius</span> and <span class="smcap">Farnaby</span>,
-and almost equal to old <span class="smcap">Servius</span> himself, except
-that, perhaps, one doth not find in him the
-singular <i>ingenuity</i><a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> you admire in the last of
-these critics.</p>
-
-<p>But be this as it will, it seems pretty well
-agreed, that the learned person, though so great
-a divine, is a very competent judge, and no
-mean proficient in classical criticism. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
-are many specimens of his talents in this way
-dispersed through the large and miscellaneous
-work of the D. L. But the greatest effort of
-his genius, they say, is seen in the explanation
-of the Sixth Book of the Ænëis. And, with
-all its defects, I can easily perceive you were so
-struck with it, that it was with the utmost reluctance
-you found yourself obliged, by the
-regard which every honest critic owes to truth,
-and by the superior delicacy of your purpose,
-to censure and expose it.</p>
-
-<p>Another man, I can easily imagine, would
-have said to himself before he had entered on
-this task, “This fine commentary, which sets
-the most finished part of the Ænëis, and indeed
-the whole poem, in so new and so advantageous
-a light, though not an essential in
-it, is yet a considerable ornament of a justly
-admired work. The author, too, is my particular
-friend; a man, the farthest of all
-others from any disposition to lessen the reputation
-of those he loves. The subject hath
-been well nigh exhausted by him; and the
-remarks I have to offer on his scheme are
-not, in truth, of that consequence as to
-make it a point of duty for me to lay aside
-the usual regards of friendship on their account:
-and, though <small>HE</small> hath greatness of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-mind enough not to resent this liberty, his
-impatient and ill-judging friends will be likely
-to take offence at it. The public itself, as
-little biassed as it seems to be in his favour,
-may be even scandalized at an attempt of
-this nature, to which no important interest
-of religion or learning seem to oblige me.”</p>
-
-<p>After this manner, I say, would a common
-man have been apt to reason with himself. But
-you, Sir, understand the <i>rights</i> of literary freedom,
-and the <i>offices</i> of sacred friendship, at
-another rate. The <i>one</i> authorize us to deliver
-our sentiments on any point of literature without
-reserve. And the <i>other</i> will not suffer you
-to dishonour the man you love, or require you
-to sully the purity of your own virtue, by a
-vicious and vulgar complaisance.</p>
-
-<p>Or, to give the account of the whole matter
-in your own memorable words:</p>
-
-<p>The Sixth Book of the Ænëis, you observe,
-though the most finished part of the twelve, is
-certainly obscure. “Here then is a field open
-for criticism, and all of us, who attempt to
-explain and illustrate Virgil, have reason to
-<small>HOPE</small> that we may make some <i>discoveries</i>,
-and to <small>FEAR</small> that we may fall into some <i>mistakes</i>;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-and this should induce us to conjecture
-with <i>freedom</i>, to propose with <i>diffidence</i>,
-and to dissent with <i>civility</i>. Ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις
-ἥδε βροτοῖσι, quoth old Hesiod<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Which shall I most admire, the dignity, the
-candour, or the prudence, that shine forth in
-this curious paragraph, which stands as a sort
-of preface to the refutation, as no doubt you
-designed it, of your friend’s work? “<i>You have
-reason to hope that</i>, after the unsuccessful
-efforts of the author of the D. L., <i>you may
-make some discoveries</i>.” In this declaration
-some may esteem you too sanguine. But I see
-nothing in it but a confidence very becoming a
-man of your talent at a <i>discovery</i>, and of your
-importance in the literary world. You add,
-indeed, as it were to temper this boldness, that
-“<i>you have reason to fear too that you may fall
-into some mistakes</i>.” This was rather too
-modest; only it would serve, at the same time,
-to intimate to your friend what he had to expect
-from the following detection of his errors.
-But you lead us to the consequence of these
-principles. “<i>They should induce us</i>, you say
-”<small>TO CONJECTURE WITH FREEDOM</small>.” Doubtless.
-And the dignity of your character is seen in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-taking it. For, shall the authority or friendship
-of any man stand in the way of my conjectures?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i20">——scilicet, ut non<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Sit mihi prima fides; et verè quod placet, ut non<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Acriter elatrem!<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>—“<span class="smcap">To propose with diffidence.</span>” Certainly
-very <i>prudent</i>, especially for one sort of
-<i>free-conjecturers</i>; and, by the way, no bad hint
-to the person you glance at, whose vice it is
-thought to be, above that of most other writers,
-never to trouble himself with composing a book
-on any question, of whose truth he is not previously
-and firmly convinced——“<span class="smcap">And to
-dissent with civility</span>.” A <i>candid</i> insinuation,
-which amounts to this, “That, when
-a writer hath done his best to shew his learning
-or his wit, the man at whose expence it
-is, especially if he be a friend, is, in consideration
-of such services, not to take it
-amiss.”</p>
-
-<p>I have been the freer to open the meaning
-of this introductory paragraph, because it lets
-us into the spirit with which you mean to
-carry yourself in this learned contention. For
-a <i>contention</i> it is to be, and to good purpose
-too, if old Hesiod be any authority. Ἀγαθὴ<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-δ’ ἔρις ἥδε βροτοῖσι, quoth old Hesiod. Though
-to make the application quite pat the maxim
-should have run thus, Ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις ἥδε φιλοῖσι,
-which I do not find in old Hesiod.</p>
-
-<p>However the reason of the thing extends to
-both. And as <i>friends</i> after all are but <i>men</i>,
-and sometimes none of the best neither, what
-need for standing on this distinction?</p>
-
-<p>Yet still the question returns, “Why so
-cool in the entrance of this friendly debate?
-Where had been the hurt of a little amicable
-parlying before daggers-drawing? If a man,
-in the true spirit of ancient chivalry, will needs
-break a lance with his friend, he might give
-him good words at least and shake hands with
-him before the onset. Something of this sort
-might have been expected, were it only to save
-the reputation of <i>dissenting with civility</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Now in answer to this question, which
-comes indeed to the point, and which I hear
-asked in all companies, I reply with much
-confidence, <i>first</i>, that the very foundation of
-it is laid in certain high fantastic notions about
-the duties of friendship, and in that vicious
-habit of civility that hath so long been prevalent
-among learned friends; both which props<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-and pillars of the cause I may presume with
-great modesty to have entirely overturned.</p>
-
-<p>But <i>secondly</i> and chiefly I say that the whole
-is an arrant misrepresentation; for that you
-have indeed proceeded in this affair, with all
-that civility and even friendliness that could
-in reason be expected from you: I mean so
-far as the sobriety and <i>Retenuë</i>, as the French
-term it (it is plain the virtue hath not been
-very common amongst us from our having no
-name to call it by) of a true critical friendship
-will allow.</p>
-
-<p>Now there are several ways by which a
-writer’s civility to his friend may appear without
-giving into the formal way of <i>address</i>: just
-as there are several ways of expressing his devotion
-to his patron, without observing the
-ordinary forms of <i>dedication</i>; of which, to note
-it by the way, the latest and best instances I
-have met with, are, “A certain thing prefatory
-to a learned work, entitled, <i>The Elements
-of Civil Law</i>,” and “Those curious
-two little paragraphs prefixed to <i>The Six
-Dissertations on different Subjects</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>You see the delicacy of the learned is improving
-in our days in more respects than one.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-And take my word for it, you have contributed
-your share to this good work. For as you
-began, so you conclude your volume with a
-master stroke of address, which will deserve
-the acknowledgment and imitation of all your
-brethren, as I now proceed distinctly and with
-great exactness of method to unfold.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The first</span> way of distinguishing a learned
-friend, without incurring the guilt of downright
-compliment, is by <i>writing on the same
-subject with him</i>. This is an obvious method
-of paying one’s court to a great writer. For it
-is in effect telling him that the public attention
-is raised to the argument he hath been debating;
-and that his credit hath even brought
-it into such vogue that any prate on the same
-subject is sure of a favourable reception. This
-I can readily suppose to have been your first
-motive for engaging in this controversy. And
-the practice is very frequent. So when a certain
-edition of <span class="smcap">Shakespear</span> appeared, though
-it had been but the amusement of the learned
-editor, every body went to work, in good
-earnest, on the great poet, and the public was
-presently over-run with editions and criticisms
-and illustrations of him. Thus too it fared with
-the several subjects treated in the D. L. Few
-were competent judges of the main argument,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-or disposed to give it a candid interpretation.
-But every smatterer had something to say to
-this or that occasional disquisition. Thus
-<span class="smcap">Sykes</span>, and <span class="smcap">Stebbing</span> grew immortal, and, as
-the poet says truly, <i>in their own despite</i>. And
-what but some faint glimmering of this <i>bright
-reversion</i>, which we will charitably hope may
-be still kept in reserve for them, could put it
-into the heads of such men as <span class="smcap">Worthington</span>,
-H. G. C.<a id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> and <span class="smcap">Peters</span>, to turn critics and
-commentators on the book of <span class="smcap">Job</span>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Secondly</span>, Though I acknowledge the full
-merit of this way of treating a learned friend,
-I am rather more taken with another, which is
-that <i>of writing against him</i>. For this demonstrates
-the esteem one hath of the author’s
-work, not only as it may seem to imply a little
-generous rivalry or indeed envy, from which infirmity
-a truly learned spirit is seldom quite
-free, but as it shews the answerer thought it
-worth <i>writing against</i>; which, let me assure
-you, is no vulgar compliment; as many living
-writers can testify, who to this hour are sadly
-lamenting that their ill fortune hath never permitted
-them to rise to this distinction. Now,
-in this view of the matter, I must take leave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
-to think that you have done a very substantial
-honour to the author of the famous <i>Discourse
-on the</i> <small>VI</small>th <i>book of Virgil</i>, in levelling so long
-and so elaborate a disputation against him.
-And <small>HE</small>, of all other men, ought to be of my
-mind, who to my certain knowledge hath
-never done thus much for one in a hundred of
-those learned persons whose principal end in
-commencing writers against him was to provoke
-him to this civility.</p>
-
-<p>But then, <small>THIRDLY</small>, this compliment of
-<i>writing against</i> a great author may be conveyed
-with that address, that he shall not appear, I
-mean to any but the more sagacious and discerning,
-to be <i>written against</i> at all. This
-curious feat of <i>leger-de-main</i> is performed <i>by
-glancing at his arguments without so much as
-naming the person or referring to him</i>. This
-I account the most delicate and flattering of
-all the arts of literary address, as it expresseth
-all the respect, I have taken notice of under
-the preceding article, heightened with a certain
-awe and fear of offence, which to a liberal
-mind, I should think, must be perfectly irresistible.
-It is with much pleasure I observe
-many examples of this kind in your truly candid
-dissertation, where without the least reference,
-or under the slight cover of—<i>some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-friends of Virgil say</i><a id="FNanchor_121" href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a>—<i>some commentators have
-thought</i><a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a>—<i>Virgil’s friends suppose</i><a id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a>—and the
-like, you have dexterously and happily slid in
-a censure of some of your friend’s principal
-reasonings. But, to be impartial, though you
-manage this matter with admirable grace, the
-secret is in many hands. And whatever be
-the cause, hath been more frequently employed
-in the case of the author of the D. L. than any
-other. I could mention, at least, a dozen
-famous writers, who, like the flatterers of Augustus,
-don’t chuse to look him full in the
-face, but artfully intimate their reverence of
-him by indirect glances. If I single out one
-of these from all the rest it is only to gratify
-the admirers of a certain eminent <small>PROFESSOR</small><a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a>
-who, as an Oxford friend writes me word,
-hath many delightful instances of this sort in
-his very edifying discourses on the <span class="smcap">Hebrew
-poetry</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Fourthly</span>, Another contrivance of near affinity
-to this, is, when you oppose his principles
-indeed, <i>but let his arguments quite alone</i>. Of
-this management a wary reader will discover
-many traces in your obliging discourse. And can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-any thing be more generous than to ease a man
-of the shame of seeing his own reasonings confuted,
-or even produced when the writer’s
-purpose requires him to pay no regard to them?
-Such tenderness, I think, though it is pretended
-to by others, can, of right, belong
-only to the true friend. But your kindness
-knows no bounds. For,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Fifthly</span>, Though you find yourself sometimes
-obliged to produce and confute his reasonings,
-<i>you take care to furnish him with better
-of your own</i>. The delicacy of this conduct
-lies in the good opinion, which is insinuated
-of the writer’s conclusion, and in the readiness
-which you shew to support it even in spite of
-himself. There is a choice instance in that
-part of your discourse, where agreeing with
-your friend that the punishments of <i>Tartarus</i>
-are properly <i>eternal</i>, you reject his reason for
-that conclusion, but supply him with many
-others in its stead.</p>
-
-<p>“This alone will not prove the eternity of
-punishments for, <i>&amp;c.</i>—<span class="smcap">But</span> if to this you
-add the Platonic doctrine, that very wicked
-spirits were never released from <i>Tartarus</i>,
-<small>AND</small> the silence of <i>Virgil</i> as to any dismission
-from that jail, <small>AND</small> the censure of the <i>Epicureans</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-who objected to religious systems
-the eternity of punishments,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>Æternas quoniam pœnas in morte timendum</i>;<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><small>AND</small> the general doctrine of the mythologists,
-<small>AND</small> the opinion of <span class="smcap">Servius</span>, that <span class="smcap">Virgil</span>
-was to be taken in this sense, we may conclude
-that the punishments in his Tartarus
-were probably eternal<a id="FNanchor_125" href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Never let men talk after this of the niggardliness
-of your friendship, when, though you
-take from him with one hand, you restore him
-five-fold with the other.</p>
-
-<p>After such an overflow of goodness, nothing
-I can now advance will seem incredible. I
-take upon me to affirm therefore,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sixthly</span>, That it is a mere calumny to say
-that you have contented yourself, though you
-very well might, with mere <i>negative</i> encomiums.
-You can venture on occasion to <i>quote
-from your friend in form</i>, and, as it should
-seem, with some <i>apparent approbation</i>. An
-instance is now before me. You cite what the
-author of the D. L. says of “<i>the transformation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-of the ships into sea deities</i>, by which,
-says he, <span class="smcap">Virgil</span> would insinuate, I suppose,
-the great advantage of cultivating a naval
-power, such as extended commerce and the
-dominion of the ocean: which in poetical
-language is becoming <i>deities of the sea</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>To which you add, “In <i>favour</i> of this opinion
-it may be further observed, that <span class="smcap">Augustus</span>
-owed his empire in a great measure
-to his naval victories<a id="FNanchor_126" href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Now can any thing be civiler than this, or
-more expressive of that amiable turn of mind,
-which disposes a man to help forward a lame
-argument of his friend, and give it the needful
-support of his authority? For it hath been
-delivered as a maxim by the nice observers of
-decorum, that wherever you would compliment
-another on his opinion, you should
-always endeavour to add something of your
-own that may insinuate at least some little defect
-in it. This management takes of the appearance
-of <i>flattery</i>, a vice which the Latin writers,
-alluding to this frequency of unqualified assent,
-have properly enough expressed by the word
-<span class="smcap">Assentatio</span>. But catch you tripping in this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-way if one can. It is plain you went on this
-just principle in the instance before us, which
-otherwise, let me tell you, I should have taken
-for something like an attempt towards downright
-adulation. As here qualified, I set it
-down for another instance of just compliment,
-more direct indeed than the other <i>five</i>, yet still
-with that graceful obliquity which they who
-know the world, expect in this sort of commerce.
-And I may further observe, that you
-are not singular in the use of this mode of celebration.
-Many even of the enemies of this
-author have obligingly enough employed it
-when they wanted to confirm their own notions
-by his, or rather to shew their parts in first
-catching a hint from him, and then, as they
-believe, improving upon it—Still I have
-greater things in view. For,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Seventhly</span>, You not only with the highest
-address insinuate a compliment in the way
-of citation, but you once or twice <i>express
-it in full form</i>, and with all the circumstance
-of panegyrical approbation. Having mentioned
-the case of the infants in Virgil’s purgatory,
-which hath so much perplexed his learned
-commentators, you rise at once into the following
-encomium. “It is an <i>ingenious</i> conjecture
-proposed in the D. L. that the poet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-might design to discountenance the cursed
-practice of exposing and murdering infants.”</p>
-
-<p>This was very liberal, and I began to think
-you had forgotten yourself a little in so explicit
-a declaration. But the next paragraph relieved
-me. “It might be added, that Virgil had
-perhaps <i>also</i> in view to please Augustus, who
-was desirous of encouraging matrimony and
-the education of children, and extremely
-intent upon repeopling Italy which had been
-exhausted by the civil wars<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a>.” It is plain
-you have still in your eye that sage rule which
-the men of manners lay down, of <i>qualifying</i>
-your civilities. So that I let this pass without
-farther observation. Only I take leave to warn
-you against the too frequent use of this artifice,
-which but barely satisfies for calling your
-friend’s notion “<i>an ingenious conjecture</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Not but are there others who see this contrivance
-in another light, and treat it as an art
-of <i>damning with faint praise</i>; a censure which
-one of the zealot friends presumes to cast, with
-much injustice and little knowledge of the
-world, on the very leader and pride of our
-party. Whereas I deliver it for a most certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-truth, that the fainter and feebler our praise
-of any man is, just so much the better will it
-be received by all companies, even by the generality
-of those who call themselves his best
-friends. And so apprehensive indeed am I of
-this nice humour in mankind, that I am not
-sure if the very slight things I am forced to say
-of yourself, though merely to carry on the purpose
-of this address, will not by certain persons,
-inwardly at least, be ill taken. And
-with this needful apology for myself I proceed
-to celebrate,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Eighthly</span>, The last and highest instance of
-your civilities to your admired friend, which
-yet I hope to vindicate from any reasonable
-suspicion of flattery; I presumed to say in the
-foregoing article that you had <i>once or twice</i>
-hazarded even a direct compliment on the person
-whose system you oppose. I expressed
-myself with accuracy. There is <i>one other</i> place
-in your dissertation, where you make this
-sacrifice to friendship or to custom. The passage
-is even wrought up into a resemblance of
-that unqualified adulation, which I condemn
-so much, and from which, in general, your
-writings are perfectly free. I could almost
-wish for your credit to suppress this one obnoxious
-paragraph. But it runs thus,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span></p>
-
-<p>“That the subterraneous adventures of
-Æneas were intended by Virgil to represent
-the <i>initiation</i> of his heroe, is an <i>elegant</i> conjecture,
-which hath been laid before the
-public, and set forth to the best advantage
-<i>by a learned friend</i><a id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>I confess to you I did not know at first sight
-what to do with the two high-flown epithets,
-<i>elegant</i> and <i>learned</i>, which stand so near together
-in one sentence. Such accumulated
-praises had well-nigh overset my system. And
-I began with much solicitude to consider how
-I should be able to reconcile this escape of
-your pen with your general practice. But
-taking a little time to look about me, I presently
-spied a way of extricating both of us
-from this difficulty. For hang it, thought I,
-if this notion of the heroe’s adventures in the
-infernal regions be <i>elegant</i>, it is but a conjecture;
-and so poor a matter as this were hardly
-worth pursuing, as the author of the D. L.
-hath done, through almost a fourth part of a
-very sizeable volume.</p>
-
-<p>And then as to the term <i>elegant</i>, to be sure
-it hath a good sound; but more than a <i>third</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
-part of this choice volume of yours, I observed,
-is employed in making appear that the conjecture,
-whatever it be, hath not the least feature
-of <i>truth</i> in it. And <i>elegance</i>, altogether devoid
-of truth, was, I concluded, a very pitiful
-thing, and indeed no very intelligible encomium.
-Well, but let there be as little truth
-as you will, in this conjecture, still it <i>hath
-been set forth to the best advantage</i>, and to
-crown all <i>by a learned friend</i>. Here a swarm
-of fresh difficulties attacked me. <i>Sed nil desperandum
-te duce.</i> For why talk of <i>advantage</i>,
-when the conjecture after all would not bear
-the handling? It was but mighty little (your
-friendship would not let you do more) which
-you had brought against it. And the conjecture
-I saw, was shrunk to nothing, and is
-never likely to rise again into any shape or
-substance. So that when you added <i>by a
-learned friend</i>, I could not for my life, help
-laughing. Surely, thought I, the reverend
-person tends on this occasion to be pleasant.——Indeed
-you often are so with a very
-good grace, but I happened not to expect it
-just at this moment.—For what <i>learning</i>
-worth speaking of could there be in the support
-of a notion, which was so easily overturned
-without any?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span></p>
-
-<p>You may be sure I mean no reflection in
-these words. Nobody questions your erudition.
-But it was not your fortune or your
-choice to make a shew of it in this discourse.
-The propriety of the epithet <i>learned</i>, then, did
-not evidently and immediately appear.</p>
-
-<p>However, as I knew there was in truth no
-small quantity of learning in the piece referred
-to, and that the author of the D. L. whatever
-<span class="smcap">Bate</span>, and <span class="smcap">Peters</span>, and <span class="smcap">Jackson</span>, may say or
-insinuate, is unquestionably, and to a very
-competent degree, learned, I began to take the
-matter a little more seriously. And, upon looking
-attentively at the words a second time, I
-thought a very natural account might be given
-of them upon other principles. For, as to the
-substantive <i>friend</i>, why might not that for once
-be put in for your own sake as well as his?
-The advantages of friendship are reciprocal.
-And though it be very clear to other people
-which is the gainer by this intercourse, who
-knows but Dr. <span class="smcap">Jortin</span>, in his great modesty,
-might suppose the odds to lie on his own side?</p>
-
-<p>And then for <i>learned</i>, which had embarrassed
-me so much, I bethought myself at last
-there was not much in that, this attribute having
-been long prostituted on every man who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-pretends, in any degree, to the profession of
-letters.</p>
-
-<p>So that, on the whole, though I must still
-reckon this for an instance, amongst others, of
-that due measure of respect with which your
-politeness teaches you to treat your friends, yet
-I see no reason for charging it with any excess
-of civility.</p>
-
-<p>And now, Sir, having been at all this pains
-to justify you from the two contrary censures
-of having done <i>too little</i> and <i>too much</i>, let us
-see how the account stands. Malice itself, I
-think, must confess that you have not been
-lavish of your encomiums. You have even
-dispensed them with a reserve, which, though
-I admire extremely, will almost expose you to
-the imputation of <i>parsimony</i>. And yet, on the
-other hand, when we compute the number and
-estimate the value of your applauses, we shalt
-see cause to correct this censure. For, from
-the <small>EIGHT</small> articles I have so carefully set down,
-and considered, it appears at length that you
-have done all due honour to your friend, and
-in ways the most adapted to do him honour.
-That is to say, <i>You have adopted his subject—You
-have written against him—You have
-glanced at him—You have spared his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-arguments—You have lent him some of your own—You
-have quoted him—You have called his
-conjecture ingenious—Nay elegant—And you
-have called himself learned</i>, and, what is more,
-<i>your friend</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And if all this will not satisfy him, or rather
-his friends (for I hope, and partly believe, he
-himself thinks nothing of this whole matter), I
-know not for my part what will. I am sure
-(and that should be your satisfaction, as it is
-mine) that you have gone as far as was consistent
-with the <i>delicacy</i> of friendship (which
-may reasonably imply in it a little jealousy),
-and with the virtuous consciousness of that
-importance which writers of your class ought
-to be of to themselves. And I hope never to
-see the day when you shall be induced by any
-considerations to compliment any man breathing
-at the expence of these two virtues.</p>
-
-<p>And here, on a view of this whole matter,
-let me profess the pleasure I take in observing
-that you (and I have remarked it in some
-others), who have so constantly those soft
-words of <i>candour</i>, <i>goodness</i>, and <i>charity</i> in your
-mouth, and whose soul, one would think, was
-ready to melt itself into all the weaknesses of
-this character, should yet have force enough<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-not to relent at the warmest influences of
-<i>friendship</i>. Men may see by this instance that
-<i>charity</i> is not that unmanly enfeebling virtue
-which some would represent it, when, though
-ready on fit occasions to resolve and open itself
-to a <i>general</i> candour, it shuts up the heart close
-and compact, and impregnable to any <i>particular</i>
-and personal attachment.</p>
-
-<p>I take much delight in this pleasing contemplation.
-Yet, as our best virtues, when pushed
-to a certain degree, are on the very point of
-becoming vices, you are not to wonder that
-every one hath not the discernment or the
-justice to do you right. And to see, in truth,
-the malignity of human nature, and the necessity
-there was for you to inculcate in your <i>third</i>
-Discourse, <i>The duty of judging candidly and
-favourably of others</i>, I will not conceal from
-you, at parting, what hath been suggested to
-me by many persons to whom I communicated
-the design of this address. “They said,” besides
-other things which I have occasionally
-obviated in the course of this letter, “that the
-excellent person whom you have allowed yourself
-to treat with so much indignity and disrespect
-(I need not take notice that I use the
-very terms of the objectors), in this poor and
-disingenuous criticism upon him, had set you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-an example of a very different sort, which you
-ought in common equity, and even decency,
-to have followed.” They observe that his own
-pen never expatiates more freely, and with
-more pleasure, than when it finds or takes an
-occasion to celebrate the virtues of some deserving
-friend. They own the natural warmth
-and benevolence of his temper is even liable to
-some excess on these inviting occasions. And
-for an instance they referred me to a paragraph
-in the notes on <i>Julian</i>, which, though I know
-you do not forget, I shall here set down as it
-stands in the last edition. He had just been
-touching a piece of ecclesiastical history. “But
-this,” says he, “I leave with Julian’s adventures
-to my learned friend Mr. <span class="smcap">Jortin</span>,
-who, I hope, will soon oblige the public with
-his curious Dissertations on Ecclesiastical
-Antiquity, composed like his Life, not in the
-spirit of <i>controversy</i>, nor, what is worse, of
-<i>party</i>, but of <i>truth</i> and <i>candour</i><a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Here, said they insultingly, is a specimen of
-that truly liberal spirit with which one learned
-friend should exert himself when he would do
-honour to another. Will all the volumes which
-the profound ecclesiastical remarker hath published,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-or ever will publish, do him half the
-credit with posterity as this single stroke, by
-which his name and virtues are here adorned
-and ushered into the acquaintance of the public?
-And will you still pretend to vindicate
-him from the scorn which every honest man
-must have for him, after seeing how unworthily
-he requites this service by his famous <span class="smcap">Sixth
-Dissertation</span> in this new volume?</p>
-
-<p>This, and a great deal more to the same purpose,
-was said by them in their tragical way.
-I need not hint to you, after the clear exposition
-I have given of my own sentiments, how
-little weight their rhetoric had on me, and how
-easily I turned aside this impotent, though invenomed,
-invective from falling on your fame
-and memory. For the <i>compliment</i> they affect
-to magnify so much, let every candid reader
-judge of it for himself. But, as much had
-been said in this debate concerning <small>FRIENDSHIP</small>,
-and the persons with whom it was most proper
-to contract it, I found myself something struck
-with the concluding observation of one of these
-rhetorical declaimers. As it was delivered in a
-language you love, and is, besides, a passage
-not much blown upon by the dealers in such
-scraps, I have thought it might, perhaps, afford
-you some amusement. He did not say where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-he found it, and you would not like it the
-better if he had, but, as I remember, it was
-delivered in these words: Ἐμοὶ πρὸς φιλοσόφους
-ἐστὶ φιλία· πρὸς μέν τοι ΣΟΦΙΣΤΑΣ, ἢ ΓΡΑΜΜΑΤΙΣΤΑΣ,
-ἢ τοιοῦτο γένος ἕτερον ΑΝΘΡΩΠΩΝ<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-ΚΑΚΟΔΑΙΜΟΝΩΝ, ὄυτε ΝΥΝ ΕΣΤΙ
-ΦΙΛΙΑ ΜΗΤΕ ΥΣΤΕΡΟΝ ΠΟΤΕ ΓΕΝΟΙΤΟ.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><i>Lincoln’s-Inn,<br />
-Nov. 25, 1755.</i></p>
-
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="A_LETTER_TO_THE_REV_DR_LELAND">
-<small>A</small><br />
-LETTER<br />
-<small>TO</small><br />
-<span class="large">THE REV. DR. LELAND.</span><br />
-<br />
-<small>FIRST PRINTED IN 1764.</small>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">
-<small>A</small><br />
-LETTER<br />
-<small>TO THE</small><br />
-<span class="large">REV. DR. THOMAS LELAND,</span><br />
-<span class="medium">FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN:</span><br />
-<small>IN WHICH</small><br />
-<span class="medium">HIS LATE DISSERTATION<br />
-ON THE PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN ELOQUENCE<br />
-IS CRITICISED;</span><br />
-<small>AND</small><br />
-<span class="medium">THE BISHOP OF GLOUCESTER’S<br />
-<i>Idea of the Nature and Character of an
-inspired Language</i>, as delivered in his
-Lordship’s <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>,</span><br />
-<small>IS VINDICATED</small><br />
-<span class="medium">From <small>ALL</small> the Objections of the learned Author
-of the <span class="smcap">Dissertation</span>.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span></h2>
-
-<h2>A LETTER TO THE REV. DR. LELAND.</h2>
-
-<p>REV. SIR,</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">I have</span> read your <span class="smcap">Dissertation</span> <i>on the principles
-of human Eloquence</i>, and shall very
-readily, I dare say, be indulged in the liberty,
-I am going to take, of giving you my free
-thoughts upon it. I shall do it, with all the
-regard that is due from one scholar to another;
-and even with all the civility which may be
-required <small>ONE</small>, who hath his reasons for addressing
-you, in this public manner, without
-a name.</p>
-
-<p>You entitle your work <i>A Dissertation on
-the principles of Eloquence</i>: but the real subject
-of it, is an <i>Opinion</i>, or <i>Paradox</i>, as you
-chuse to term it, delivered by the Bishop of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-<i>Gloucester</i> in his late discourse <i>on Grace</i>.
-This opinion, indeed, concerns, or rather, in
-your ideas, subverts, <i>the very principles</i> of
-Eloquence, which your office, it seems, in a
-learned society obliged you to maintain: so that
-you cannot be blamed for giving some attention
-to the ingenious Prelate’s paradox, which
-so incommodiously came in your way. Only
-the more intelligent of your hearers might possibly
-think it strange that, in a set of rhetorical
-lectures, addressed to them, the <i>Controversial</i>
-part should so much take the lead of the <i>Didactic</i>:
-or rather, that the <i>Didactic</i> part should
-stand quite still, while the <i>Controversial</i> keeps
-pacing it, with much alacrity, from one end
-of your Dissertation to the other.</p>
-
-<p>Yet neither, on second thoughts, can you
-be blamed for this conduct, which one way or
-other might serve to the instruction of your
-young auditory; if not in <i>the principles of
-Rhetoric</i>, yet in a better thing, <i>the principles
-of Logic</i>. It might, further, serve to another
-purpose, not unworthy the regard of a rhetoric
-lecturer. The subject of Eloquence has been
-so exhausted in the fine writings of antiquity,
-and, what is worse, has been so hackneyed in
-modern compilations from them, that your
-discourse wanted to be enlivened by the poignant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
-controversial air, you have given to it,
-and to be made important, by bringing an
-illustrious character into the scene.</p>
-
-<p>All this I am ready to say in your vindication,
-if your conduct may be thought to require
-any. Having, therefore, nothing to object to
-the <i>general design</i>, or <i>mode</i> of your dissertation,
-I shall confine myself entirely to the
-<small>MATTER</small> of it, after acquainting the reader, in
-few words, with the occasion and subject Of
-this debate.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop of <i>Gloucester</i>, in late theological
-treatise on <i>the doctrine of Grace</i>, which
-required him to speak fully to the subject of
-<i>inspiration</i>, found it necessary to obviate an
-objection to what he conceived to be the right
-notion of <i>inspired scripture</i>, which had been
-supported by some ingenious men, and very
-lately by Dr. <span class="smcap">Middleton</span>. The objection is
-delivered by the learned Doctor, in these
-words.</p>
-
-<p>“If we allow the gift [of inspired languages]
-to be lasting, we must conclude that some
-at least of the books of scripture were in this
-inspired Greek. But we should naturally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-expect to find an inspired language to be
-such as is worthy of God; that is, pure,
-clear, noble and affecting, even beyond the
-force of common speech; since nothing can
-come from God but what is perfect in its
-kind. In short, the purity of <span class="smcap">Plato</span>, and
-the eloquence of <span class="smcap">Cicero</span>. Now, if we
-try the apostolic language by this rule, we
-shall be so far from ascribing it to God, that
-we shall scarcely think it worthy of man,
-that is, of the liberal and polite; it being
-utterly rude and barbarous, and abounding
-with every fault that can possibly deform
-a language. And though some writers,
-prompted by a false zeal, have attempted to
-defend the purity of the Scripture-Greek,
-their labour has been idly employed<a id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a>.” Thus
-far the learned <span class="smcap">Doctor</span>.</p>
-
-<p>‘These triumphant observations,’ says the
-Bishop, ‘are founded on two propositions, both
-of which he takes for granted, and yet neither
-of them is true:</p>
-
-<p>‘The one, That an inspired language must
-needs be a language of perfect eloquence;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span></p>
-
-<p>‘The other, That eloquence is something
-congenial and essential to human speech<a id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Bishop</span> then undertakes to shew the falshood
-of these two propositions. <span class="smcap">You</span>, Sir, contend
-for the truth of the <i>latter</i>: and controvert the
-principles on which the Bishop would confute
-the <i>former</i>. That the reader may be enabled
-to judge for himself between you, I shall quote
-his Lordship’s own words, paragraph by paragraph,
-so far as any thing said by him is controverted
-by you; and shall then endeavour,
-with all care, to pick up the loose ends of your
-argument, as I find them any where <i>come up</i>
-in the several chapters of your Dissertation;
-intermixing, as I go along, such reflexions of
-my own, as the occasion may suggest.</p>
-
-<p>‘With regard to the <small>FIRST</small> proposition (resumes
-the Bishop) I will be bold to affirm,
-that were the <span class="smcap">Style</span> of the New Testament
-exactly such as his [Dr. <span class="smcap">Middleton’s</span>] very
-exaggerated account of if would persuade us to
-believe, namely that it is <i>utterly rude and barbarous,
-and abounding with every fault that
-can possibly deform a language</i>, this is so far
-from proving such language not divinely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-inspired, that it is one certain mark of this
-original<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>By the manner, in which the learned Bishop
-introduces this <i>affirmation</i>, one sees that he
-foresaw very clearly it would be esteemed a
-<i>bold</i> one. Nay, in another place<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a>, he even
-takes to himself the shame, with which some
-readers, he well knew, would be forward
-enough to cover him, and in one word confesses
-his general notion of eloquence to be a
-<span class="smcap">Paradox</span>: <i>which yet</i>, says he, <i>like so many
-others, I have had the odd fortune to advance,
-will be seen to be only another name,
-for</i> <span class="smcap">Truth</span>. After this concession, it had been
-more generous in you to have omitted some
-invidious passages; such as that where you
-say, <i>the Bishop in his reply to this objection</i>
-[of Dr. <span class="smcap">Middleton</span>] <i>seems to have displayed
-that</i> <small>BOLD OPPOSITION TO THE GENERAL OPINIONS
-OF MANKIND</small>, <i>by which his learned labours
-are distinguished</i>; Intr. p. ii. And again
-in p. vii. where you speak of his principles as
-<i>paradoxical</i>, and implying <small>AN HARDY OPPOSITION
-TO THE GENERAL SENSE OF MANKIND</small>.</p>
-
-<p>But let the <i>boldness</i> of the Bishop’s principles
-be what it will, there is small hurt done,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
-provided they turn out, what he seems persuaded
-they will, only <i>truths</i>. Let us attend
-his Lordship, then, in the proof of his <small>FIRST</small>
-Paradox.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will not pretend, says he, to point out
-which books of the N. T. were, or were not,
-composed by those who had the Greek tongue
-thus miraculously infused into them; but
-this I will venture to say, that the style of a
-writer so inspired, who had not (as these
-writers had not) afterwards cultivated his
-knowledge of the language on the principles
-of Grecian eloquence, would be precisely
-such as we find it in the books of the New
-Testament.</p>
-
-<p>‘For, if this only be allowed, which no one,
-I think, will contest with me, that a strange
-language acquired by illiterate men, in the
-ordinary way, would be full of the idioms of
-their native tongue, just as the Scripture-Greek
-is observed to be full of Syriasms, and
-Hebraisms; how can it be pretended, by
-those who reflect upon the nature of language,
-that a strange tongue divinely infused
-into illiterate men, like that at the day of
-Pentecost, could have any other properties
-and conditions<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a>?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span></p>
-
-<p>Here, the features of this bold paradox begin
-to soften a little. We are something reconciled
-to it, 1. by being told, what the <i>rudeness
-and barbarity</i> is, which is affirmed to be <i>one
-certain mark</i> of an inspired language, namely,
-<i>its being full of the idioms of the native
-tongue</i> of the inspired writer: And 2. by being
-told, that these idioms are equally to be expected
-whether the new language be infused
-by divine inspiration, or acquired by illiterate
-men in the ordinary way. In the <i>latter</i> case,
-it is presumed, and surely with reason enough
-(because experience uniformly attests the fact),
-that a strange language, so learnt, would
-abound in the native idioms of the learner:
-All that remains is to shew, that the event
-would be the same, in the <i>former</i>. The Bishop
-then applies himself, in order, to this
-task.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let us weigh these cases impartially. Every
-language consists of two distinct parts; the
-single terms, and the phrases and idioms.
-The first, as far as concerns appellatives especially,
-is of mere arbitrary imposition, though
-on artificial principles common to all men:
-The second arises insensibly, but constantly,
-from the manners, customs, and tempers of
-those to whom the language is vernacular;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-and so becomes, though much less arbitrary
-(as what the Grammarians call <i>congruity</i> is
-more concerned in this part than in the
-other), yet various and different as the several
-tribes and nations of mankind. The first
-therefore is unrelated to every thing but to
-the genius of language in general; the second
-hath an intimate connexion with the fashions,
-notions, and opinions of that people only, to
-whom the language is native.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let us consider then the constant way which
-illiterate men take to acquire the knowledge
-of a foreign tongue. Do they not make it
-their principal, and, at first, their only study,
-to treasure up in their memory the signification
-of the terms? Hence, when they come
-to talk or write in the speech thus acquired,
-their language is found to be full of their own
-native idioms. And thus it will continue, till
-by long use of the strange tongue, and especially
-by long acquaintance with the owners
-of it, they have imbibed the particular genius
-of the language.</p>
-
-<p>‘Suppose then this foreign tongue, instead
-of being thus gradually introduced into the
-minds of these illiterate men, was instantaneously
-infused into them; the operation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
-(though not the very mode of operating)
-being the same, must not the effect be the
-same, let the cause be never so different?
-Without question. The divine impression
-must be made either by fixing the terms or
-single words only and their signification in
-the memory; as for instance, Greek terms
-corresponding to the Syriac or Hebrew; or
-else, together with that simple impression,
-another must be made, to inrich the mind
-with all the ideas which go towards the composing
-the phrases and idioms of the language
-so inspired: But this latter impression seems
-to require, or rather indeed implies, a previous
-one, of the tempers, fashions, and opinions
-of the people to whom the language is
-native, upon the minds of them to whom the
-language is thus imparted; because the phrase
-and idiom arises from, and is dependent on,
-those manners: and therefore the force of expression
-can be understood only in proportion
-to the knowledge of the manners: and understood
-they were to be; the Recipients of this
-spiritual gift being not organical canals, but
-rational Dispensers. So that this would be a
-waste of miracles without a sufficient cause;
-the Syriac or Hebrew idiom, to which the
-Disciples were enabled of themselves to adapt
-the words of the Greek, or any other language,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
-abundantly serving every useful purpose,
-all which centered in giving <small>CLEAR
-INTELLIGENCE</small>. We conclude, therefore, that
-what was thus inspired was the <span class="smcap">Terms</span>, together
-with that grammatic congruity, which is
-dependant thereon. In a word, to suppose such
-kind of inspired knowledge of <i>strange tongues</i>
-as includes all the native peculiarities, which,
-if you will, you may call their <i>elegancies</i>;
-(for the more a language is coloured by the
-character and manners of the native users,
-the more elegant it is esteemed) to suppose
-this, is, as I have said, an ignorant fancy,
-and repugnant to reason and experience.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, from what has been observed, it follows,
-that if the style of the N. T. were indeed
-derived from a language divinely infused
-as on the day of Pentecost, it must be just
-such, with regard to its style, as, in fact, we
-find it to be; that is to say, Greek words very
-frequently delivered in Syriac and Hebrew
-idiom.</p>
-
-<p>‘The conclusion from the whole is this, that
-<i>nominal</i> or <i>local</i> barbarity of style (for that
-this attribute, when applied to style, is no
-more than nominal or local, will be clearly
-shewn under our next head) is so far from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
-being an objection to its miraculous acquisition,
-that it is one mark of such extraordinary
-original<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>I have given this long quotation together,
-that the reader may comprehend at one view the
-drift and coherence of the Bishop’s argument:
-which is so clearly explained that what force it
-hath, can receive no addition from any comment
-of mine upon it.</p>
-
-<p>It is true, this force appears to you no
-mighty matter—“We are told, you say, that,
-in order to convey clear intelligence to a foreigner,
-nothing more is necessary, than to
-use the <i>words</i> of his language adapted to the
-<i>idiom</i> of our own. But shall we always find
-correspondent words in his language<a id="FNanchor_136" href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a>?”</p>
-
-<p>Shall <i>we always find correspondent words</i>?—Not
-always, <i>perfectly</i> correspondent. Where
-does the Bishop say, we shall? Or, how was
-it to his purpose to say it? He does indeed
-speak of <i>such a correspondency of terms</i>, and
-chiefly <i>of such an adaption of the terms of
-one language to the idiom of another</i>, as shall
-abundantly serve to give <i>clear intelligence</i>.
-And this is all he had occasion to say.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span></p>
-
-<p>Well, but an exact correspondency of terms
-is material. To what? To give <i>clear intelligence</i>?
-But if this be true, no clear intelligence
-can possibly be given in any translation
-from one language into another; for, in all
-translations whatever, it is necessary to render
-some words by others, that are not perfectly
-correspondent. You will scarcely deny that
-our English translation of the Gospels conveys,
-in general, <i>clear intelligence</i> to the English
-reader, though many terms are used in it, and
-were of necessity to be used, that do not perfectly
-and adequately correspond to the Greek
-terms, employed by the sacred writers. Without
-doubt it was your purpose to convey <i>clear
-intelligence</i> to your English reader in the
-elegant translations, they say, you have made
-of <span class="smcap">Demosthenes</span>: and yet doubtless you will
-acknowledge that many words of the Athenian
-orator are not perfectly correspondent
-to those employed by you in your version
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>What follows from this? Why, either that
-all translations must be exploded and set aside
-as insufficient to give clear intelligence, or that
-we must accept them, with all their unavoidable
-imperfections, as, in general, sufficiently
-representative of the sense of their originals,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
-though in some particulars that sense be inadequately
-conveyed to us.</p>
-
-<p>But how then, you will say, shall we gain a
-clear and perfect intelligence of such particulars?
-Why in the way, which common sense
-suggests; by inquiring, if we are able, what
-the precise meaning is of those terms of the
-original language, to which the translated
-terms are thus imperfectly correspondent. And
-if this be an inconvenience, ’tis an inconvenience
-necessarily attending every translation
-in the world, in which a writer would express
-the mixed modes denoted by the words of any
-other. For supposing the Greek tongue, infused
-by divine inspiration into the sacred
-writers, to have been that of <span class="smcap">Plato</span> or <span class="smcap">Demosthenes</span>
-himself, you will hardly pretend
-that it could have furnished them with Greek
-terms perfectly expressive of such compound
-ideas as certain Syriac or Hebrew terms expressed,
-and of which their subject obliged
-them to give, as far as the nature of the case
-would permit, <i>clear intelligence</i>. So that I
-cannot for my life comprehend the drift of that
-short question, <i>Shall we always find correspondent
-terms in a foreign language?</i> or,
-the pertinence of your learned comment on
-the text of <span class="smcap">Cicero’s</span> letter to <span class="smcap">Servius</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span></p>
-
-<p>I am sensible indeed, that, if the <i>terms</i> only
-of the new language were divinely infused,
-<i>these</i>, whether perfectly correspondent or not,
-would be insufficient of themselves to give clear
-intelligence. But the Bishop supposes more
-than this to be infused; for, <i>what was inspired,
-he tells us, was the terms</i>, <small>TOGETHER</small> <i>with that
-grammatic congruity which is dependent
-thereon</i>. Now this knowledge of the <i>grammatic
-congruity</i> of any tongue, superadded to
-a knowledge of its <i>terms</i>, would methinks enable
-a writer to express himself in it, for the
-most part, <i>intelligibly</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I confess, the Bishop speaks—<i>of fixing the
-terms or single words</i> <small>ONLY</small>, <i>and their signification,
-in the memory</i>—But then he does
-not mean to exclude the <i>grammatic congruity</i>
-in the use of them, which, as we have seen, he
-expressly requires in the very same paragraph,
-but merely to expose the notion of the <i>phrases
-and idioms</i> being required, too. His Lordship
-speaks of the <i>terms, or single words</i> <small>ONLY</small>, in
-opposition to <i>phrases and idioms</i>: you seem
-to speak of <i>terms, or single words</i> <small>ONLY</small>, in
-opposition to <i>systematic congruity</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I say, you <i>seem</i> so to speak: for, otherwise,
-I know not what to make of all you say concerning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-the insufficiency of the <i>terms only</i> of
-any language to give intelligence. And yet,
-in what follows, you <i>seem</i> to do justice to the
-Bishop, and to admit that, besides the <i>terms</i>,
-a <i>grammatic congruity in the use of them</i> was
-divinely inspired. For you go on to observe,
-“That the real purport of almost every sentence,
-in every language, is not to be learned
-from the signification of detached words, <i>and
-their grammatical congruity</i>, even where
-their signification may be expressed by correspondent
-words in another language<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>And here, Sir, your learning expatiates
-through several pages: the purpose of all which
-is to shew, that, if the <i>terms</i> of one language,
-though <i>congruously used</i>, be strictly adapted
-to the <i>idiom</i> of another, still they would give
-no intelligence, or at least a very obscure one;
-as you endeavour to prove by a <i>decent</i> instance
-taken from your countryman, <span class="smcap">Swift</span>, in his
-dotages; and another, given by yourself in a
-literal version of a long passage of a sacred
-writer. It is true, in this last instance, you do
-not confine yourself to the strict observance of
-<i>grammatic congruity</i>. If you had done this,
-it would have appeared, from your own instance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-that <i>intelligence</i> might have been given,
-and with tolerable <i>clearness</i> too, even in a literal
-version.</p>
-
-<p>But be it allowed, that, if the terms of one
-language, even though a congruous construction
-be observed, be constantly and strictly
-adapted to the <i>idioms</i> of another, the expression
-will still, many times, be very dark
-and obscure: how is this <i>obscurity</i> to be prevented?
-Take what language you will for the
-conveyance instruction, it will be necessary
-for the reader or hearer to gain a competent
-knowledge of its idioms and phraseology, before
-he can receive the full benefit of it. So that,
-unless there had been a language in the world,
-native to all nations, and in the strictest sense
-of the word <i>universal</i>, I see not how inspiration
-itself could remedy this inconvenience. Suppose,
-as I said before, that the inspired language
-in which the Apostles wrote had been the
-purest Greek, still its <i>idiomatic phraseology</i>
-had been as strange and obscure to all such to
-whom that language was not native, as the
-Syriac or Hebrew idioms, by which the Apostolic
-Greek is now supposed to be so much
-darkened.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span></p>
-
-<p>I conclude upon the whole, that nothing you
-have said overturns, or so much as affects, the
-learned Prelate’s notion of divine inspiration,
-<i>as conveying only the terms and single words
-of one language, corresponding to those of another,
-together with that grammatic congruity
-in the use of them which is dependant thereon</i>.
-This <i>first and grand principle</i>, as you call it,
-of the Bishop’s new theory, <i>is such</i>, you say, <i>as
-no critic or grammarian can admit</i><a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a>. On the
-contrary, I must presume to think, because I
-have now shewn, that no critic or grammarian,
-who deserves the name, can reasonably object
-to this <i>principle</i>, as it allows all that is necessary
-to be supposed of an inspired language,
-its sufficiency to give clear intelligence: so
-<i>clear</i>, that, had the idioms of the new language
-been inspired too, it could not, in the
-general view of Providence, who intended this
-intelligence for the use of all people and languages,
-have been clearer.</p>
-
-<p>But your unfavourable sentiment of the Bishop’s
-principle arises from your misconception
-of the <i>circumstances</i>, <i>abilities</i>, and <i>qualifications</i>
-of the Apostles, when they addressed
-themselves to the work of their ministry, and
-especially to the work of composing books for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-the instruction of the faithful in this originally
-inspired language.</p>
-
-<p>When the Greek language was first infused,
-it would, no doubt, be full of their native
-phrases, or rather it would be wholly and entirely
-adapted to the Hebrew or Syriac idioms.
-This would render their expression somewhat
-dark and obscure to their Grecian hearers. But
-then it would be intelligible enough to those
-to whom they first and principally addressed
-themselves, the <i>Hellenistic Jews</i>, who, though
-they understood Greek best, were generally no
-strangers to the Hebrew idiom.</p>
-
-<p>Further still, though this Hebrew-Greek language
-was all that was originally infused into
-the Apostles, nothing hinders but that they
-might, in the ordinary way, improve themselves
-in the Greek tongue, and superadd to
-their inspired knowledge whatever they could
-acquire, besides, by their conversation with the
-native Greeks, and the study of their language.
-For, though it can hardly be imagined, as the
-Bishop says, <i>that the inspired writers had cultivated
-their knowledge of the language on the
-principles of the Grecian eloquence</i><a id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a>, that is,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-had formed and perfected their style by an
-anxious and critical attention to the rules and
-practice of the Greek rhetors, yet we need not
-conclude that they wholly neglected to improve
-themselves in the knowledge and use of this
-new language. So that, by the time they turned
-themselves to the Gentiles, and still more by
-the time they applied themselves to pen the
-books of the N. T. they might be tolerable
-masters even of the peculiar phraseology of the
-Greek tongue, and might be able to adapt it, in
-good measure, to the Greek idioms.</p>
-
-<p>All this, I say, is very <i>supposeable</i>; because
-their turning to the Gentiles was not till near
-<small>TEN</small> years after the descent of the Holy Ghost
-upon the Apostles and the date of their earliest
-writings, penned for the edification of the
-Church, was not till near <small>TWENTY</small> years after
-that period: In all which time, they had full
-leisure and opportunity to acquire a competent
-knowledge of the native idiomatic Greek, abundantly
-sufficient to answer all ends of clearness
-and instruction.</p>
-
-<p>But I go further, and say, It is not only very
-<i>supposeable</i>, and perfectly consistent with all
-the Bishop has advanced on the subject of inspiration,
-that the sacred writers <i>might</i> thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-improve themselves, but it is, likewise, very
-<i>clear</i> and <i>certain</i> that they <small>DID</small>. How else are
-we to account for that difference of style observable
-in the sacred writers, whose expression
-is more or less coloured by their native Hebrew
-idioms, according as their acquaintance with
-the Greek tongue was more or less perfect?
-There were still, no doubt, very many of their
-own native idioms interspersed in their most
-improved Greek: As must ever be the case of
-writers who compose in a foreign tongue, whether
-acquired in the ordinary way, or supernaturally
-infused into them: But these barbarisms,
-as they are called, I mean these Syriasms
-or Hebraisms, are not so constant and perpetual
-as to prevent their writings from giving
-<i>clear intelligence</i>. In short, the style of the
-inspired writers is <small>JUST</small> that which we should
-naturally expect it to be, on this supposition of
-its being somewhat improved by use and exercise,
-and which the learned Bishop <i>accurately</i>
-(and in perfect <i>consistency</i> with his main
-principle, <i>of the terms only being inspired,
-with the congruous use of them</i>) defines it to
-be, “<i>Greek words</i> <small>VERY FREQUENTLY</small> <i>delivered
-in Syriac and Hebrew idiom</i><a id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus, in every view, the Bishop’s <i>grand</i>
-principle may be safely admitted. All that we
-<i>need</i> suppose, and therefore all that is <i>reasonable</i>
-to be supposed, is, <i>That the terms of
-the Greek language, and a grammatical congruity
-in the use of them</i>, was miraculously infused:
-The rest would be competently and sufficiently
-obtained by the application of ordinary
-means, without a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>After saying so little, or rather after saying
-indeed <i>nothing</i>, that affects the Bishop’s principle,
-I cannot but think it is with an ill grace
-you turn yourself to cavil at the <i>following incidental
-observation</i> of his Lordship, which yet
-will be found as true and as just as any other
-he has made on this subject.</p>
-
-<p>To those who might expect <i>that, besides the
-simple impression of the Greek terms only,
-and their signification</i> on the minds of the
-inspired linguists, <i>another should have been
-made to inrich the mind with all the ideas
-which go towards the composing the phrases
-and idioms of the language so inspired</i> (all
-which had been necessary, if the inspired language
-had been intended for a perfect model of
-Grecian eloquence), the Bishop replies—‘This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span>
-latter impression seems to require, or rather
-indeed implies, a previous one of the tempers,
-fashions, and opinions, of the people to whom
-the language is native, upon the minds of
-them to whom the language is thus imparted;
-because the phrase and idiom arises from, and
-is dependent on those manners<a id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a>.’ But such
-an impression as this, he goes on to shew, was
-not to be expected.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear from this passage, that the Bishop
-is speaking of <i>an impression</i> necessary to be
-made on the minds of the Apostles, if the inspired
-language had been so complete as to extend
-to all its native phrases and idioms. If
-the Apostles were instantly to possess the inspired
-Greek in this perfection, it is necessary
-to suppose that this <i>last</i> impression must, as
-well as that of the terms, be made upon them.
-Can any thing, be more certain and undeniable
-than this <i>affirmation?</i> Yet, in p. 86. of your
-book, you have this strange passage.</p>
-
-<p>After having shewn, as you suppose, that the
-Bishop’s grand principle, of the inspiration of
-the <small>TERMS</small> only, stands on a very insecure foundation,
-“Perhaps,” you say, “it is no less<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
-<small>HAZARDOUS</small> to affirm, that a knowledge of the
-idiom or phraseology of any language, <i>always</i>
-implies a previous knowledge of the customs
-and manners of those to whom it is vernacular.”</p>
-
-<p>You intended, no doubt, in your censure of
-this hazardous position, to oppose something
-which the Bishop had affirmed. Be pleased
-now to cast your eye on the passage you criticize,
-and tell me where the Bishop asserts, <i>that
-a</i> <small>KNOWLEDGE</small> <i>of the idiom or phraseology of
-any language</i> <small>ALWAYS</small> <i>implies a previous knowledge
-of the customs and manners of those to
-whom it is vernacular</i>. What the Bishop asserts
-is, <i>That an</i> <small>IMPRESSION</small> <i>of the phrases and
-idioms of an inspired language implies a previous</i>
-<small>IMPRESSION</small> <i>of the tempers, fashions, and
-opinions of the people to whom the language is
-native, upon the minds of them to who the
-language is</i> <small>THUS</small> <i>imparted</i>: that is, if a knowledge
-of the idioms had been <i>impressed</i>, a
-knowledge of the customs and manners from
-which those idioms arise, and without a knowledge
-of which they could not be understood
-(as they were to be, by the recipients of this
-spiritual gift), must have been <i>impressed</i> likewise.
-No, you say: a <i>knowledge</i> of the idiom
-of a language does not <i>always</i> imply a previous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-<i>knowledge</i> of the manners. Who says, it does?
-We may come to <i>know</i> the idioms of languages,
-without a <i>divine impression</i>: and
-without such impression, for any thing appears
-to the contrary, the Bishop might suppose the
-sacred writers came by their knowledge, so far
-as they possessed it, of the Greek idioms. But
-the <i>impression</i> of such idioms could only come
-from another and <i>previous impression</i> of the
-customs and manners: because in this case,
-without a previous impression of the <i>customs
-and manners</i>, the <i>idioms</i> themselves, when
-impressed, could not have been understood,
-nor consequently put to use, by the persons
-on whom this impression was made. They had
-no time to recur to Lexicons, Grammars, and
-Commentaries to know the meaning of the impressed
-idioms. How then were they, on the
-instant, to know their meaning at all, but by
-a <i>previous impression</i> of the manners, from
-which they arose, and which would put them
-into a capacity of understanding these impressed
-idioms?</p>
-
-<p>In a word, the Bishop is speaking of <small>SUPERNATURAL
-IMPRESSION</small>: you, of <small>NATURAL KNOWLEDGE</small>.
-No wonder, then, your reasoning and
-your learning, in the concluding pages of this
-chapter, should look entirely <i>beside</i> the matter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span>
-in hand, or, at best, should look so <i>askew</i> on
-the Bishop’s <i>hazardous</i> position. It is certain,
-you are far enough out of all danger of encountering
-it, when you entrench yourself, at length,
-behind this distant and secure conclusion—“that
-the knowledge of idiom is so far from
-requiring, or implying a previous one of
-tempers, manners, <i>&amp;c.</i> that the very <small>CONVERSE</small>
-of this seems to be the safer principle;
-and that tempers and manners are not to be
-learned, without some degree of previous acquaintance
-with the peculiarities of a language<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a>:”
-a proposition, which though exceptionable
-enough, as you put it, and even
-suggesting some pleasant ideas, I am in no
-humour, at present, to contest with you.</p>
-
-<p>This, <span class="smcap">Sir, is the whole</span> of what I find advanced
-by you, that hath any shew or appearance
-of being intended as a Confutation of the
-argument by which the Bishop supports his
-<span class="smcap">first Paradox</span>; in opposition to Dr. <span class="smcap">Middleton’s</span>
-opinion, <i>That an inspired language
-must needs be a language of perfect eloquence</i>.
-The Bishop has told us in very accurate
-terms what he conceives the character of
-an inspired language must needs be: and I
-have at least shewn, that the character he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
-gives of it may be a just one, notwithstanding
-any thing you have objected to it in your
-learned Dissertation.</p>
-
-<p>I now proceed to the Bishop’s <span class="smcap">second Paradox</span>;
-which opposes Dr. <span class="smcap">Middleton’s</span> <i>second
-Proposition, That eloquence is something
-congenial and essential to human speech, and
-inherent in the constitution of things</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘This supposes, says the Bishop, ‘that there
-is some certain <span class="smcap">Archetype</span> in nature, to
-which that quality refers, and on which it is
-formed and modelled. And, indeed, admitting
-this to be the case, one should be apt
-enough to conclude, that when the Author of
-nature condescended to inspire one of these
-plastic performances of human art, he would
-make it by the exactest pattern of the
-<i>Archetype</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘But the proposition is fanciful and false.
-Eloquence is not congenial or essential to human
-speech, nor is there any Archetype in
-nature to which that quality refers. It is accidental
-and arbitrary, and depends on custom
-and fashion: it is a mode of human
-communication which changes with the
-changing climates of the Earth; and is as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
-various and unstable as the genius, temper,
-and manners of its diversified inhabitants.
-For what is <span class="smcap">Purity</span> but the use of such terms,
-with their multiplied combinations, as the
-interest, the complexion, or the caprice of a
-writer or speaker of authority hath preferred
-to its equals? What is <span class="smcap">Elegance</span> but such a
-turn of idiom as a fashionable fancy hath
-brought into repute? And what is <span class="smcap">Sublimity</span>
-but the application of such images, as arbitrary
-or casual connexions, rather than their
-own native grandeur, have dignified and ennobled?
-Now <span class="smcap">Eloquence</span> is a compound of
-these three qualities of speech, and consequently
-must be as nominal and unsubstantial
-as its constituent parts. So that, that
-mode of composition, which is a model of
-<i>perfect eloquence</i> to one nation or people,
-must appear extravagant or mean to another.
-And thus in fact it was. Indian and Asiatic
-eloquence were esteemed hyperbolic, unnatural,
-abrupt and puerile to the more phlegmatic
-inhabitants of <i>Rome</i> and <i>Athens</i>. And
-the Western eloquence, in its turn, appeared
-nerveless and effeminate, frigid or insipid, to
-the hardy and inflamed imaginations of the
-East. Nay, what is more, each species, even
-of the most approved genus, changed its nature
-with the change of clime and language;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
-and the same expression, which, in one place,
-had the utmost <i>simplicity</i>, had, in another,
-the utmost <i>sublime</i><a id="FNanchor_143" href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop then proceeds to illustrate this
-last observation by a famous instance, taken
-from the first chapter of <i>Genesis</i>, and then
-recapitulates and enforces his general argument
-in the following manner.</p>
-
-<p>‘Apply all this to the books of the N. T. an
-authorized collection, professedly designed for
-the rule and direction of mankind. Now such
-a rule demanded that it should be inspired of
-God. But inspired writing, the objectors say,
-implies the most <i>perfect eloquence</i>. What
-human model then was the Holy Ghost to
-follow? And a human model, of arbitrary
-construction, it must needs be, because there
-was no other: Or, if there were another, it
-would never suit the purpose, which was to
-make an impression on the minds and affections;
-and this impression, such an eloquence
-only as that which had gained the popular
-ear, could effect. Should therefore the
-<i>Eastern</i> eloquence be employed? But this
-would be too inflated and gigantic for the
-<i>West</i>. Should it be the <i>Western</i>? But this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-would be too cold and torpid for the <i>East</i>.
-Or, suppose the <i>generic</i> eloquence of the
-more polished nations was to be preferred,
-which <i>species</i> of it was to be employed? The
-rich exuberance of the Asiatic Greeks, or the
-dry conciseness of the Spartans? The pure
-and poignant ease and flowing sweetness of
-the Attic modulation, or the strength and
-grave severity of the Roman tone? Or should
-all give way to that African torrent, which
-arose from the fermented mixture of the dregs
-of <i>Greece</i> and <i>Italy</i>, and soon after overflowed
-the Church with theological conceits
-in a sparkling luxuriancy of thought, and a
-sombrous rankness of expression? Thus various
-were the species’s! all as much decried
-by a different genus, and each as much disliked
-by a different species, as the eloquence
-of the remotest East and West, by one another<a id="FNanchor_144" href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Thus far the learned Bishop, <i>with the spirit
-and energy</i>, as you well observe, <i>of an ancient
-orator</i><a id="FNanchor_145" href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a>; and, let me add, with a justness and
-force of reasoning, which would have done honour
-to the best ancient Philosopher. But here
-we separate again. You maintain, with Dr.
-<span class="smcap">Middleton</span>, <i>that eloquence is something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
-congenial and essential to human speech</i>:
-While <i>I</i>, convinced by the Bishop’s reasoning
-in these paragraphs, maintain that it assuredly
-is not.</p>
-
-<p>The subject, indeed, affords great scope to
-your rhetorical faculties; and the cause, you
-maintain, being that, as you conceive, of the
-antient orators, and even of eloquence itself,
-you suffer your enthusiasm to bear you away,
-without controul; and, as is the natural effect
-of enthusiasm, with so little method and precision
-of argument, that a cool examiner of your
-work hardly knows how to follow you, or
-where to take aim at you, in your aery and
-uncertain flight. However, I shall do my best
-to reduce your Rhetoric to Reason; I mean,
-to represent the substance of what you seem to
-intend by way of argument against the Bishop’s
-principle, leaving your eloquence to make what
-impression on the gentle reader it may.</p>
-
-<p>And, <small>FIRST</small>, in opposition, as you suppose,
-to the Bishop’s tenet, “<i>That eloquence is</i> <small>NOT</small>
-<i>something congenial and essential to human
-speech</i>,” you apply yourself to shew, through
-several chapters, that tropes, metaphors, allegories,
-and universally what are called by Rhetoricians
-<i>figures of speech</i>, are natural and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
-necessary expressions of the passions, and have
-their birth in the very reason and constitution
-of things. To make out this important point
-is the sole drift of your <small>I</small>, <small>II</small>, <small>III</small>, and <small>IV</small>ᵗʰ
-Chapters; in which you seem to me to be contending
-for that which nobody denies, and to
-be disputing without an opponent. At least,
-you can hardly believe that the Bishop of
-<i>Gloucester</i> is to be told, that metaphors, allegories,
-and similitudes are the offspring of nature
-and necessity, <span class="smcap">He</span>, who has, <i>with the utmost
-justness and elegance of reasoning</i>, as
-you well observe<a id="FNanchor_146" href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a>, explained this very point,
-himself, in the <span class="smcap">Divine Legation</span>.</p>
-
-<p>What then are we to conclude from these
-elaborate chapters? Why, that by some unlucky
-mistake or other, let us call it only by
-the softer name, of <i>inattention</i>, you have entirely
-misrepresented the scope and purpose of
-all the Bishop has said on the subject of eloquence.
-And that this is no hasty or groundless
-charge, but the very truth of the case, will
-clearly be seen from a brief examination of the
-Bishop’s theory, compared with your reasonings
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p>The position, <i>that eloquence is something
-congenial and essential to human speech, supposes</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span>
-says the Bishop, <i>that there is some certain
-Archetype in nature, to which that quality
-refers, and on which it is to be formed
-and modelled</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop, you see, requires an <i>Archetype</i>
-to be pointed out to him of that consummate
-eloquence, which is said to be <i>congenial and
-essential to human speech</i>. The demand is
-surely reasonable; and not difficult to be complied
-with, if such an Archetype do, in fact,
-subsist. But do you know of any such? Do
-you refer him to any such? Do you specify
-that <i>composition</i>? or do you so much as delineate
-that <i>sort</i> of composition, which will pass
-upon all men under the idea of an Archetype?
-Nothing of all this. Permit us then to attend
-to the Bishop’s reasoning, by which he undertakes
-to prove that no such Archetype does or
-can exist.</p>
-
-<p>‘The proposition [that asserts, there is such
-an Archetype] is fanciful and false. Eloquence
-is not congenial or essential to human
-speech, nor is there any Archetype in nature
-to which that quality refers. It is accidental
-and arbitrary, and depends on custom and
-fashion: It is a mode of human communication
-which changes with the changing climates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>
-of the earth; and is as various and
-unstable as the genius, temper, and manners
-of its diversified inhabitants<a id="FNanchor_147" href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop asserts <i>there is no Archetype</i>,
-because eloquence is a variable thing, depending
-on custom and fashion; is nothing absolute
-in itself; but relative to the fancies and prejudices
-of men, and changeable, as the different
-climes they inhabit. This <i>general</i> reason seems
-convincing: it appeals to fact, to experience, to
-the evidence of sense. But the learned Prelate
-goes further. He analyzes the complex idea of
-eloquence: he examines the qualities of speech,
-of which it is made up; and he shews that they
-are nominal and unsubstantial. Hence it follows,
-again, That there is no Archetype in nature of
-perfect eloquence; its very constituent parts, as
-they are deemed, having no substance or reality
-in them.</p>
-
-<p>But why should the Bishop condescend to this
-analysis, when his <i>general argument</i> seemed
-decisive of the question? For a good reason.
-When the Bishop asked for an <span class="smcap">Archetype</span>,
-though you are shy of producing any, he well
-knew that the masters of Eloquence, those I
-mean who are accounted such in these parts of
-the world, had pretended to give one. He knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
-the authority of these masters of human speech
-with the sort of men, he had to deal with: he
-therefore takes the Archetype, they have given,
-and shews, upon their own ideas of eloquence,
-it is a mere phantom.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to be supposed that the Bishop, in
-touching incidentally the question of Eloquence
-in a theological treatise, should follow the Greek
-and Latin rhetors through all the niceties and
-distinctions of their Art, or should amuse himself
-or us with a minute detail of all the particulars
-which go to the making up of this mighty
-compound, their <span class="smcap">Archetypal idea</span> of human
-eloquence. If he had been so pleased, and had
-had no better business on his hands, it is likely
-he could have told us <i>news</i>, as you have done,
-out of <span class="smcap">Aristotle</span>, <span class="smcap">Longinus</span>, and <span class="smcap">Cicero</span>.
-But his manner is to say no more on a subject,
-than the occasion makes necessary; which, in
-the present case, was no more than to acquaint
-his reader, in very general terms, with the constituent
-parts of eloquence; which he resolves
-into these three, <span class="smcap">Purity</span>, <span class="smcap">Elegance</span>, and
-<span class="smcap">Sublimity</span>.</p>
-
-<p>But this you call <i>a most illogical division of
-Eloquence; for that the Bishop hath not only
-enumerated the constituent parts imperfectly;
-but, of the three qualities which he hath exhibited,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
-the first is included in the second, and
-the third is not necessarily and universally a
-part of eloquence</i><a id="FNanchor_148" href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>enumeration</i>, you say, <i>is imperfect</i>.
-Yet <i>Purity</i>, I think, denotes whatever comes
-under the idea of <small>PROPRIETY</small>, that is, of approved
-custom, as well as grammatical use, in
-any language: <i>Elegance</i>, expresses all those
-embellishments of composition, which are the
-effect of <span class="smcap">Art</span>: and I know no fitter term than
-<i>Sublimity</i>, to stand for those qualities of eloquence,
-which are derived from the efforts of
-Genius, or <span class="smcap">natural Parts</span>. Now what else
-can be required to complete the idea of Eloquence,
-and what defect of logic can there be
-in comprehending the various properties of human
-speech under these three generic names?
-The division is surely so natural and so intelligible,
-that few readers, I believe, will be disposed
-to object with you, <i>that the first of the three
-qualities is included in the second, and that the
-third is not necessarily and universally a part
-of eloquence</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But let the Bishop’s enumeration be ever so
-<i>logical</i>, you further quarrel with his <i>idea</i> of
-these three constituent parts of eloquence, and
-his reasoning upon them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span></p>
-
-<p>‘What; says his Lordship, is <span class="smcap">Purity</span> but
-the use of such terms with their multiplied
-combinations, as the interest, the complexion,
-or the caprice of a writer or speaker of authority
-hath preferred to its equals?’</p>
-
-<p>This idea of purity in language you think
-strange; and yet in the very chapter in which
-you set yourself to contemplate and to reprobate
-this <i>strange idea</i>, you cannot help resolving
-<i>purity</i>, into <i>usage and custom</i>, that is, with
-<span class="smcap">Quintilian</span>, into <i>consensum</i> (<i>eruditorum</i>);
-which surely is but saying in other words with
-the Bishop, that it consists <i>in the use of such
-terms, with their multiplied combinations, as
-the interest, the complexion, or the caprice of
-a writer or speaker of Authority hath preferred
-to its equals</i>—for <i>equals</i> they undoubtedly
-were, till that usage or custom took place.
-When this <i>consent of the learned</i> is once established,
-every writer or speaker, who pretends
-to <i>purity</i> of expression, must doubtless conform
-to it: but previously to such consent, <i>purity</i> is
-a thing arbitrary enough to justify the Bishop’s
-conclusion, that this quality <i>is not congenial
-and essential to human speech</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Next, the Bishop asks, ‘What is <span class="smcap">Elegance</span>
-but such a turn of idiom as a fashionable fancy
-hath brought into repute?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span></p>
-
-<p>Here, again, you grow very nice in your inquiries
-into the idea of <i>fancy</i>, the idea of
-<i>fashion</i>, and I know not what of that sort.
-In a word, you go on <i>defining</i>, and <i>distinguishing</i>
-to the end of the chapter, in a way
-that without doubt would be very edifying to
-your young scholars in <i>Trinity College</i>, but,
-as levelled against the Bishop, is certainly
-unseasonable and out of place. For define <i>elegance</i>
-that you will, it finally resolves into something
-that <i>is not of the essence of human speech</i>, but
-factitious and arbitrary; as depending much
-on the taste, the fancy, the caprice (call it what
-you please) of such writers or speakers, as have
-obtained the popular vogue for this species of
-eloquence, and so had the fortune to bring
-the turn of idiom and expression, which
-they preferred and cultivated, into general
-repute.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lastly,’ the Bishop asks, ‘What is <span class="smcap">Sublimity</span>
-but the application of such images, as
-arbitrary or casual connexions, rather than
-their own native grandeur, have dignified and
-ennobled?’</p>
-
-<p>To this question you reply by asking another,
-<i>Whether sublimity doth necessarily consist in
-the application of images?</i> But, <i>first</i>, if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span>
-what is <i>called</i> Sublimity, <i>generally</i> consists
-in the application of images, it is abundantly
-sufficient to the Bishop’s purpose: <i>Next</i>, I
-presume to say, that the sublime of eloquence,
-or the impression which a genius makes upon
-us by his expression, consists necessarily and
-universally in the application of <i>images</i>, that
-is, of bright and vivid ideas, which is the true,
-that is, the received sense of the word, <i>images</i>,
-(however rhetoricians may have distinguished
-different kinds of them, and expressed them by
-different names) in all rhetorical and critical
-works. <i>Lastly</i>, I maintain that these bright
-and vivid ideas are rendered <i>interesting</i> to the
-reader or hearer from the influence of <span class="smcap">Association</span>,
-rather than <i>of their own native dignity
-and grandeur</i>: of which I could give so many
-instances, that, for this reason, I will only give
-your <i>own</i>, which you lay so much stress upon,
-of <i>the famous oath, by the souls of those who
-fought at</i> Marathon <i>and</i> Platæa<a id="FNanchor_149" href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a>: where the
-peculiar ideas of <i>interest</i>, <i>glory</i>, and <i>veneration</i>,
-associated to the <i>image</i> or idea of the battle of <i>Marathon</i>
-and <i>Platæa</i>, gave a sublime and energy
-to this oath of <span class="smcap">Demosthenes</span>, <i>by the souls of
-those that fought there</i>, in the conceptions of
-his countrymen, which no other people could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
-have felt from it, and of which you, Sir, with
-all your admiration of it, have certainly a very
-faint conception at this time.</p>
-
-<p>I should here have dispatched this article of
-<i>Sublimity</i>, but that you will expect me to take
-some notice of your objection to what the Bishop
-observes, ‘That this species of eloquence
-changed its nature, with the change of clime
-and language; and that the same expression,
-which in one place had the utmost <i>simplicity</i>,
-had, in another, the utmost <i>sublime</i><a id="FNanchor_150" href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a>:’ An
-observation, which he illustrates and confirms
-by the various fortune of the famous passage in
-<i>Genesis, God said, Let there be light, and
-there was light; so sublime</i>, in the apprehension
-of <span class="smcap">Longinus</span> and <span class="smcap">Boileau</span>, and so <i>simple</i>,
-in that of <span class="smcap">Huetius</span> and <span class="smcap">Le Clerc</span>.</p>
-
-<p>To this pertinent illustration, most ingeniously
-explained and enforced by the learned
-Prelate, you reply with much ease, “That this
-might well be, and even in the same place,”
-and then proceed to <i>inform</i> him of I know not
-what union between <i>simplicity</i> and <i>sublimity</i>;
-though you <i>civilly</i> add, “That it is a point
-known to every <small>SMATTERER</small> in criticism, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
-these two qualities are so far from being inconsistent
-with each other, that they are frequently
-united by a natural and inseparable
-union<a id="FNanchor_151" href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Simplicity and <i>sublimity</i> may be found
-together.” I think the proposition false, in
-your sense of it, at least. But be it true, that
-these qualities in expression may be found together.
-What then? The question is of a
-passage, where these qualities, in the apprehension
-of great critics, are found separately;
-the one side maintaining that it is merely
-<i>simple</i>, the other, that it is merely <i>sublime</i>.
-<i>Simplicity</i> is, here, plainly opposed to <i>sublimity</i>,
-and implies the absence of it: <span class="smcap">Boileau</span>,
-after <span class="smcap">Longinus</span>, affirming that the expression
-<i>is</i>, and his adversaries affirming that it is <i>not</i>,
-<i>sublime</i>. Can any thing shew more clearly,
-that the <i>sublime</i> of eloquent expression depends
-on <i>casual associations</i>, and not on the nature
-of things?</p>
-
-<p>But the Bishop goes further and tells us,
-what the <i>associations</i> were that occasioned these
-different judgments of the passage in question.
-The ideas suggested in it were <i>familiar</i>, to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span>
-sacred writer: they were <i>new</i> and admirable,
-to the Pagan Critic. Hence the expression
-would be of the greatest <i>simplicity</i> in <span class="smcap">Moses</span>,
-though it would be naturally esteemed by <span class="smcap">Longinus</span>,
-infinitely <i>sublime</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Here you cavil a little about the Effect of
-<i>familiarity</i>: but, as conscious of the weakness
-of this part of your answer, <i>Not to insist</i>, you
-say, <i>upon this, How comes it then that</i> <span class="smcap">Boileau</span>
-<i>and many other Christian readers, to whom
-the ideas of creation were as familiar as to</i>
-<span class="smcap">Moses</span> <i>himself, were yet affected by the sublime
-of this passage</i>? You ask, How this comes
-to pass? How? Why in the way, in which
-so many other strange things come to pass, by
-<i>the influence of authority</i>. <span class="smcap">Longinus</span> had said,
-the expression of this passage was <i>sublime</i>.
-And when he had said this, the wonder is to find
-two men, such as <span class="smcap">Huetius</span> and <span class="smcap">Le Clerc</span>, who
-durst, after that, honestly declare their own
-feelings, and profess that, to them, the expression
-was <i>not</i> sublime.</p>
-
-<p>But more on this head of <i>Authority</i> presently.</p>
-
-<p>You see, Sir, I pass over these chapters <i>on
-the qualities of Eloquence</i>, though they make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span>
-so large a part of your <i>Dissertation</i>, very rapidly:
-and I do it, not to escape from any
-force I apprehend there to be in your argument
-or observations, but because I am persuaded
-that every man, who knows what language is,
-and how it is formed, is so convinced that those
-qualities of it by which it comes to be denominated
-<i>pure</i>, and <i>elegant</i>, and <i>interesting</i>,
-are the effects of <i>custom</i>, <i>fashion</i>, and <i>association</i>,
-that he would not thank me for employing
-many words on so plain a point. Only, as
-you conclude this part of your work with <i>an
-appeal</i>, which you think sufficiently <i>warranted,
-against the most positive decisions of fashion,
-custom, or prejudice, to certain general and
-established principles of rational criticism</i>,
-subversive, as you think, of the Bishop’s whole
-theory, I shall be bold to tell you, as I just
-now promised, what my opinion is, <i>of these
-established rules of</i> <small>RATIONAL CRITICISM</small>: by
-which you will understand how little I conceive
-the Bishop’s system to be affected by this confident
-appeal to <i>such principles</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I hold then, that what you solemnly call <i>the
-established principles of rational criticism</i> are
-only such principles as criticism hath seen good
-to establish <i>on the practice of the Greek and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span>
-Roman speakers and writers</i>; the European
-eloquence being ultimately the mere product
-and result of such practice; and European criticism
-being no further <i>rational</i> than as it accords
-to it. This is the way, in which ancient
-and modern critics have gone to work in forming
-their systems: and their systems deserve to
-be called <i>rational</i>, because they deliver such
-rules as experience has found most conducive
-to attain the ends of eloquence in these parts
-of the world. Had you attended to this obvious
-consideration, it is impossible you should
-have alarmed yourself so much, as you seem to
-have done, at the Bishop’s bold Paradox, as if
-it threatened the downfall of Eloquence itself:
-which, you now see, stands exactly as it did,
-and is just as secure in all its established rights
-and privileges on the Bishop’s system of <i>there
-being no Archetype of Eloquence in nature</i>, as
-upon your’s, <i>that there is one</i>. The rules of
-criticism are just the same on either supposition,
-and will continue the same so long as we take
-the Greek and Roman writers for our masters
-and models; nay, so long as the influence of
-their authority, now confirmed and strengthened
-by the practice of ages, and struck deep
-into the European notions and manners, shall
-subsist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span></p>
-
-<p>You need, therefore, be in no pain for the
-interests of Eloquence, which are so dear to
-you; nor for the dignity of your <i>Rhetorical
-office</i> in the University of <i>Dublin</i>; which is
-surely of importance enough, if you teach your
-<i>young hearers</i> how to become eloquent in that
-scene where their employment of it is likely to
-fall; without pretending to engage them in certain
-chimerical projects how they may attain
-an essential universal eloquence, or such as
-will pass for eloquence in all ages and countries
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>You see, Sir, if this opinion of mine be a
-truth, that it overturns at once the whole structure
-of your book. We, no doubt, who have
-been lectured in Greek and Roman eloquence,
-think it preferable to any other; and we think
-so, because it conforms to certain rules which
-our criticism has established, without considering
-that those rules are only established on the
-successful practice of European writers and
-speakers, and are therefore no rules at all in
-such times and places where a different, perhaps
-a contrary, practice is followed with the
-same success. Let a Spartan, an Asiatic, an
-African, a Chinese system of rhetoric be given:
-Each of these shall differ from other, yet each
-shall be best and most <i>rational</i>, as relative to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span>
-people for whom it is formed. Nay, to see how
-groundless all your fancies of a <i>rational essential
-eloquence are</i>, do but reflect that even the
-European eloquence, though founded on the
-same general principles, is yet different in different
-places in many respects. I could tell
-you of a country, and that at no great distance,
-where that which is thought supremely <i>elegant</i>
-passes in another country, not less conversant
-in the <i>established principles of rational criticism</i>,
-for <small>FINICAL</small>; while what, in this country,
-is accepted under the idea of <i>sublimity</i>, is derided,
-in that other, as no better than <small>BOMBAST</small>.</p>
-
-<p>What follows, now, from this appeal to <i>experience</i>,
-against your appeal to the <i>established
-rules of criticism</i>? Plainly this: That all the
-rhetors of antiquity put together are no authority
-against what the Bishop of <i>Gloucester</i> asserts
-concerning the nature of eloquence; since
-<small>THEY</small> only tell us (and we will take their word
-for it) what will <i>please or affect</i> under <i>certain</i>
-circumstances, while the <span class="smcap">Bishop</span> only questions
-whether the same rules, under <small>ALL</small> circumstances,
-will enable a writer or speaker to
-<i>please and affect</i>. Strange! that you should
-not see the inconsequence of your own reasoning.
-The Bishop says, The rules of eloquence
-are for the most part, local and arbitrary: No,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span>
-you say, The rules are not local and arbitrary,
-<small>FOR</small> they were held reasonable ones at <i>Athens</i>
-and <i>Rome</i>. Your very answer shews that they
-were local and arbitrary. You see, then, why
-I make so slight on this occasion of all your
-multiplied citations from the ancient writers,
-which, how respectable soever, are no decisive
-authority, indeed no authority at all, in the present
-case.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, the Bishop had been considering
-eloquence <small>ONLY SO FAR</small> as it is founded in arbitrary
-principles and local prejudices. For,
-though his expression had been general, he
-knew very well that his thesis admitted some
-limitation; having directly affirmed of <i>the various
-modes of eloquence</i>, not that they were
-altogether and in all respects, but <small>MOSTLY</small>, <i>fantastical</i>
-(p. 67), which, though you are pleased
-to charge it upon him as an <i>inconsistency</i><a id="FNanchor_152" href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a>, the
-reader sees is only a necessary qualification of
-his general thesis, such as might be expected
-in so exact a writer as the learned Bishop. He
-now then attends to this limitation, and considers
-what effect it would have on his main
-theory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span></p>
-
-<p>‘It will be said, <i>Are there not some more
-substantial principles of eloquence, common to
-all</i> the various species that have obtained in
-the world?—Without doubt, there are.—Why
-then should not these have been employed,
-to do credit to the Apostolic inspiration?
-For good reasons: respecting both
-the speaker and the hearers. For, what <i>is</i>
-eloquence but a persuasive turn given to the
-elocution to supply that inward, that conscious
-persuasion of the speaker, so necessary
-to gain a fair hearing? But the first preachers
-of the Gospel did not need a succedaneum to
-that inward conscious persuasion. And what
-is the <i>end</i> of eloquence, even when it extends
-no further than to those more general principles,
-but to stifle reason and inflame the
-passions? But the propagation of Christian
-truths indispensably requires the aid of reason,
-and requires no other human aid<a id="FNanchor_153" href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Here, again, you are quite scandalized at the
-Bishop’s paradoxical assertions concerning the
-<i>nature</i> and <i>end</i> of eloquence; and you differ as
-widely from him now he argues on the supposition
-of there being <i>some more substantial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span>
-principles of eloquence</i>, as you did before, when
-he contended that <i>most</i> of those we call principles
-were arbitrary and capricious things.
-You even go so far as to insult him with a
-string of questions, addressed <i>ad hominem</i>: for,
-having quoted some passages from his book,
-truly eloquent and rhetorical, you think you
-have him at advantage, and can now confute
-him out of his own mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Can any thing,” you ask, “be more brilliant,
-more enlivened, more truly rhetorical,
-than these passages? What then are we to
-think of the writer and his intentions? Is
-he really sincere in his reasoning? or are
-these eloquent forms of speech so many marks
-of falshood? Were they assumed as <i>a succedaneum
-to conscious persuasion</i>? And is
-the end and design of them to <i>stifle reason
-and inflame the passions</i><a id="FNanchor_154" href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a>?”</p>
-
-<p>To blunt the edge of these sharp and pressing
-interrogatories, give me leave to observe that
-the main question agitated by the Bishop is,
-whether divine inspiration can be reasonably
-expected to extend so far as to infuse a perfect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span>
-model of eloquence, and to over-rule the inspired
-Apostles in such sort, as that all they
-write or speak should be according to the rules
-of the most consummate rhetoric. He resolves
-this question in the <i>negative</i>: <i>first</i>, by shewing
-that there is no such thing as what would
-be deemed a perfect model of eloquence subsisting
-in nature; a great part of what is called
-eloquence in all nations being arbitrary and chimerical;
-and, <i>secondly</i>, by shewing that even
-those principles, which may be justly thought
-more substantial, were, for certain reasons, not
-deserving the solicitous and over-ruling care of
-a divine inspirer. His reasons are these: <i>First</i>,
-that eloquence, when most genuine, <i>is but a
-persuasive turn given to the elocution to supply
-that inward, that conscious persuasion of the
-speaker, so necessary to gain a fair hearing,
-and which the first preachers of the Gospel
-had already</i>, by the influence and impression
-of the holy Spirit upon their minds: And, <i>next,
-that the end of eloquence, even when it extends
-no further than to those more general principles,
-is but to stifle reason and inflame the
-passions</i>; an <i>end</i> of a suspicious sort, and
-which the propagation of Christian truths, the
-proper business of the sacred writers or speakers,
-did not require.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span></p>
-
-<p>You see these <i>reasons</i>, in whatever defective,
-are both of them founded in <i>one common</i>
-principle, which the Bishop every where goes
-upon, and the best philosophy warrants, That,
-when the Deity interposes in human affairs, he
-interposes no further than is <i>necessary</i> to the
-end in view, and leaves every thing else to the
-intervention and operation of second causes.
-The Apostles wanted <small>NO</small> succedaneum to an
-inward conscious persuasion, which the observance
-of the general principles of eloquence
-supplies; they were not, therefore, supernaturally
-instructed in them. They wanted <small>NO</small> assistance
-from a power that tends <i>to stifle reason
-and inflame the passions</i>: it was not, therefore,
-miraculously imparted to them. Every
-thing here is rational, and closely argued. What
-was not necessary was not done. Not a word
-about the inconvenience and inutility, in all
-cases, of recurring to the rules and practice of
-a chaste eloquence: not a word to shew that,
-where eloquence is employed, there is nothing
-but fraud and <i>falshood</i>, no inward persuasion,
-no consciousness of truth: not a word to insinuate
-that either you or the Bishop should be
-restrained from being as eloquent on occasion
-as you might have it in your power to be, or
-might think fit: nay, not a word against the
-Apostles themselves having recourse to the aids<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span>
-of human eloquence, if they had access to them,
-and found them expedient; only these aids
-were not <small>REQUIRED</small>, that is, were not to be
-claimed or expected from divine inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>Thus stands the Bishop’s reasoning, perfectly
-clear and just. The only room for debate is,
-whether his ideas of the <i>nature</i> and <i>end</i> of eloquence
-be just, too. <i>Eloquence</i>, he says, <i>is
-but a persuasive turn given to the elocution, to
-supply that inward, that conscious persuasion
-of the speaker, so necessary to gain a fair
-hearing</i>. The general affirmation you do not,
-indeed cannot, reject or controvert; for, the
-great master of eloquence himself confirms it
-in express words—<i>Tum optimè dicit orator,
-cum</i> <small>VIDETUR</small> <i>vera dicere</i>. <span class="smcap">Quinctil.</span> l. iv. c. 2.
-And, again, <i>Semper ita dicat</i>, <small>TANQUAM</small> <i>de
-causâ optimè sentiat</i>. l. v. c. 13; that is, an
-inward conscious persuasion is to be supplied
-by the speaker’s art. The Bishop’s idea then
-of the <i>nature</i> of eloquence is, as far as I can
-see, the very same idea which <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> had
-of it. Both agree, that eloquence is <i>such a
-turn of the elocution as supplies that inward
-conscious persuasion so necessary to the speaker’s
-success</i>. The Bishop adds, that this <i>supply</i>
-the inspired writers did not want. But you
-will say, perhaps, that merely human writers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span>
-may have this <i>inward conscious persuasion</i>, as
-well as the inspired. What then? if human
-writers can do without this succedaneum, which
-human eloquence supplies to inward persuasion,
-who obliges them to have recourse to it? Yes,
-but they cannot do <i>so well</i> without it. Who
-then forbids them to have recourse to it? For,
-neither are the inspired writers barred of this
-privilege: only, as being simply <small>UNNECESSARY</small>,
-it was not præternaturally supplied. Your perplexity
-on this subject arises from not distinguishing
-between what is <i>absolutely necessary</i>,
-and what is <i>sometimes expedient</i>: Divine inspiration
-provides only for the <i>first</i>; the <i>latter</i>
-consideration belongs to human prudence.</p>
-
-<p>But it would be, further, a mistake to say,
-<i>that merely human writers have their inward
-conscious persuasion as well as the divine</i>.
-They may have it, indeed, from the conclusions
-of their own reason, but have they it in the
-same degree of strength and vivacity, have they
-the same <i>full assurance of faith</i>, as those who
-have truth immediately impressed upon them
-by the hand of God? I suppose, not.</p>
-
-<p>But the Bishop’s idea of the <small>END</small> of eloquence
-revolts you as much as his idea of its <i>nature</i>.
-<i>What</i>, says he, <i>is the</i> <small>END</small> <i>of eloquence, even
-when it extends no further than to those more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span>
-general principles, but to stifle reason and inflame
-the passions</i>? And what other end, I
-pray you, can it have? You will say, To adorn,
-recommend, and enforce truth. It may be so,
-sometimes: this, we will say, is its more legitimate
-end. But even this end is not accomplished
-but by <i>stifling reason and inflaming
-the passions</i>: that is, eloquence prevents reason
-from adverting <i>simply</i> to the truth of things,
-and to the force of evidence; and it does this
-by agitating and disturbing the natural and
-calm state of the mind with rhetorical <i>diminutions
-or amplifications</i>. <span class="smcap">Vis</span> <i>oratoris</i> <small>OMNIS</small>,
-says <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>, <i>in</i> <small>AUGENDO MINUENDOQUE</small>
-<i>consistit</i>. [l. viii. c. 3. sub fin.] Now
-what is this but <i>stifling reason</i>? But it goes
-further: it <i>inflames the passions</i>, the ultimate
-end it has in view from <i>stifling reason</i>, or putting
-it of its guard. And for this, again, we
-have the authority of <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>, <i>affectibus
-perturbandus et ab intentione auferendus orator.
-Non enim solum oratoris est docere, sed
-plus eloquentia</i> <small>CIRCA MOVENDUM</small> <i>valet</i>. l. iv.
-c. 5. Or, would you see a passage from the
-great master of rhetoric, where his <i>idea</i> of this
-double end of eloquence is given, at once; it
-follows in these words—<i>Ubi</i> <small>ANIMIS</small> <i>judicum</i>
-<small>VIS</small> <i>afferenda est, et</i> <small>AB IPSA VERI CONTEMPLATIONE</small>
-<i>abducenda mens</i>, <small>IBI PROPRIUM ORATORIS
-OPUS EST</small>. l. vi. c. 2. That is, where the <i>passions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span>
-are to be inflamed, and reason stifled,
-there is the proper use and employment of the
-rhetorical art</i>. So exactly has the Bishop
-traced the footsteps of the great master, when
-he gave us his idea of the <small>END</small> of eloquence!</p>
-
-<p>Well, but this <i>end</i>, you say, is <small>IMMORAL</small>. So
-much the worse for your system; for such is
-the undoubted end of eloquence, even by the
-confession of its greatest patrons and advocates
-themselves. But what? Is this end immoral
-in all cases? And have you never then heared,
-<i>that the passions</i>, as wicked things as they are,
-<i>may be set on the side of truth</i>? In short,
-Eloquence, like Ridicule, which is, indeed, no
-mean part of it, may be either well or ill employed;
-and though it cannot be truly said
-that the end of either is simply <i>immoral</i>, yet it
-cannot be denied that what these <i>modes of address</i>
-propose to themselves in <small>ALL</small> cases is, <i>to
-stifle reason and inflame the passions</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop’s idea, then, of the end of eloquence,
-I presume, is fairly and fully justified.
-But your complaint now is, that the Bishop
-does not himself abide by this idea. For you
-find a contradiction between what his Lordship
-says here—<i>that the</i> <small>END</small> <i>of eloquence, even
-when it extends no further than to those more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span>
-general principles, is but to style reason and
-inflame the passions</i>, and what he says elsewhere—<i>that
-the</i> <small>PRINCIPAL</small> <i>end of eloquence</i>,
-<small>AS IT IS EMPLOYED IN HUMAN AFFAIRS</small>, <i>is to
-mislead reason and to cajole the fancy and
-affections</i><a id="FNanchor_155" href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a>. But these propositions are perfectly
-consistent; nor was the <i>latter</i> introduced
-so much as for the purpose of <i>qualifying and
-palliating</i> any thing that might be deemed offensive
-in the <i>former</i>. For though eloquence,
-chastely employed, goes no further than to
-<i>stifle reason and inflame the passions</i> (and
-the chastest eloquence, if it deserves the name,
-goes thus far), yet <i>the principal end of eloquence,
-as it is employed in human affairs</i>, is
-to <i>mislead</i> reason, which is something more
-than <i>stifling</i> it; and to <i>cajole</i>, which is much
-worse than to <i>inflame</i>, the passions. Reason
-may be <small>STIFLED</small>, and the passions <small>INFLAMED</small>,
-when the speaker’s purpose is to inculcate
-<i>right and truth</i>: Reason is only in danger of
-being <small>MISLED</small>, and the fancy and affections of
-being <small>CAJOLED</small>, when wrong and error are enforced
-by him. So very inaccurate was your
-conception of the Bishop’s expression! which I
-should not have explained so minutely, but to
-shew you that, when you undertook to expose
-such a writer, as the Bishop, you should have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span>
-studied his expression with more care, and
-should have understood the force of words at
-another rate, than you seem to have done in
-this instance.</p>
-
-<p>Still you will ask, if the <i>end</i> be so legitimate,
-why should not the inspired writers be
-trusted with this powerful engine of human
-eloquence? The Bishop gives several reasons:
-It is a <i>suspicious instrument</i>, p. 57. It was an
-<i>improper</i> instrument for heaven-directed men,
-whose strength was not to be derived from <i>the
-wisdom of men</i>, but from <i>the power of God</i>,
-p. 59. But the direct and immediate answer is
-contained, as I observed, in these words—<i>The
-propagation of Christian truths indispensably
-requires the aid of reason, and requires no
-other aid</i>. 1. Christianity, which is <i>a reasonable
-service</i>, was of necessity to be propagated
-by force of reason; in the Bishop’s better expression,
-<small>IT INDISPENSABLY REQUIRED THE AID
-OF REASON</small>; but <i>Reason</i>, he tells us in the
-next words, <i>can never be fairly and vigorously
-exerted but in that favourable interval which
-precedes the appeal to the passions</i>. 2. The
-Propagation of Christianity, which indispensably
-required the aid of reason, <small>REQUIRED NO
-OTHER HUMAN AID</small>: that is, no other human
-means were simply <small>REQUISITE</small> or <small>NECESSARY</small>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span>
-God, therefore, was pleased to leave his inspired
-servants to the prudential use and exercise of
-their own natural or acquired talents; but
-would not supernaturally endow them with this
-<i>unnecessary</i> power of eloquent words. The
-inspired writers, even the most learned and, by
-nature, the most eloquent of them, made a very
-sparing use of such talents, <i>proudly sacrificing
-them</i>, as the Bishop nobly and eloquently says,
-<i>to the glory of the everlasting Gospel</i>. But
-as the <i>end</i> was not, so neither was the <i>use</i> of
-eloquence, simply immoral or evil in itself.
-They were considerations of <i>propriety</i>, <i>prudence</i>,
-and <i>piety</i>, which restrained the Apostles
-generally, but not always, in the use of
-eloquence; which was less <i>decent</i> in their case,
-and which they could very well do without.
-When the same considerations prompt other
-men, under other circumstances, to affect the
-way of eloquence, it may safely, and even
-commendably, for any thing the Bishop has
-said on this subject as it concerns divine inspiration,
-be employed.</p>
-
-<p>Admitting then the Bishop’s ideas both of
-the <i>nature</i> and <i>end</i> of eloquence, the <i>want</i> of
-this character in the sacred writings is only
-vindicated, not <i>the thing itself</i> interdicted or
-disgraced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span></p>
-
-<p>The conclusion from the whole of what the
-Bishop has advanced on this argument, follows
-in these words:</p>
-
-<p>‘What, therefore, do our ideas of fit and
-right tell us is required in the <i>style</i> of an
-universal law? Certainly no more than this—To
-employ those aids which are common to
-<i>all</i> language as such; and to reject what is
-peculiar to <i>each</i>, as they are casually circumstanced.
-And what are these aids but <small>CLEARNESS</small>
-and <small>PRECISION</small>? By these, the mind and
-sentiments of the Composer are intelligibly
-conveyed to the reader. These qualities are
-essential to language, as it is distinguished
-from jargon: they are eternally the same, and
-independent on custom or fashion. To give
-a language <i>clearness</i> was the office of Philosophy;
-to give it <i>precision</i> was the office of
-Grammar. Definition performs the first service
-by a resolution of the ideas which make
-up the terms: Syntaxis performs the second
-by a combination of the several parts of
-speech into a systematic congruity: these are
-the very things in language which are least
-positive, as being conducted on the principles
-of metaphysics and logic. Whereas, all besides,
-from the very power of the elements,
-and signification of the terms, to the tropes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span>
-and figures of composition, are arbitrary;
-and, what is more, as these are a deviation
-from those principles of metaphysics and
-logic, they are frequently vicious. This, the
-great master quoted above [<span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>]
-freely confesseth, where speaking of that ornamented
-speech, which he calls σχήματα
-λέξεως, he makes the following confession
-and apology—esset enim omne schema <small>VITIUM</small>,
-si non peteretur, sed accideret. Verum
-auctoritate, vetustate, consuetudine, plerumque
-defenditur, sæpe etiam <small>RATIONE QUADAM</small>.
-Ideoque cum sit a simplici rectoque loquendi
-genere deflexa, <i>virtus</i> est, si habet <small>PROBABILE
-ALIQUID</small> quod sequatur<a id="FNanchor_156" href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>There is no part of your book in which you
-exult more than in the confutation of this
-obnoxious paragraph. It is to be hoped, you
-do it on good grounds—but let us see what
-those grounds are.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop, in the paragraph you criticize
-in your vᵗʰ Chapter, had said <i>that tropes and
-figures of composition</i>, under certain circumstances,
-there expressed, are frequently <i>vicious</i>.
-You make a difficulty of understanding this
-term, and doubt whether his Lordship means<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span>
-<i>vice</i> in a <i>critical</i>, or <i>moral</i> sense. I take upon
-me to answer roundly for the Bishop, that he
-meant <i>vice</i> in the <i>critical</i> sense: for he pronounces
-such tropes and figures <i>vicious</i>, <small>ONLY</small>
-<i>as they are a deviation from the principles of</i>
-<small>METAPHYSICS AND LOGIC</small>; and therefore I presume
-he could not mean <i>vice</i> in the other
-sense, which is <i>a deviation from the principles
-of</i> <small>ETHICS</small>. All you say on this subject, then,
-might have been well spared.</p>
-
-<p>This incidental question, or doubt of your’s,
-being cleared up, let us now attend to the <i>more
-substantial grounds</i> you go upon, in your censure
-of the learned Bishop.</p>
-
-<p>He had been speaking of <i>clearness</i> and <i>precision,
-as the things in language, which are
-least positive. Whereas, all besides, from the
-very power of the elements and signification
-of the terms, to the tropes and figures of
-composition, are arbitrary; and, what is more,
-as these are a deviation from the principles of
-metaphysics and logic, are frequently vicious.</i></p>
-
-<p>In <i>the first place</i>, you say, <i>it were to be
-wished that his Lordship had pleased to express
-himself with a little more precision</i>—<i>Want
-of precision</i> is not, I think, a fault with
-which the Bishop’s writings are commonly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span>
-charged; and I wish it may not appear in this
-instance, as it did lately in another, that your
-misapprehension of his argument arises from
-the very <i>precision</i> of his expression. But in
-what does this supposed <i>want of precision</i>
-consist? Why, in not qualifying this sentence,
-passed on <i>the tropes and figures of
-Composition</i>, which, from the general terms,
-in which it is delivered, falls indiscriminately
-upon <small>ALL</small> writers and speakers; for that “<small>ALL</small>
-men, who have ever written and spoken,
-have <i>frequently</i> used this mode of elocution,
-which is said to be <i>frequently</i> vicious<a id="FNanchor_157" href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a>.”
-Well, but from the word, <i>frequently</i>, which
-you make yourself so pleasant with, it appears
-that the Bishop <i>had</i> qualified <i>this bold and
-dangerous position</i>.—Yes, but this makes the
-position <i>still more bold</i>. Indeed! The Bishop
-is then singularly unhappy, to have his position,
-<i>first</i>, declared bold for want of being
-qualified, and, <i>then</i>, bolder still, for being so.
-But your reason follows.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes this position still more hardy
-is, that, however the conclusion seems confined
-and restrained by the addition of that
-qualifying word [frequently], yet the premises
-are general and unlimited. It is asserted
-without any restriction, that figurative<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span>
-composition is a deviation from the principles
-of metaphysics and logic. If then it be
-vicious <i>as</i> it is, i. e. <i>because</i> [<i>quatenus</i>] it is
-such a deviation, it must be not only <i>frequently</i>
-but <i>always</i> vicious; a very severe
-censure denounced against almost every
-speaker, and every writer, both sacred and
-prophane, that ever appeared in the world<a id="FNanchor_158" href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>Here your criticism grows very logical; and,
-notwithstanding the confidence I owned myself
-to have in the <i>precision</i> of the Bishop’s style, I
-begin to be in pain how I shall disengage him
-from so exact and philosophical an objector.
-Yet, as the occasion calls upon me, I shall try
-what may be done. <i>As these</i> [tropes and figures
-of composition] <i>are a deviation from the
-principles of metaphysics and logic, they are
-frequently</i> <small>VICIOUS</small>. Since the <i>Attribute</i> of
-this proposition is so peculiarly offensive to
-you, your first care, methinks, should have
-been to gain precise and exact ideas of the <i>subject</i>;
-without which it is not possible to judge,
-whether what is affirmed of it be exceptionable,
-or no.</p>
-
-<p>By <i>tropes and figures of composition</i>, you
-seem to understand <i>metaphors</i>, <i>allegories</i>, <i>similitudes</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span>
-and whatever else is vulgarly known
-under the name of <i>figures of speech</i>. For in
-p. 27, you speak of <i>Allegories, Metaphors
-and</i> <small>OTHER</small> <i>tropes and figures, which, you
-say, are no more than comparisons and similitudes
-expressed in another form</i>: And your
-concern, throughout this whole chapter, is for
-the vindication of <i>such tropes and figures</i> from
-the supposed charge of their being <i>a deviation
-from the principles of metaphysics and logic</i>.
-But now, on the other hand, I dare be confident
-that the Bishop meant these terms, not in
-this <i>specific</i>, but in their <i>generic</i> sense, as expressing
-any kind of change, deflexion, or deviation
-from the plain and common forms of
-language. I say, I am <i>confident</i> of this, 1.
-because the precise sense of the words <i>is</i> such
-as I represent it to be; and I have observed,
-though, it seems, you have not, that the Bishop
-is of all others the most <i>precise</i> in his expression.
-2. Because <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> authorizes
-this use of those terms, who tells us that—<i>per
-tropos verti formas non verborum modo,
-sed et sensuum, et compositionis</i>, l. viii. c. 6.
-And as to <i>figuram</i>, he defines it to be (as
-the word itself, he says, imports) <i>conformatio
-quædam orationis, remota à communi et primum
-se offerente ratione</i>, l. ix. c. 1. <i>words</i>,
-large enough to take in every possible change<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span>
-and alteration of common language. So that
-<i>all manners and forms</i> of language, different
-from the common ones, may, according to
-<span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>, be fitly denominated <i>tropes and
-figures of composition</i>. 3. I conclude this to
-be the Bishop’s meaning, because the <i>specific
-sense</i> of these words was not sufficient to his
-purpose, which was to speak of <small>ALL</small> kinds of
-tropical and figured speech. Now though <i>allegories,
-metaphors and other tropes and figures,
-which are no more than comparisons
-and similitudes, expressed in another form</i>,
-belong indeed to the <i>genus</i> of figured language,
-they are by no means the whole of it,
-as so great a master of rhetoric, as yourself,
-very well knows. 4. I conclude this, from the
-<i>peculiar mode</i> of his expression: if the Bishop
-had said simply <i>tropes and figures of speech</i>,
-I might perhaps (if nothing else had hindered)
-have taken him to mean, as you seem to have
-done, only <i>metaphors, allegories, and other
-tropes and figures, expressing, in another
-form, comparisons and similitudes</i>, which, in
-vulgar use, come under the name of <i>tropes and
-figures of speech</i>: But when he departs from
-that common form of expression, and puts it,
-<i>tropes and figures of</i> <small>COMPOSITION</small>, I infer
-that so exact a writer, as the Bishop, had his
-reasons for this change, and that he intended<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span>
-by it to express <i>more</i> than <i>tropes and figures
-of speech</i> usually convey, indeed <small>ALL</small> that can
-any way relate to the tropical and figurative
-use of words in <i>literary composition</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is now seen what the <small>SUBJECT</small> of this bold
-proposition is: namely, <i>tropical or figured
-language, in general</i>. This figured language,
-as it is a deviation from the principles of
-metaphysics and logic, is frequently <i>vicious</i>; i. e. is
-an acknowledged vice or fault in composition,
-as such. We now then see the force of the
-<span class="smcap">Predicate</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Well; but if this figured language “be
-vicious <i>as</i> it is, <i>i. e.</i> <i>because</i>, <i>quatenus</i>, it is
-such a deviation, it must not only be <i>frequently</i>,
-but <i>always</i> vicious.” The premises
-are general and unlimited: so must, likewise,
-be the conclusion. What sense, then, is there
-in the word, <i>frequently</i>? or what room, for
-that qualification?</p>
-
-<p>See, what it is to be a great proficient in
-logic, before one has well learnt one’s Grammar!
-As, i. e. <i>because</i>, <i>quatenus</i>, say you.
-How exactly and critically the English language
-may be studied in <i>Dublin</i>, I pretend not
-to say: But we in <i>England</i> understand the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span>
-particle as, not only in the sense of <i>because</i>,
-<i>quatenus</i>, but also, and, I think, more frequently,
-in the sense of <i>in proportion as</i>, <i>according
-as</i>, or, if you will needs have a Latin
-term to explain an English term, <i>prout, perinde
-ac</i>. So that the proposition stands thus:
-<i>These tropes and figures</i>, <small>ACCORDING AS</small> <i>they
-are a deviation from the principles of metaphysics
-and logic, are frequently vicious</i>. The
-premises, you now see, are qualified, as well
-as the conclusion. Figured language, <small>WHEN</small> it
-deviates from the principles of metaphysics and
-logic, is—what? <i>always</i> vicious? But the
-Bishop did not say, that figured language is
-<i>always</i> a deviation from those principles. He
-only says, <i>when</i> it so deviates, it is vicious. It
-is implied in the expression that figured language
-at least <i>sometimes</i> deviates from those
-principles, and the Bishop, as appears, is of
-opinion that it <i>frequently</i> deviates: He therefore
-says, consistently with his premises, and
-with his usual accuracy, It is <i>frequently</i>
-vicious.</p>
-
-<p>In short, the Bishop’s argument, about which
-you make so much noise, if drawn out in mood
-and figure, would, I suppose, stand thus—“Tropical
-and figured language, <small>WHEN</small> it deviates
-from the principles of metaphysics and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">374</span>
-logic, is vicious—Tropical and figured language
-<small>FREQUENTLY</small> deviates from those principles—Therefore
-tropical and figured language
-is <small>FREQUENTLY</small> vicious.” And where
-is the defect of sense or logic, I want to know,
-in this argumentation? But you impatiently
-ask, Are <i>metaphors, allegories, and comparisons</i>
-then included in this <i>figured language</i>,
-which is pronounced <i>vicious</i>? To this question
-I can only reply, That I know not whether
-<i>metaphors, allegories, and comparisons</i>,
-are, in the Bishop’s opinion, <i>deviations</i> from
-the principles of metaphysics and logic; for I
-cannot find that he says any thing, in <i>particular</i>,
-of this kind of tropes and figures. But if
-you, or any one for you, will shew clearly, that
-<i>metaphors, allegories, and comparisons</i> are
-such <i>deviations</i>, the Bishop, for any thing I
-know, might affirm, and might be justified in
-affirming, that they were in themselves <i>vicious</i>.
-But be not too much alarmed for your favourites,
-if he should: They would certainly
-keep their ground, though convicted of such
-<i>vice</i>; at least unless the Rhetoricians of our
-time should be so dull as not to be able to find
-out what <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> calls <i>probabile aliquid</i>,
-some probable pretext to justify or excuse
-them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span></p>
-
-<p>But, instead of troubling ourselves to guess
-what the Bishop <i>might</i> say on a subject on
-which he has said nothing, it is to better purpose
-to attend to what he <i>has</i> said, on the
-subject in question. The Bishop <i>has</i> said,
-<i>That tropical and figured language is frequently
-vicious</i>. You ask when? He replies,
-<i>When it deviates from the principles of metaphysics
-and logic</i>. But in what particular
-instances does this appear? He tells you this
-too. He gives you instances enough, to justify
-his affirmation, that tropical and figured language
-is <i>frequently</i> vicious; for he exemplifies
-his affirmation in <small>ONE WHOLE</small> class of such
-figured speech, as deviates from the principles
-of metaphysics and logic, and is therefore vicious,
-namely, <i>in the class of verbal figures</i>.
-‘This, [<i>i. e.</i> the truth of the affirmation, That
-figured language, according as it is found to
-be a deviation from the principles of metaphysics
-and logic, is frequently vicious] the
-great master, <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>, freely confesseth,
-where, speaking of that ornamented speech,
-which he calls σχήματα λέξεως, he makes the
-following confession and apology—esset enim
-omne schema <small>VITIUM</small>, si non peteretur, sed
-accideret. Verum auctoritate, vetustate, consuetudine,
-plerumque defenditur, sæpe etiam
-<small>RATIONE QUADAM</small>. Ideoque cum sit à simplici<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span>
-rectoque loquendi genere deflexa, <i>virtus est</i>,
-si habet <small>PROBABILE ALIQUID</small> quod sequatur<a id="FNanchor_159" href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty, I trust, now begins to clear
-up. Figured language, is frequently vicious.
-Of this we have an instance given in one entire
-species of figured or ornamented speech,
-namely σχήματα λέξεως, or <i>verbal figures</i>.
-Can any thing be clearer and plainer? Yet,
-because you had taken it into your head that
-by <i>tropes and figures of composition</i> the Bishop
-understood, nay could only understand,
-<i>metaphors, allegories, and comparisons</i>, you
-dreamt of nothing, here, but the same fine
-things. And though <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> lay before
-the Bishop, when he quoted these words,
-though the Bishop’s own express words shew
-the contrary, for he speaks not of tropes and
-figures in general, much less of such tropes
-and figures as you speak of, but solely of <i>that
-ornamented speech</i>, called σχήματα λέξεως, you
-will needs have him quote <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> in this
-place as speaking of <i>Rhetorical figures</i>. But
-let us attend to <span class="smcap">Quinctilian’s</span> words. <i>Esset
-omne schema vitium, si non peterentur, sed acciderent.</i>
-What! Shall we think the Bishop
-could mean to affirm of <i>rhetorical figures</i>, that
-they would <i>always be vicious</i>, if they <i>were not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span>
-sought for, but occurred of themselves</i>? For
-that, I think, is the translation of—<i>si non peterentur,
-sed acciderent</i>. Surely one way, and
-that the chief, in which <i>rhetorical figures,
-metaphors, allegories, and comparisons</i>, become
-vicious, is, when they <small>ARE</small> <i>sought for,
-sollicitously hunted after, and affectedly
-brought in</i>. The very contrary happens with
-regard to these verbal figures: they are vicious,
-when they <i>are</i> <small>NOT</small> <i>sought for and purposely
-affected</i>. I conclude then, that his Lordship,
-who surely does not want common sense, and,
-I think, understands Latin, did not, and could
-not intend to exemplify his observation in the
-case of <i>rhetorical figures</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Still you are something puzzled and perplexed
-by the Bishop’s observation. Admitting
-him to mean, as his author does, <i>verbal figures</i>,
-how can these be considered <i>as a deviation
-from the principles of metaphysics and logic</i>?
-How? Why, has not the Bishop told us, or,
-if he had not, is it not certain in itself, that
-<i>to give a language clearness is the office of
-philosophy; and that Definition, a part of
-Logic, performs that service by a resolution
-of the ideas, which make up the terms</i>? But
-these verbal figures are often a deviation from,
-nay a willful defiance of, <i>all logical definition</i>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span>
-Witness the very instance you and <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>
-give us, in <span class="smcap">Virgil’s</span> <i>timidi damæ</i>. Logic defines
-<i>Damæ</i> to be the <i>females</i> of that species
-of animals called <i>Deer</i>. The figurative <span class="smcap">Virgil</span>
-confounds this distinction by using this term
-for the <i>males</i>, as well as females. But, universally,
-<i>Grammar</i> itself, whose peculiar office
-is to <i>give precision to language</i>, is a part
-of logic: the Bishop says, <i>its rules are conducted
-on the principles of Logic</i>. But <i>verbal
-figures</i>, even when they do not offend against
-the strictness of definition, are universally violations,
-in some degree or other, of <i>Grammar</i>,
-i. e. of <i>Logic</i>. Yet these violations of <i>Logical
-Grammar</i>, <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> tells us, may be allowed,
-<i>si habent probabile aliquid quod sequantur</i>;
-that is, for some fantastical reason
-or other, by which the masters of Rhetoric are
-pleased to recommend them to us.</p>
-
-<p>And now, Sir, let me ask, what becomes of
-your fine comment on <span class="smcap">Quinctilian’s</span> chapter
-concerning <i>verbal figures</i>, and, particularly, of
-your nice distinction between these, and <i>rhetorical
-figures</i>, which the Bishop, no doubt,
-wanted to be informed of? The issue of your
-exploits in Logic and Criticism is now seen to
-be this, That you have grossly misrepresented
-the Bishop; and needlessly, at least, explained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span>
-<span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>. <i>First</i>, you make the Bishop
-talk of <i>rhetorical figures</i> <small>ONLY</small>, in the <i>specific</i>
-sense of these terms, when his Lordship was
-all the while speaking of <i>figured language, in
-general</i>. <i>Next</i>, you make him deliver a bold
-position concerning rhetorical figures, as being
-<i>frequently</i> vicious, because <i>always</i> deviations
-from the principles of metaphysics and logic;
-when all he maintains, is, That figured language
-is <small>FREQUENTLY</small> vicious, according as it
-deviates from those principles; and, in particular,
-that <i>that</i> part of figured speech, called
-grammatical or verbal figures, is <small>ALWAYS</small>
-vicious.</p>
-
-<p>To conclude, if you had shewn any compunction,
-or even common respect in exposing
-what you took to be the Bishop’s absurdities
-on this subject, I should have made a conscience
-of laying you open on this head of
-<i>Rhetorical and Grammatical figures</i>. As it
-is, your unmerciful triumph over the poor Bishop
-makes it allowable for me to lay your
-dealing with him before the reader in all its
-nakedness; and, after what has been said, I
-cannot do it better than by letting him see how
-the Bishop’s argumentation is represented by
-you, as drawn out in your own words, and
-that in full mood and figure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span></p>
-
-<p>“I should by no means,” say you, “willingly
-misrepresent the argument of my Lord Bishop;
-but upon repeated examination of the passage
-here quoted, I must state it thus:</p>
-
-<p>“Quinctilian declares, that what are called
-grammatical figures are really no more than
-faulty violations of grammatical rules, unless
-when purposely introduced upon some reasonable
-or plausible grounds.”</p>
-
-<p>Therefore,</p>
-
-<p>“He confesses that tropes and figures of
-composition, as they are a deviation from the
-principles of metaphysics and logic, are frequently
-vicious.”</p>
-
-<p>You add, “If this be a fair representation, it
-were to be wished that the learned author <i>had
-so far condescended to men of confined abilities</i>,
-as to explain the connexion between these
-two propositions<a id="FNanchor_160" href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>As the <i>learned author</i>, I guess, may be better
-employed than in this unnecessary task, which
-you <i>wish</i> to impose upon him, I have taken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span>
-upon me to discharge that office, with less able
-hands; and, yet, have <i>explained the connexion
-between these two propositions</i> in such sort,
-that, if I mistake not, we shall never hear more
-from you, of any inconsistency between them.</p>
-
-<p>I have <small>NOW</small>, Sir, gone through the several
-particulars of your Dissertation, and have
-shewn, I think, clearly and invincibly, that
-all your objections to the Bishop’s paradoxical
-sentiments on the subject of Eloquence are mistaken
-and wholly groundless.</p>
-
-<p>The <small>TWO</small> propositions his Lordship took upon
-him to confute, 1. <i>That an inspired language
-must needs be a language of perfect eloquence</i>;
-and, 2. <i>That eloquence is something congenial
-and essential to human speech, and inherent in
-the constitution of things</i>: These two propositions,
-I say, are so thoroughly confuted by the
-Bishop, that not one word of all you say in any
-degree affects his reasoning, or supports those
-two propositions against the force of it. I am
-even candid enough to believe that, on further
-thoughts, you will not yourself be displeased
-with this ill success of your attack on the learned
-Prelate’s <i>principles</i>; which are manifestly calculated
-for the service of religion and the honour
-of inspired scripture. For, though you attempt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span>
-to shew us in your two last chapters,
-how the honour of inspired scripture may be
-saved on <i>other principles</i>, yet allow me to say
-that, for certain reasons, I much question the
-validity of those principles; at least, that the
-persons, most concerned in this controversy,
-will by no means subscribe to them. If there
-be an Archetype of eloquence in nature, ‘one
-should be apt enough, as the Bishop says, to
-conclude, that when the Author of nature condescended
-to inspire one of these plastic performances
-of human art, he would make it by
-the exactest pattern of the Archetype<a id="FNanchor_161" href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a>.’ Or,
-whatever you and I and the Bishop might conclude,
-assure yourself that the objectors to inspired
-scripture will infallibly draw that conclusion.
-And, when they do so, and fortify
-themselves, besides, with the authority of so
-great a master of eloquence, as yourself, it will
-be in vain, I doubt, to oppose to them your
-ingenious harangues and encomiums on the eloquent
-composition of the sacred scriptures. Nay,
-it would give you, no doubt, some pain to find
-that, though they should accept your authority
-for the truth of their favourite principle of there
-being <i>an Archetype in nature of perfect eloquence</i>,
-they would yet reject your <i>harangues<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span>
-and encomiums</i> with that disdain which is so
-natural to them. The honour of sacred scripture
-will then hang on a question of <i>Taste</i>: and unluckily
-the objectors are of such authority in
-that respect, that there is no appeal from their
-decisions of it.</p>
-
-<p>The contemplation of these <i>inconveniencies</i>,
-together with the <i>love of truth</i>, determined me
-to hazard this address to you. I will not deny,
-besides, that the mere <i>justice</i> due to a great
-character, whom I found somewhat freely, not
-to say injuriously treated by you, was also, <i>one</i>
-motive with me. If I add still <i>another</i>, it is
-such as I need not disown, and which you, of all
-men, will be the last to object to, I mean a
-motive of <i>Charity</i> towards yourself.</p>
-
-<p>I am much a stranger to your person, and,
-what it may perhaps be scarce decent for me to
-profess to you, even to your writings. All I
-know of <small>YOURSELF</small>, is, what your book tells me,
-that you are distinguished by an honourable
-place and office in the University of <i>Dublin</i>:
-and what I have heared of your <small>WRITINGS</small>,
-makes me think favourably of a private scholar,
-who, they say, employs himself in such works
-of learning and taste, as are proper to instill a
-reverence into young minds for the best models<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span>
-of ancient eloquence. While you are thus creditably
-stationed, and thus usefully employed,
-I could not but feel some concern for the hurt
-you were likely to do yourself by engaging in so
-warm and so unnecessary an opposition to a
-<i>writer</i>, as you characterize him, <i>of distinguished
-eminence</i><a id="FNanchor_162" href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a>. Time was, when even with us on
-this side the water, the novelty of this writer’s
-positions, and the envy, which ever attends superior
-merit, disposed some warm persons to
-open, and prosecute with many hard words,
-the unpopular cry against him, of his being a
-bold and <small>PARADOXICAL</small> writer. But reflexion
-and experience have quieted this alarm. Men
-of sense and judgment now consider his Paradoxes
-as very harmless, nay as very sober and
-certain truths; and even vye with each other in
-their zeal of building upon them, as the surest
-basis, on which a just and rational vindication
-of our common religion can be raised. This is
-the present state of things with us, and especially,
-they say, in the Universities of this kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, not without some surprize,
-and, as I said, with much real concern, that I
-found a gentleman of learning and education revive,
-at such a juncture, that stale and worn-out
-topic, and disgrace himself by propagating this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span>
-clamour, of I know not what <i>paradoxical boldness</i>,
-now long out of date, in the much-approved
-writings of this great Prelate. Nor was
-the dishonour to yourself, the only circumstance
-to be lamented. You were striving,
-with all your might, to infuse prejudices into
-the minds of many ingenious and virtuous young
-men; whom you would surely be sorry to mislead;
-and who would owe you little thanks for
-prepossessing them with unfavourable sentiments
-of such a man and writer, as the Bishop
-of <i>Gloucester</i>, they will find, is generally
-esteemed to be.</p>
-
-<p>These, then, were the considerations, which
-induced me to employ an hour or two of leisure
-in giving your book a free examination. I have
-done it in as few words as possible, and in a
-<i>manner</i> which no reasonable and candid man,
-I persuade myself, will disapprove. I know
-what apologies may be requisite to the learned
-Bishop for a stranger’s engaging in this officious
-task. But to you, Sir, I make none: It is
-enough if any benefits to yourself or others
-may be derived from it.</p>
-
-<p>I am, with respect, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<h3>FINIS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span></p>
-
-<p class="copy">Printed by J. Nichols and Son,<br />
-Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2 id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a> Prov. xvi. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a> Isaiah, xxvi. 9.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a> Rev. ii. 4, 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a> Eph. i. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a> John i. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a> Col. i. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a> Rev. i. 17. xxii. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">8</a> Heb. i. 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">9</a> Micah v. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">10</a> Rev. i. 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">11</a> John xvii. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">12</a> Ps. iii. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">13</a> Eph. iii. 9, 10, 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">14</a> Eph. iii. 18, 19.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">15</a> Acts x. 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">16</a> Eph. iii. 21.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">17</a> 1. Pet. i. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">18</a> Eph. i. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">19</a> Rev. xiv. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">20</a> Gal. i. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">21</a> Rom. x. 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">22</a> Col. xi. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">23</a> Matth. xxviii. 19.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">24</a> 2 Cor. i. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">25</a> 2 Cor. xii. 9.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">26</a> 1 Cor. vii. 21-24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">27</a> John xv. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">28</a> 1 Tim. iv. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">29</a> Phil. i. 10, 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">30</a> Archbishop’s Injunctions, S. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">31</a> Canon LXXV.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">32</a> Phil. i. 9-11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">33</a> Rom. xii. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">34</a> Erasmi in Evang. Joannis Paraphrasis, cap. i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">35</a> 1 Cor. ii. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">36</a> 1 Cor. ii. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">37</a> 2 Tim. iv. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">38</a> Lord Bacon, A. L. B. i. p. 417.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">39</a> <i>Fiduciam</i> orator præ se ferat, semperque ità dicat
-tanquàm de causâ optimè sentiat. Quint. l. v. c. 13, p. 422.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">40</a> Matth. vii. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">41</a> Matth. xv. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">42</a> “In omnibus quæ dicit tanta auctoritas inest, ut dissentire
-pudeat; nec advocati studium, sed testis aut judicis
-afferat fidem.” Said of Cicero by Quintilian. The Roman
-orator acquired this praise by consummate art and genius.
-The plainest Christian homilist, who does his duty in
-<i>speaking as the oracles of God</i>, attains it with ease, and deserves
-it much better. Such is the pre-eminence of what
-the Apostle calls <i>the foolishness of preaching</i>!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">43</a> Tanta in oratione auctoritas, ut <i>probationis</i> locum
-obtineat. Quintil. p. 422.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">44</a> Bishop Stillingfleet, Sermon IV.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">45</a> <i>Afficiamur</i>, antequam afficere conemur. Quint. p. 461.
-<i>moveamur</i> ipsi. Ib.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">46</a> If I mention the names of the Bishops <span class="smcap">Beveridge</span>
-and <span class="smcap">Blackall</span>, it is not in exclusion of many others, but
-because I suspect they are less known to the younger
-clergy than they deserve to be.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">47</a> Matth. xxviii. 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">48</a> “Parentes et Pædagogi pueros olim cum primum per
-ætatem sapere, et intelligere cœpissent, primis Christianæ
-religionis rudimentis diligenter instituebant, ut pietatem
-unà penè cum lacte nutricis imbiberent, et à primis statim
-cunis, virtutis incunabilis ad vitam illam beatam alerentur.
-Quem etiam ad usum breves libri, quos <i>Catechismos</i> nostri
-appellant, conscribebantur.”</p>
-
-<p class="author">Noelli Catechismus de Baptismo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">49</a> 2 Cor. xiii. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">50</a> W. Weston, B. D. Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge;
-and vicar of Campden, Gloucestershire. Camb. 1746.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">51</a> Pref. p. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">52</a> Pref. p. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">53</a> Ded. p. iv.—“The best compliment I can make your
-Lordship on the occasion is the true one, <i>that I have a good
-opinion of the present performance myself</i>,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">54</a> Pref. p. iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">55</a> Pref. p. iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">56</a> Pref. p. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">57</a> The following passages brought to confirm this <i>fact</i>
-are so well known, that, if there was not something
-uncommonly strong, and subversive of the writer’s objection
-in the very turn of expression, I should scarce think myself
-at liberty to transcribe them.—Visa est mihi res digna
-consultatione, maximè propter perielitantium <i>numerum</i>.
-Multi enim <i>omnis ætatis, omnis ordinis</i>, utriusque sexûs
-etiam vocantur in periculum et vocabuntur. Neque enim
-civitates tantum, sed vicos etiam atque <i>agros</i> superstitionis
-istius contagio pervagata——<i>propè jam desolata templa,——sacra
-solemnia diu intermissa</i>.—Plin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">58</a> Hesterni sumus, et <i>vestra omnia implevimus, urbes, insulas,
-castella, municipia, conciliabula, castra ipsa, tribus,
-decurias, palatium, senatum, forum</i>; sola vobis relinquimus
-templa. Tertull. Apol. c. 37. And before speaking
-of the heathens, <i>Obessam vociferantur civitatem, in agris,
-in castellis, in insulis</i> Christianos, <i>omnem sexum, ætatem,
-conditionem &amp; dignitatem</i> transgredi ad hoc nomen quasi
-detrimento mærent. c. i. See also Arnobius, contr. Gentes,
-insisting on the same fact.—Vel hæc saltem fidem vobis
-faciunt argumenta credendi, quod jam per <i>omnes terras</i> in
-<i>tam brevi tempore et parvo immensi nominis hujus sacramenta
-diffusa sunt</i>? &amp;c. L. ii. sub fin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">59</a> Pref. p. iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">60</a> Chap. iii. p. 38.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">61</a> Speaking of I know not what <i>sour and dogmatical</i>
-divines, “I am not sure (says he) that I shall escape <i>their
-anathema</i>; since it is their custom generally to be displeased
-with every thing that does not fall in with their
-<i>fixed and settled sentiments</i>; and every defence of religion
-that is <i>out of their way</i> wants another to support it.”
-Pref. p. viii. And again: “With some, I suppose, the
-<i>novelty</i> of this matter will be for ever a bar to its reception.”
-P. 370.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">62</a> The reader sees I complaisantly allow the writer’s
-representation of the cases both of <i>Pilate and Gallio</i>;
-though much might, with good reason, be objected to each
-of them. For, 1. If I should lay any stress on the <i>acts of
-Pilate</i>, which, he owns, if admitted, would overturn the
-whole use of his evidence, I should but follow in this the
-best authorities, and those too supported by such reasonings
-as the Inquirer would find it difficult to confute. And,
-2. As to Gallio’s case, however inattentive he might be to
-the fame of Paul’s miracles, the passage alledged is certainly
-insufficient to prove it. Acts, chap. xviii. 17. For,
-indeed, the Inquirer did not so much as apprehend the purpose
-of the sacred writer in that whole narration; which
-manifestly was not to signify to us Gallio’s inattention to the
-Apostle’s miracles, but his candour, and prudent conduct in
-refusing to interfere in religious matters, and in chusing
-rather to overlook an act of violence done in his presence
-(which, though strictly speaking illegal, he might probably
-think not altogether undeserved of the malicious intolerating
-Jew), than gratify the complainant’s passion in punishing
-either Paul or his heathen advocates. For this is
-the sense of those words, <i>He cared for none of these things</i>;
-which the writer ought to have seen is so far from proving
-Gallio’s disregard of miracles, that, had he been Paul’s
-convert, the very same thing had been observed of him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">63</a> Aristeas.—The writers referred to in the margin are
-<i>Strabo</i>, <i>Maximus Tyrius</i>, <i>Pliny</i>, and <i>Herodotus</i>. Of these,
-the three first mention Aristeas <i>occasionally</i> only; and yet
-Strabo calls him ανηρ γοης ει τις αλλος; and <i>Max. Tyrius</i> and
-<i>Pliny</i>, though they explode miracles, yet plainly enough
-declare the common creed to run in his favour. Max.
-Tyrius in particular, after having given us his opinion of
-his miracles, together with his reasons for pretending to
-them, adds, <i>And Aristeas gained more credit by this pretension
-to wonders and supernatural communications, than
-Xenagoras, Xenophanes, or any other philosopher could have
-acquired by relating the plain truth</i>. Και ην πιθανωτερος ταυτα
-λεγων ὁ Αριστεας η ὁ Ξεναγορας η Ξενοφανης, η τις αλλος των εξηγησαμενων
-τα οντα ὡς εχει. Lastly, the account Herodotus gives
-us is so much to the credit of his miracles, that one cannot
-imagine how the writer should think it to his purpose to
-refer to him. For he <i>was</i>, indeed, delivering the popular
-history of Aristeas; and therefore did, as might be expected,
-represent him, not only as a worker of miracles,
-but as much reverenced and <i>esteemed</i> for them. This he
-attests upon his own knowledge of several cities, all concurring
-in the firm belief of his miracles; and one of them
-in particular transported by so religious a veneration of
-him, as to erect a statue to his memory; which they also
-caused to be set up in the most public part of their city,
-and even close to one they had at the same time decreed to
-Apollo. And for the historian himself, though in truth
-the story be even foolish enough, yet so far is he from
-speaking of it with disregard, that I am not certain if he
-did not believe it, at least that part which relates to the
-Metapontini; which, after the mention of some other
-things from hearsay only, he introduces in the following
-assured manner: “Thus far the report of these cities:
-But what I am now going to relate, I <i>certainly know</i> to
-have happened to the Metapontini in Italy, &amp;c.” Ταυτα
-μεν αἱ πολεις αὑται λεγουσι, τα δε οιδα Μεταποντινοισι εν Ιταλιη
-συγκυρησαντα, &amp;c. L iv. 15; and then mentions the affair which
-gave occasion to the statue; which, he tells us, he saw
-himself, placed, as I have said, and inscribed to the memory
-of Aristeas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">64</a> The other impostors mentioned as not much esteemed
-for their miracles are <i>Pythagoras</i>, <i>Jamblichus</i>, and <i>Adrian</i>;
-though it is certain the writers of their lives lay great
-stress upon them. <i>Jamblichus</i> and <i>Porphyry</i>, after enlarging
-on several of Pythagoras’s miracles, which drew the
-applause and admiration of his followers, appeal to current
-fame for the credit of these, and of other still <i>diviner miracles</i>,
-which, say they, <i>are related of him with an uniform</i>
-and constant belief, μυρια δ’ ἑτερα θαυμαστοτερα και θειοτερα περι
-τ’ ανδρος ὁμαλως και συμφονως ειρηται. (<i>Porph.</i> S. 28 and to
-the same purpose, and nearly in the same words, <i>Jambl.</i>
-S. 135). Jamblichus even goes so far, in speaking of the
-Pythagorean fondness for miracles, as to assure us, that
-they were conceived to prove the <i>divinity</i> of their authors,
-and by that means to give a sanction to their <i>opinions and
-doctrines</i>. την πιστιν των παρ’ αυτοις ὑποληψεων ἡγουνται ειναι ταυτην,
-&amp;c. S. 140. <i>They conceive it, says he, to add a</i> <small>CREDIT</small> <i>and
-authority to their doctrines, that the author of them was
-a</i> <small>GOD</small>; <i>and therefore to the question, Who was Pythagoras?
-their answer was, The hyperborean Apollo; and in proof of
-this they alledge the miracle of his golden thigh. And yet</i>,
-says the Inquirer, <i>Pythagoras was not much more esteemed
-for his thigh of gold than one of flesh</i>. What pity is it, the
-wit of this antithesis should be no better supported!</p>
-
-<p>As for <i>Eunapius</i>, though he plainly disbelieved the silly
-tale of the two boys of Gadara, yet, in relating it circumstantially
-as he does, he clearly enough expresses his own
-opinion of miracles, and acknowledges thereby the credit
-they would bring his master, were they better attested, or
-but fairly received.</p>
-
-<p>The miracles of the emperors are well known. And as
-their manifest intent was, of the one of them, to add a
-credit, or, as Suetonius more strongly expresses it, an
-<i>authority, and certain awfulness, befitting majesty</i>, to the
-person of <i>Trajan</i>, and of the <i>other</i>, to inspire the hopes of
-recovery into <i>Adrian</i>, so the relation of them by their
-historians, as useful and subservient to those ends, is a
-thorough confutation of what the author pretends about
-the little regard paid to them. And here it may be proper
-to observe, once for all, that the frequent narrations of
-prodigies and miracles, of which all Pagan story and antiquity
-is full, is infinitely a stronger argument for the high
-credit of miracles amongst the heathens in general, than
-any pretended <i>coolness, tranquillity, and indifference</i>, which
-the writer’s warmth, in the prosecution of his favourite
-novelty, leads him to imagine in the narrations themselves,
-is, or can be, for the contrary opinion. Since <i>this</i> could
-only shew the incredulity of the relaters; whilst the <i>relating</i>
-them at all demonstrates the general good reception
-they met with from the people.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">65</a> This miracle was that of the fiery eruptions which
-hindered the building of the temple at Jerusalem by <i>Julian</i>;
-and which, falling into the hands of <i>Marcellinus</i>, might be
-expected to be spoken of as a natural event. But this is
-all: for, as to that <i>wonderful coolness and tranquillity</i>,
-which the writer pretends to have discovered in the narration,
-it is so far from appearing to me, that, on the
-contrary, I see not how the historian could have expressed
-himself with more emotion, without directly owning the
-miracle. His words are these: Quum itaque rei fortiter
-instaret Alypius, juvaretque provinciæ rector, <i>metuendi
-globi flammarum prope fundamenta crebris assultibus erumpentes,
-fecere locum, exustis aliquoties operantibus, inaccessum:
-hoc modo elemento destinatius repellente cessavit
-Inceptum</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">66</a> Pp. 40, 54, 57.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">67</a> Epicurus, Democritus, &amp;c. p. 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">68</a> For the passage referred to (Orig. contr. Cels. l. 8) is
-in answer to an harangue of Celsus, wherein he had expatiated
-largely on the heathen miracles, and opposed
-them with great confidence to the Christian. Upon which
-the excellent Father observes with much force, “I know
-not how it is that Celsus thinks proper to alledge
-the heathen miracles as incontestably evident, and undoubted
-facts; and yet affects to treat the Jewish and
-Christian miracles recorded in our books as mere fables.
-For why should not ours rather be thought true, and
-those which Celsus preaches up fabulous? Especially,
-since those were never <i>credited</i> by their own philosophers,
-such as <i>Democritus</i>, <i>Epicurus</i>, and <i>Aristotle</i>; who
-yet, had they lived with Moses or Jesus, on account of
-the exceeding great clearness and evidence of the facts,
-δια την εναργειαν, would in all probability have believed
-ours.” Having thus fairly laid the passage before the
-reader, it is submitted to his judgment with what colour
-of reason the learned writer could think of deducing a
-proof of the <i>low opinion of miracles in general amongst the
-philosophers</i> from it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">69</a> P. 62.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">70</a> P. 63. Philost. L., v. c. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">71</a> P. 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">72</a> This was remarkably the case of Mahomet and Numa;
-the former of whose <i>converse with the angel Gabriel, his
-journey to heaven, and the armies of angels attending on his
-battles</i>—as well as the other’s pretended <i>intercourse with
-the goddess Egeria</i>, is well known.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">73</a> It may seem odd that any of the Fathers of the Church
-should retain such a strong tincture of this <i>evil principle</i>;
-yet this, &amp;c. p. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">74</a> Matthew, xxiv. 24. For there shall arise false Christs
-and false Prophets, and shall shew <i>great signs and wonders</i>,
-insomuch that (if it were possible) they shall deceive the
-very Elect.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">75</a> Our evidence is still increasing, and is in the next
-place confirmed even by Divine authority. P. 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">76</a> But I could not lay too great a stress on the authority
-of the Jews, because it <i>neither properly belongs to the present
-case</i>, nor, &amp;c. P. 74.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">77</a> For this would shew that the <i>heathen</i> rejection of
-miracles <i>might</i> not be owing to any contempt of them as
-<i>such</i>, since the <i>Jewish</i> was plainly owing to a very different
-reason.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">78</a> 1 Cor. i. 22. The Jews require a <i>sign</i>, and the Greeks
-seek after wisdom, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">79</a> V. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">80</a> V. 19.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">81</a> V. 20, 21, 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">82</a> It is remarkable that Maimonides pushes this prejudice
-so far as to deny that the true Messiah was to work any
-miracles at all, except that of restoring the temporal dominion
-of Israel. <i>If he</i> (the person pretending to be the
-Messiah) <small>PROSPERS</small> <i>in what he undertakes, and subdues all
-the neighbouring nations round him, and rebuilds the Sanctuary
-in its former place, and gathers together the dispersed
-of Israel, then</i> <span class="smcap">he is for certain the Messiah</span>. Maimon.
-in Yad Hachazekah Tract. de Reg. et Bell. eorum.
-c. 11. s. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">83</a> The right understanding of what is meant by the Jews
-<i>requiring a sign</i> is of such importance to the perfectly comprehending
-several parts of the Gospel history, that I shall
-be allowed to justify and illustrate the interpretation here
-given by some further considerations. And,</p>
-
-<p>1. If by σημειον is to be understood simply a <i>miracle</i>, then
-it is not true that Jesus, whom Paul preached, was or could
-be on that account a <i>stumbling block</i> to the Jews, it being
-allowed on all hands that many and great miracles <i>did
-shew forth themselves through him</i>. See John vii. 31. xi. 47.
-But,</p>
-
-<p>2. Notwithstanding this, and though it was owned in
-the fullest manner by the chief priests and Pharisees themselves,
-yet we find them very pressing for a <i>sign</i>, σημειον
-[Matth. xii. 38. xvi. 1. Luke xi. 29.] and that too (which
-is very remarkable) at the instant our Saviour had been
-working a miracle before them; a degree of perversity
-not rashly to be credited of the Jews themselves.</p>
-
-<p>It is true this <i>sign</i> is sometimes called σημειον απο του ουρανου,
-<i>a sign from Heaven</i>; which, if meaning any thing more
-than σημειον, as explained above, i. e. a <i>test</i> or credential of
-his heavenly or divine mission (and what can be more natural
-than that the Jews should express by this name the
-<i>only</i> mark they would admit of the Messiah’s coming from
-Heaven?) I say, if any thing further be intended in it, it
-must be either, 1. An outward, sensible display of the
-Divine power, <i>indicating</i>, by some prodigious and splendid
-appearance in the heavens, or actually <i>interposing</i>, in some
-signal way, to <i>accomplish</i> the deliverance of Israel; and
-then either way it falls in with and includes the interpretation
-here given. Or else, 2. It must mean a <i>mere</i> prodigy,
-asked out of wantonness, and for no other end than
-to gratify a silly curiosity in beholding a wondrous sight
-from Heaven: an interpretation, which, though maintained
-by some good writers, is utterly unsupported by the
-sacred accounts, calling it σημειον indiscriminately, without
-as with the addition of του ουρανου; and shocking to common
-sense, which makes it incredible that so frivolous a reason
-as the being denied a <i>sign</i>, thus understood, could be, as
-St. Paul asserts it was, <i>the stumbling-block</i> of infidelity to
-the Jewish nation.</p>
-
-<p>3. But what above all confirms and fixes this interpretation
-is the tenor of our Saviour’s answer to the question
-itself. For, upon the inquiry, <i>Master, shew us a sign</i>, &amp;c.
-his constant reply was, <i>A wicked and adulterous generation
-seeketh after a sign, and there shall no sign be given them
-but that of the prophet Jonas: For</i>, &amp;c. As though he had
-said, “A perverse and degenerate people, disregarding
-the wisdom of my doctrines, and the power of my miracles—the
-genuine marks and characteristics of the
-Messiah—are yet crying out for the <i>test</i>, σημειον, of my
-coming. I know the proud and ambitious sentiment of
-your heart: but assure yourselves, God will not accommodate
-his proceedings to your fond views and prejudices.
-No such <i>test</i> shall be given you. One sure and
-certain <small>TEST</small> indeed there shall be, over and above what
-has yet been afforded; but to shew you how widely different
-the Divine conduct is from your prescriptions, it
-is such a one as ye shall least expect; the very reverse of
-your hopes and expectations. It shall be that of the prophet
-<i>Jonas</i>. <i>For, as Jonas was three days and three nights
-in the whale’s belly</i>, so shall Christ (sad contradiction to
-your conceit of temporal dominion!) be put to death by
-the Jews, and <i>lie three days and three nights in the heart
-of the earth</i>. And this event, so degrading of my character
-with you, and so repugnant to your wishes, shall,
-I readily foresee, so scandalize you, that, though my return
-from the grave, like that of <i>Jonas</i> from the whale,
-shall be in the demonstration of power, yet shall ye,
-through the inveteracy of that prejudice, be so hardened,
-as not to be convinced by it.”</p>
-
-<p>The answer of our Saviour is related by <i>Matthew</i> and
-<i>Luke</i> with some addition, but such as is further favourable
-to this interpretation. For, upon their asking a sign, it
-is plain he understood them to mean not a <i>miracle</i>, but a
-<small>TEST</small>, by the question immediately put to them: <i>When it
-is evening, ye say it will be fair weather; for the sky is red.
-And in the morning, it will be foul to-day; for the sky is
-red and lowering. O! ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face
-of the sky, but can ye not discern the face of the times?</i>
-“Are the appearances which, in the order and constitution
-of nature, precede the changes of weather, a sign or test
-to you of those changes? And are ye stupid and perverse
-enough to neglect those which, by the Divine appointment,
-are made the <i>sign</i> or <i>test</i> of the <small>TIMES</small>, of
-the change of the Mosaic for the Christian dispensation?
-How is it that ye do not collect this from my <i>miracles</i> and
-<i>doctrine</i>, the ordinary and stated marks of this change,
-but ye must perversely demand a <i>test</i> of it, which the
-Scriptures nowhere promise, and the order and course
-of God’s Providence disclaim?”</p>
-
-<p>If, after all this, there can yet remain any doubt of the
-truth of this comment, it will be effectually removed by an
-authority or two from the other Evangelist, which the
-reader will indulge me in just mentioning. In our Saviour’s
-exerting an act of civil power, in scourging and driving
-the money-changers out of the temple, the Jews require
-him to shew the credentials of his authority, <i>What sign
-shewest thou that thou doest these things?</i> The asking a miracle
-in this case were impertinent; for that, how extraordinary
-soever, could never prove to the Jews that he came invested
-with the powers of the civil magistrate. The sign they
-expected, then was evidently of another kind: an express
-declaration, or open display, of the regal character and
-office, evidencing his commission <i>to do such things</i>. Accordingly,
-the reply of our Saviour was to the same effect
-as before. <i>Jesus said unto them, destroy this temple, and in
-three days I will raise it up</i>; for he spake, we know, <i>of
-the temple of his body</i>. c. ii.</p>
-
-<p>The next authority is in the sixth chapter, where we
-have an account of the miracle of feeding <i>the five thousand</i>.
-Upon the multitude’s following him after this, our Saviour
-objects to them their neglect of miracles, which he presses
-upon them as motives to their belief. <i>Ye seek me not, because
-ye saw the miracles</i>, &amp;c. Now what do the Jews return
-to this charge? Why, they fairly own it to be just, and,
-what is more, give a reason for their conduct. Their
-answer is to this effect: “Wherefore do you urge your
-miracles thus constantly to us, as motives for our belief?
-If you would have us trust and confide in you as the
-Messiah, <i>Where is the sign?</i> For, as to your miracles so
-often insisted on by you, we cannot admit them as proper
-evidences of your commission. And indeed how should
-we? for Moses wrought as great, if not greater wonders
-than you. To confront your late boasted miracle of
-feeding <i>the five thousand with five loaves</i>, did not he, as it
-is written, <i>give our fathers bread from heaven</i>? What
-miracle of yours can be more extraordinary? Yet <i>Moses</i>
-could do this. The Messiah, therefore, of whom greater
-things are promised, we expect to be <i>characterized</i> by
-other <i>signs</i>. What work takest thou in hand, τι εργαζη?”
-Here, at last, we see (and the reader will forgive the length
-of the note for the sake of so clear conviction) that the
-<i>sign</i> asked for, of what kind soever it might be, neither
-<i>was</i> nor <i>could</i> be a miracle, since all such <i>signs</i> were rejected
-by these inquirers upon <i>principle</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">84</a> I have now done with this head [the low opinion of
-miracles in the heathen world] and am not aware that any
-reasonable exceptions can be made to the testimonies
-which have been brought to confirm it; but if any one
-should think otherwise, and maintain that something
-else is necessary for the establishment of so <i>singular</i> an
-opinion, he will be <i>gratify’d</i> in his expectations, as we <i>go
-along</i>; and will find the principles and practices of much
-the greater part of the heathens on this point <i>strengthening
-and confirming</i> each other. P. 77.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">85</a> For this he must say, and not that the credit of miracles
-would hereby be something weakened: a point,
-that, as we shall see hereafter, may be allowed, and yet
-be of no manner of service to his conclusion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">86</a> I have said <i>bad Dæmons</i>; for miracles wrought by
-the assistance of <i>good Dæmons</i> were, as the Inquirer observes,
-p. 247, in great repute.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">87</a> For that this was the obvious and essential difference
-betwixt the genuine miracles of the gospel, and the tricks
-of magic, is apparent from many strong expostulations of
-the Christian apologists, who, when encountered with
-this frivolous, but <i>malicious</i> objection, used to exclaim:
-<i>Potestis aliquem nobis designare, monstrare ex omnibus illis
-magis, Qui unquam fuere per sæcula, consimile aliquid Christo
-millesimâ ex parte qui fecerit? Qui</i> <small>SINE ULLA VI CARMINUM
-SINE HERBARUM AUT GRAMINUM SUCCIS, SINE ULLA ALIQUA
-OBSERVATIONE SOLLICITA SACRORUM, LIBAMINUM,
-TEMPORUM</small>? &amp;c. Arnob. contr. Gen. L. i. And again,
-ibid. Atqui constitit Christum <small>SINE ULLIS ADMINICULIS
-RERUM</small>, <small>SINE ULLIUS RITUS ORSERVATIONE TEL LEGE</small>,
-<i>omnia illa, quæ fecit, nominis sui possibilitate fecisse; et
-quod proprium, consentaneum, Deo dignum fuerat vero,
-nihil nocens, aut noxium, sed</i> <small>OPIFERUM, SED SALUTARE,
-SED AUXILIARIBUS PLENUM BONIS</small> <i>potestatis munificæ liberalitate
-donâsse</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">88</a> Acts, C. viii. and xix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">89</a> For as to the remaining chapters on the <i>idolatry of
-the Heathens, the parallel betwixt the Heathen and Protestant
-rejection of miracles, and his Conclusion</i>, they seem
-very little to concern either him, or me. For, 1. The
-influence of idolatry is urged to prove, that the <i>religion</i>,
-not <i>miracles</i>, of Jesus, <i>was hard to be admitted</i> (p. 352);
-which, though true, has nothing <i>new</i> in it, and is, besides,
-intirely foreign, if not contradictory, to his purpose.
-2. <i>The parallel betwixt the Heathen and Protestant rejection
-of miracles</i> derives all its little illustrative force from this
-poor presumption, already confuted, that the Heathens
-had universally <i>a contempt of miracles</i>. I said the parallel
-drew its whole force from this fact, for unless it be true
-that the Heathens universally disbelieved all miracles said
-to be wrought amongst them, the case of their rejection
-of Christian miracles, the reader sees, is widely different
-from that of the Protestant rejection of the Popish. This
-one circumstance then, to mention no others, overturns
-the whole use of his parallel. But, 3. As to his conclusion,
-the design and business of that is, I allow, something
-extraordinary. It is to shew us, that his whole
-force was not spent in this wearisome Inquiry, but that,
-was he disposed for it, he <i>could</i> go on to answer other
-objections against miracles (p. 408-9) and our common
-Christianity, which had been already confuted to his
-hands. For, having shewn us what he <i>could not</i> do with
-an argument of his <i>own</i>, he was willing, it seems, to shew
-us what he <i>could</i> do with those of <i>other writers</i>. For which
-meritorious service he has my compliments and congratulations:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Labore alieno magno, partam Gloriam<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Verbis sæpè in se transfert, qua sal habet,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Quod in TE est.<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="label">90</a> Page 348, and in another place he says, it has been
-fairly shewn from <i>their own accounts</i>, and from <small>THE
-NATURE OF THEIR PRINCIPLES</small>, that the Heathens neither
-<i>had</i>, nor <i>could</i> have an high opinion of miracles. P. 383.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="label">91</a> Matth. xi. 20. Luke x. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="label">92</a> Page 172.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="label">93</a> 1 Cor. i. Col. ii. 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="label">94</a> Rom. i. Eph. v. and elsewhere <i>passim</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="label">95</a> Mr. Addison of the Christian Religion, S. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="label">96</a> Lord Chancellor Hardwicke.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="label">97</a> Page 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="label">98</a> Page 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="label">99</a> Or, by <i>judicio suo</i> may be understood that the Chancellor
-is impowered to inflict which of the several censures
-mentioned in the Statute he shall think fit, on offenders.
-The words are <i>ignavos, &amp;c. suspensione graduum, carcere,
-aut alio leviore supplicio</i>, <small>JUDICIO SUO</small> <i>castigandos</i>. And
-the same is the meaning of <small>PRO ARBITRIO SUO</small> in the Statute
-<i>de Officio Procuratorum</i>; on which the <i>Inquirer</i> affects
-to lay some stress (p. 32). “<i>Eum, qui deliquerit, primò
-pecuniâ præfinitâ mulctabit; iterum delinquenti duplicabit
-mulctam; tertiò verò si deliquerit, gravius, pro</i> <small>ARBITRIO
-SUO</small>, coercebit.” But take it in which sense you will,
-either of <i>passing sentence by his single authority</i> or <i>determining
-the kind of punishment at his discretion</i>, neither way
-can this expression be made to serve the cause in hand.
-No art of construction can pick, out of the words <i>judicio
-suo</i>, the sense of <i>final determination</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_100" href="#FNanchor_100" class="label">100</a> Lord Chancellor Hardwicke.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_101" href="#FNanchor_101" class="label">101</a> The ignorance of the <i>Inquirer</i>, who asserts <i>that the
-University has nothing to do with ecclesiastical censures</i>, and
-that <i>suspension</i> from degrees, in particular, <i>is a punishment
-merely academical</i> (p. 26), is amazing. Had he been in the
-least qualified to treat the matter he has undertaken, he
-would have known that <i>suspension</i> is not merely an usage
-of the University Court, as such, but was practised by the
-Ecclesiastical Court of the Bishops or Archbishops, as long
-as they had jurisdiction in the University. To let in one
-ray or two of light, in mere compassion, on that utter
-darkness which environs him, and shuts out all law, <i>canon</i>
-as well as <i>civil</i>, I will just refer him to <i>Arundel’s Constitutions</i>
-in a provincial Council; where Members of the
-University offending in the premisses are declared <i>suspended</i>,
-<i>ab omni actu scholastico</i>, and <i>deprived</i>, <i>ab omni privilegio
-scholastico</i>. [<i>Lyndwood</i>, de <i>Hæret.</i> cap. <i>Finaliter</i>.] And
-the same appears in a Constitution of Archbishop <i>Stratford</i>.
-[Ib. <i>De Vit. &amp; Honest. Clericorum</i>, cap. <i>Exterior</i>.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_102" href="#FNanchor_102" class="label">102</a> So Mr. Attorney General <i>Yorke</i>, in his <i>Argument for the
-University in Dr.</i> Bentley’s <i>Case</i>,—“The congregation are
-to be considered as the judges of the Court, and the <i>Vice-chancellor</i>
-as their <i>official</i>.” The <i>Inquirer</i> hath himself
-desired the reader to observe (p. 10) that the <i>V. C.</i> in the
-absence of the <i>Chancellor</i>, hath all the power which the
-University delegates to this great officer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_103" href="#FNanchor_103" class="label">103</a> That his Court was directed by this law, appears from
-a determination of Delegates, concerning <i>second Appeals
-in the same cause</i>, which I will take the liberty to transcribe.</p>
-
-<p>De Appellationibus à Delegatis.</p>
-
-<p>In Dei nomine, Amen. Nos D. Buckmaister, Inceptor
-Dakyns, M’ri Myddylton, Longforth, et Pomell, authoritate
-nobis ab Universitate commissâ, decernimus ac pro
-firmâ sententiâ determinamus, quòd liceat unicuique in
-suâ causâ appellare à judicibus delegatis per Universitatem
-ad eandem Universitatem, modò id fiat juxta juris exigentiam,
-hoc est, si antea ab eodem secundâ vice in eâdem
-causâ appellatum non fuerit. Quod si anteà bis appellaverit,
-neutiqùam tertiò appellare licebit, quum id prorsus
-sit vetitum <i>tam per jus civile quàm canonicum</i>: Cæterum
-unicuique tam actori quàm reo maneat sua libertas appellandi
-in suâ causâ à judicibus delegatis per Universitatem
-modo supradicto et à jure præscripto. [<i>Lib. Proc. Jun.
-fol.</i> 132.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_104" href="#FNanchor_104" class="label">104</a> See old Statutes <i>De Judiciis et Foro scholarium</i>; <i>De
-pœnis Appellantium</i>; <i>De tempore prosequendi Appellationes</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_105" href="#FNanchor_105" class="label">105</a> See <i>Determination of Delegates</i>, before cited, p. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_106" href="#FNanchor_106" class="label">106</a> P. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_107" href="#FNanchor_107" class="label">107</a> P. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_108" href="#FNanchor_108" class="label">108</a> P. 62.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_109" href="#FNanchor_109" class="label">109</a> <i>Delegates</i> are nominated by the <i>Caput</i>; and the Caput
-is, in effect, appointed by the Vice-chancellor and Heads
-of Colleges, who are commonly parties in all appellations.
-[See Stat. <i>De capite Eligendo</i>.] So (as the University
-complained, in their remonstrance against this very Statute
-of Q. <i>Elizabeth</i>) “when they [the V. C. and Masters
-of Houses] offer wrong, and themselves appoint judges
-to redress that wrong; it is too true, which <i>Livy</i>
-writeth in the state of <i>Decemvira, siquis Collegam appellaverit</i>,
-(meaning Appius’s judgment), <i>ab eo, ad quem venerit,
-ità discessurum, tanquam pæniteret prioris decreto
-non stetisse</i>.” [C. C. C. MSS.] So little reason is there on
-the part of the Vice-chancellor, to fear any thing from
-<i>partial Delegates</i>!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_110" href="#FNanchor_110" class="label">110</a> The <i>Inquirer</i> hath even had the hardiness to advance
-this in the plainest terms. He harangues at large from p.
-9. to 13. on the impropriety of appealing from the <i>determination
-of a superior to an inferior</i>; and, in another place,
-p. 39. derides the notion of <i>citing the supreme Magistrate
-before more supreme Delegates</i>. But how different were the
-sentiments of a late learned Civilian on this head, from
-those of this <i>little academical Lawyer</i>! Speaking of Mr.
-<i>Campbell’s</i> case, in 1725. “There is, says he, a subordination
-of jurisdiction in the University. The Vice-chancellor’s
-jurisdiction is <i>inferior</i> to that of the Senate;
-and upon Mr. <i>C—’s</i> saying, that he appealed to the
-University, the <i>inferior jurisdiction</i> ceased and devolved
-to the Senate, even before the inhibition. And, afterwards
-in considering the proctor’s inhibition; <i>upon the
-Appeal</i>, the Proctors represent the University, and are
-in that case superior to the Vice-chancellor.—And I am
-of opinion, that the Delegates in Mr. <i>C—’s</i> cause may,
-upon the Proctor’s applying to them, <i>primo et ante omnia</i>
-reverse the whole proceedings against him, in the
-V. C’s court, <i>as an attentat upon the University’s jurisdiction</i>;
-and may likewise inflict such censures, as the
-Statutes impower them to make use of, for the breach
-of the inhibition; all inhibitions being by Law, <i>sub
-pænâ juris et contemptûs</i>.” Dr. <span class="smcap">Andrews</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_111" href="#FNanchor_111" class="label">111</a> P. 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_112" href="#FNanchor_112" class="label">112</a> We have this confession from the candid writer of <i>Considerations
-on the late Regulations, &amp;c.</i> “I must enter,
-says he, upon this subject with acknowledging, as I do
-with equal truth and pleasure, that there never was,
-within my remembrance, nor, I believe, within any
-one’s memory, a set of more able and industrious tutors
-than we have at present; more capable of discharging
-that useful office, or more diligent and careful in the
-discharge of it,” p. 12. And, again, “I think there
-prevails in general and through all degrees among us,
-a great disposition to sobriety and temperance,” p. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_113" href="#FNanchor_113" class="label">113</a> P. 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_114" href="#FNanchor_114" class="label">114</a> P. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_115" href="#FNanchor_115" class="label">115</a> P. 65.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_116" href="#FNanchor_116" class="label">116</a> “You will urge—that, as a previous <i>oath</i> must be
-taken by the tutor, that he believes <i>in his conscience</i> that
-his pupil has a just cause of appeal, all Appeals would by
-this means be prevented, but such as were founded upon
-good reasons. But the force of this argument will not
-be thought very great, if, <i>&amp;c.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Reader, I can easily guess the sentiments which must
-arise in thee, at the sight of this shocking paragraph. But
-think not I have abused thee in this citation. They are
-the author’s own words, as they lie in p. 65 of the <i>Inquiry</i>.
-Well, but his reason? Why, “if it be remembered, that,
-though oaths of this kind were exacted in order to prevent
-the frequency of Appeals, they by no means had
-their proper effect, the same number having been commenced
-for the three years next after this regulation, as
-in that towards the close of which it was first made.”
-This provision of <i>oaths had not</i>, he says, <i>its proper effect</i>.
-And how does this appear? Why, <i>because Appeals were
-as frequent afterwards as before</i>. Now, any other man
-would, surely, have inferred from hence, that “therefore
-the Appeals made were not without good reason.” Not
-so the <i>Inquirer</i>. He is of another spirit. Rather than give
-any quarter to <i>Appeals</i>, let every tutor in the University be
-an abandoned perjured villain. In very tenderness to this
-unhappy writer, whoever he be, I forbear to press him farther
-on such a subject.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_117" href="#FNanchor_117" class="label">117</a> P. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_118" href="#FNanchor_118" class="label">118</a> Diss. VI. p. 259.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_119" href="#FNanchor_119" class="label">119</a> Diss. VI. p. 251.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_120" href="#FNanchor_120" class="label">120</a> Hodges, Garnet, Chappelow.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_121" href="#FNanchor_121" class="label">121</a> P. 296.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_122" href="#FNanchor_122" class="label">122</a> P. 255.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_123" href="#FNanchor_123" class="label">123</a> P. 296.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_124" href="#FNanchor_124" class="label">124</a> Dr. Lowth.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_125" href="#FNanchor_125" class="label">125</a> Page 261.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_126" href="#FNanchor_126" class="label">126</a> Page 253.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_127" href="#FNanchor_127" class="label">127</a> Page 269.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_128" href="#FNanchor_128" class="label">128</a> Page 293.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_129" href="#FNanchor_129" class="label">129</a> Julian, p. 316.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_130" href="#FNanchor_130" class="label">130</a> <i>Essay on the Gift of Tongues</i>, Works, vol. ii. p. 91.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_131" href="#FNanchor_131" class="label">131</a> <span class="smcap">Doctrine of Grace</span>, b. i. c. viii. p. 41. 2ᵈ Ed. 8ᵛᵒ.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_132" href="#FNanchor_132" class="label">132</a> Ib.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_133" href="#FNanchor_133" class="label">133</a> D. G. p. 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_134" href="#FNanchor_134" class="label">134</a> P. 41, 42.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_135" href="#FNanchor_135" class="label">135</a> From p. 42 to p. 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_136" href="#FNanchor_136" class="label">136</a> Dissertation, p. 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_137" href="#FNanchor_137" class="label">137</a> Dissert. p. 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_138" href="#FNanchor_138" class="label">138</a> Dissert. p. 86.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_139" href="#FNanchor_139" class="label">139</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_140" href="#FNanchor_140" class="label">140</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_141" href="#FNanchor_141" class="label">141</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_142" href="#FNanchor_142" class="label">142</a> Dissert. p. 88.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_143" href="#FNanchor_143" class="label">143</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 52, 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_144" href="#FNanchor_144" class="label">144</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 55, 56.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_145" href="#FNanchor_145" class="label">145</a> Dissert. p. 19.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_146" href="#FNanchor_146" class="label">146</a> Dissert. p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_147" href="#FNanchor_147" class="label">147</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_148" href="#FNanchor_148" class="label">148</a> Dissert. p. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_149" href="#FNanchor_149" class="label">149</a> Dissert. p. 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_150" href="#FNanchor_150" class="label">150</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_151" href="#FNanchor_151" class="label">151</a> Dissert. p. 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_152" href="#FNanchor_152" class="label">152</a> Dissert. p. 80, n.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_153" href="#FNanchor_153" class="label">153</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, pp. 56, 57.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_154" href="#FNanchor_154" class="label">154</a> Dissert. p. 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_155" href="#FNanchor_155" class="label">155</a> Dissert. p. 80. n.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_156" href="#FNanchor_156" class="label">156</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_157" href="#FNanchor_157" class="label">157</a> Dissert. p. 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_158" href="#FNanchor_158" class="label">158</a> Dissert. p. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_159" href="#FNanchor_159" class="label">159</a> <span class="smcap">Quinct.</span> l. ix. c. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_160" href="#FNanchor_160" class="label">160</a> Dissert. p. 34.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_161" href="#FNanchor_161" class="label">161</a> <i>Doctrine of Grace</i>, p. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_162" href="#FNanchor_162" class="label">162</a> Adv. to the Dissert.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="INDEX">INDEX<br />
-<small>TO</small><br />
-<span class="large">VOLUMES V. VI. VII. <small>AND</small> VIII.</span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span></p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-
-<li class="ifrst">A.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Adultery</span>, absolution of the woman taken in, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">gives no encouragement to think slightly of the sin, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Æneid</span>, the sixth book of, finely criticized in the D. L. viii. <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the same subject discussed by Dr. Jortin, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alembert, M. D’</span>, his opinion on Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alphonsus</span> the Wise, blasphemed the system of nature, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_31">31</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amusements, lawful</span>, may not be expedient, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anticato</span>, a name once assumed by Cæsar, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antichrist</span>, prophecies concerning, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">characters which distinguish that power, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_172"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-<li class="isub1">meaning of the term, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how construed and applied by the early Christian writers, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how by the Church of Rome, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">application of the term to that Church at various periods, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_190">190 to 201</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">deduction from those facts, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prejudices against the doctrine, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how to be removed, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">term not applied against the person of the Pope, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophecies respecting the downfal of, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">disagreeing opinions of learned men concerning, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">time and other circumstances relating to, not to be ascertained, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">main prejudice against it, whence arising, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophetic characters of, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">testimony of St. Paul, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">another symbol from St. John, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tyrannical, intolerant, and idolatrous, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">time of appearance in the world, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">declared expressly by the prophets, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the several marks of, enumerated, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">uses of this inquiry, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antichristian superstition</span>, prevailed not against the Church of Christ, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antinomians</span>, of the last century, their profligacy, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apologies</span> for Christianity, wherein generally faulty, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Appeals</span>. See <a href="#Cambridge"><span class="smcap">Cambridge</span></a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aphorisms</span>, why a favourite mode of instruction with the inspired writers, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apostolic Age</span>, Christianity how propagated in, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apostles</span>, conveyed instruction by general precepts, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">preached not themselves but Christ Jesus the Lord, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">used no arts to set off their moral character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">or their intellectual, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_186">186</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">preached therefore by the direction of the Holy Spirit, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Spirit promised them by our Saviour, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to guide them into all truth, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to shew them things to come, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">and situation considered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the promise not abused by them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">admonition of the angels to them on our Lord’s ascension, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under what circumstances the Greek language was inspired into them, viii. <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">had time to improve themselves in it, ere they turned to the Gentiles, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their style such as might be expected, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">needed no aid from eloquence, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">By what considerations generally restrained from the use of it, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apostrophe</span>, of Solomon to youth, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apocalypse</span>. See <a href="#Revelations"><span class="smcap">Revelations</span></a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aristeas</span>, an impostor, esteemed as a worker of miracles, viii. <a href="#Page_157">157</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aristotle</span>, at one time gave law to the Christian world, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arnulphus</span>, bishop of Orleans, styled the Pope Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Articles</span>, the Thirty-nine, are the formulary of faith with us, viii. <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arts, Fine</span>, administer to luxury, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Asiatic Christians</span>, their condition different from that of the Jews, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ascension</span> of Jesus into Heaven, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his coming to be in like manner, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Assentatio</span>, a species of flattery, viii. <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Atheism</span>, adopted as a release from the restraints of morality, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aventinus, Joannes</span>, points out the beginning of the reign of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Augury</span>, of the duration of the Roman Empire, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Authority</span>, an air of, its effect in orators, viii. <a href="#Page_124">124</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">——, of our Saviour’s teaching, in what consisting, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">B.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Babylon</span>, a Pagan idolatrous city, of what an emblem, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bacon</span>, Lord, his observation on the double sense of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Baptism</span>, its reference to the typical washings of the law, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Baptist, The</span>, his food and raiment emblematical, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Barrow</span>, Dr. an eminent expositor of the Catechism, viii. <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Beast</span>, in the Revelations, its seven heads a double type, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Benevolence</span>, how perverted, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in the Gospel takes the name of Charity, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Berengarius</span>, styles Rome the seat of Satan, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bernard</span>, St. denounces the church of Rome as Antichristian, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bible</span>, only, the religion of Protestants, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Blood</span> of Christ, its efficacy and value how signified by him, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_154">154</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">danger of refusing to be washed by it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its benefits how to be secured, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Boniface III.</span> begged the title of Œcumenical Bishop, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Bossuet"><span class="smcap">Bossuet, M.</span> his remark on the conduct of the primitive Christians, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_168">168</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Mr. Mede’s work on the Revelations, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the terms <i>fornication</i> and <i>adultery</i>, as applied to Rome, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_307">307</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">justifies persecution, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_315">315</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his unreasonable jocularity on the Reformation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_318">318</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">British people</span>, zeal for religion abated among them, viii. <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">private morals relaxed, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">civil or political virtues disappearing, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brutus</span>, erred from excess of virtue, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">C.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cæsar</span>, his baldness a mark of infamy, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his admirable way of recording his own achievements, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Cambridge"><span class="smcap">Cambridge University</span>, dispute concerning appeals at, viii. <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">historical account of its jurisdiction, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">addition of civil power to the spiritual, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">power of making local statutes, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">body of new statutes given, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">appeals not forbidden, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the right of appealing not affected by disuse, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grace proposed by the assertors of the right of appeal, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">delegates by whom nominated, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">subordination in the jurisdiction, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>. n.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">objections against the grace answered, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">right of under-graduates exercised by the interposition of their tutors, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">insinuations against the advocates for the right of appeal exposed, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the claim as ancient as the English Constitution, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Casuists</span>, have perverted the precepts of the Gospel, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Catechizing</span>, the duty of, viii. <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its uses to the catechumens, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the congregation present, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the clergy themselves, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Catiline</span>, described by Cicero, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cato</span>, his virtue contrasted with that of Cæsar, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Celsus</span>, how he represents the Jews, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_6">6</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his objections against their oracles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_14">14</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chance</span>, by some considered, as supplying the place of inspiration, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">could not have accomplished the spiritual prophecies, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Character</span>, moral, artifices which men use to display it, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">intellectual, two ways of displaying, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charity</span>, Christian, its genealogy, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_3">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">genuine how to be distinguished from false, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the proper cure for learned pride, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles I.</span> the religious troubles in his reign whence originating, viii. <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">struggles for civil liberty, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chillingworth</span>, and others, established the old principle of the Protestant religion, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_349">349</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">393</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Christ</span>, the spirit of prophecy, his testimony, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his appeal to that spirit, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">all the prophets bear witness to him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">great purpose of his coming, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fortunes of his dispensation not yet perfectly disclosed, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his prophecy concerning the treachery of Judas, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">its use, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophecies concerning his first coming, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">how enforced among the Jews, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">concerning his second coming, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his prophecy of the destruction of Jerusalem, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">fulfilled, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sublime command to his followers, to teach all nations, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">foretold the appearance of false Christs, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his mediatorial office not to be interfered with by the worship of saints, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">time of his appearing how foretold, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">vast scheme of prophecy relating to his first and second coming, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">benefits of his death extend to all men, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">faith in him the condition of salvation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">declared to the believing Jews, how they were to be judged, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">to his disciples, that they had seen the Father, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why he spake in parables, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his promise to manifest himself, to whom given, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why he condescended to wash the feet of his disciples, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">his answer to Peter on that occasion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death a propitiation for sin, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his admonition respecting the hearing of the word, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sentence on those who receive it not, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his reply to the Pharisees concerning blindness and sin, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_260">260</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">394</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">denounces a woe against those of whom all men speak well, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his question of the Jews who stoned him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his admonition to the woman taken in adultery, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">his address to those who accused her, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">why he did not condemn her, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><small>HE</small> first acknowledged humility as a virtue, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">particulars of his humility, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why derided by the Pharisees, who were covetous, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the author of eternal life, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duties which we owe him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">made manifest in the flesh, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">justified in the spirit, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">seen of angels, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">preached to the Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">believed on in the world, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">received up into glory, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">never man spake like him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">as to the matter of his discourses, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">the authority with which they were delivered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">their wisdom, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">their divine energy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why he spake to the unbelieving Jews in parables, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">why he wrought few miracles among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why he preached the Gospel to the poor, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the goodness of his character thus displayed, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">his wisdom equally, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Father’s house, of many mansions, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sincerity conspicuous in this declaration, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what was truly his character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what our expectations from him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">promised the spirit of truth to his disciples, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">fulfilment of the promise, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his ascension graced by the ministry of angels, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prejudices of his countrymen against him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_253">253</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">395</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">his triumphs over the kingdom of Satan, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">forbade strict retaliation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his declaration to those who shall be ashamed of him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">and of his words, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his memorable promise to Peter a two-fold prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his driving the buyers and sellers out of the temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">in what light understood, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">acted thus not as a zealot but a prophet only, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophecy to which he appealed, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">in what light regarded by the Jews, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">why he used this mysterious method of information, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_423">423</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever, viii. <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dignity of his person here expressed, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">immense scheme of redemption through him, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">unchangeable nature of his religion, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Christian</span>, bound by principle to be modest and humble, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">character of a wise one, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his body the temple of God, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_382">382</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">he is bought with a price, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">encouraged to reason on the subject of religion, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">not bound to inquire curiously into the doctrinal and moral part of the gospel, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Christianity"><span class="smcap">Christianity</span>, attested by prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in a secondary as well as a primary sense, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">weight of the general evidence, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">argument from prophecy of no less weight to us because the Jews were not convinced by it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">proof of its divine institution, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why propagated by mean instruments, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its evidences many and various, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">philosophy how far serviceable to it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_199">199</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">396</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">objections on its mysterious nature answered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">questions to those who sincerely reject it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">danger and crime of disbelief, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its evidences a subject of inquiry in different ages, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the faith early adulterated by vain speculations, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">purified in part after the Reformation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of reason in its support, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">force of prejudice against, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in modern times, against its evidences and doctrines, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what the only exorcism it permits, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">doctrine of not resisting evil, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">does not supersede the use of resentment, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">except in case of persecution, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">liberties taken with it to render it not mysterious, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">zeal for it abated among us, viii. <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its unchangeable nature, as a rule of life, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Christians</span>, Primitive, idea formed of Antichrist by them, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their advantages of acquiring religious knowledge, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">precept addressed to them of giving a reason for their hope, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cicero</span>, palliated the desertion of his principles, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">abounded in fulsome encomiums, viii. <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Clemens Alexandrinus</span>, his opinion on the persecution of Christianity, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Church</span>, its union with Christ, how prefigured, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on what rock founded, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Jewish and Gentile persecutions raised against it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">internal commotions when settled under Constantine, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_361">361</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">397</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">endangered by the Mahometan imposture, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">by the Antichristian superstition, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its trial by the enlightened reason of mankind, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">by the learned Jews, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_368">368</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">by the Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">after the revival of letters, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_374">374</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by modern infidel writers, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the gates of Hell prevail not against it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Clarke</span>, Dr. <span class="smcap">Samuel</span>, his remark on the book of Revelations, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Clergy</span>, why chosen and ordained, viii. <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">first object of their ministry to teach a right faith, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the second, to produce the fruits of piety, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">and of charity, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">benefits of personal residence, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">directions respecting curates, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">none but fit ones to be recommended, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what the office of reason on the subject of revealed religion, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">requisites of a Christian preacher, fidelity, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an air of authority, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">zeal, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duty of catechizing, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">benefit of sermons to accompany the examinations, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cobham</span>, Lord, why committed to the flames, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Conceit</span>, admonition against, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">proper remedy for, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Conjectures</span>, in the way of prophecy, frequently verified, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Conscience</span>, defined, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constantinople</span>, not the residence of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Controversy</span>, in public discourses, to be avoided, viii. <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">398</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Corinthians</span>, how addressed by the Apostle on their impurity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their city a market of prostitution, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Covenant</span>, New, the christian dispensation so called, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Courage</span>, the affectation of, a snare to those who seek the honour of men, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Creeds</span>, origin and justification of, viii. <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crevier, M.</span>, defends persecution, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_315">315</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Criticism</span>, as of late improved, of what use in explaining the Scriptures, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">rational, what its established principles, viii. <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Curates</span>, directions respecting, viii. <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Curiosity</span>, anxious, its folly, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tends to create quick resentments, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">leads to peevish complaints, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">breeds uneasy suspicions, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its injustice, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cyaxares</span>, of Xenophon, supposed to be Darius the Mede, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">D.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Daillé, M.</span>, on the use of the Fathers, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Daniel</span>, his vision of the four kingdoms, and of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">foretold the rise of that power, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">antiquity of the book questioned, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">objections answered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">cause of his advancement, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Darius</span> the Mede, doubts respecting his existence, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_380">380</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">399</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dedication</span>, two good instances of, pointed out, viii. <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Demosthenes</span>, his sublime and energetic oath, viii. <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Devil</span>, if resisted, will flee, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">terms applied to that wicked spirit in Scripture, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Christ’s triumphs over, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">powers permitted him over the bodies and fortunes of men, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">over the souls of men, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">objections answered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">religious and moral uses of the doctrine, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">whole scheme of Christianity depends on it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Distress</span>, National, never inflicted before it is deserved, viii. <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Divination</span>, idea of pagan philosophers concerning, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">from augury, instances of, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">D. L.</span> the author of, his character by a warm friend, viii. <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his personal virtues,—reference to Dr. Jortin, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">some of his foibles enumerated, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his talents for classical criticism, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dragon</span>, a symbol of the Roman Government, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dreams</span>, a mode of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Drusilla</span>, her character, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">E.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eagles</span>, a figurative expression for the standards of the Roman army, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eclipse</span>, why an emblem of the ruin of empires, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_246">246</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">400</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Elegance</span>, of speech, what, viii. <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eloquence</span>, among the ancients, studied from vanity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Dr. Middleton’s notion of, confuted, viii. <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">no archetype of it in nature, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its rules for the most part, local and arbitrary, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its end, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Egyptians</span>, retained their hieroglyphics after the invention of the alphabet, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Energy</span>, of our Saviour’s discourses, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Envy</span>, excited by eminent virtue, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a striking picture of, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Erasmus</span>, his observation on the use of reason in religion, viii. <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Error</span>, in matters of religion, notion of its innocency considered, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Evidence</span>, moral, gradation in the scale of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ezekiel</span>, foretold the cessation of prophecy among the Jews, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_116">116</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">F.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Faith</span>, the condition of salvation, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the parent of charity, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why said to come by hearing, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">some inclined too much to it, at the expence of morality, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">not at variance with knowledge, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">See <a href="#Christianity"><span class="smcap">Christianity</span></a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Falkland</span>, Lord, his glorious excess of virtue, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fame</span>, the love of, to be controuled by the love of truth, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_259">259</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">401</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fashion</span>, the rule of life with men of the world, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fathers</span> of the Church, their application of the term Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">question respecting their authority in the interpretation of scripture, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">plainness of their discourses, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fear of God</span>, the proper guide of life, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">contrasted with fashion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with law, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with philosophy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">inclines men to depart from evil, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Felix</span> the Procurator, his character, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of Paul’s preaching on him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his subsequent treatment of the apostle, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Figurative</span> language, a cause of obscurity in prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fig-tree</span>, cursed, a sign, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">connected with that of purging the temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fire</span>, allusion to its effects, frequent in Scripture, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Flesh</span>, the vices of, to be put away from us, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fleury</span>, Abbé, his observation on the authority of the Pope, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Free-thinking</span>, modern, to be resolved into two sophisms, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Friendship</span>, among the great scholars of every age, indelicacy in the expression of, viii. <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">various arguments in exercise for, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">answered, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">specimen of the high complimentary manner, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">delicate ways of conveying encomium, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">402</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">See <a href="#Jortin">Dr. <span class="smcap">Jortin</span></a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">G.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gadarenes</span>, their sordid prejudice against our Saviour, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Galatia</span>, Churches of, early infested with false teachers, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gallio</span>, his disregard of miracles not proved, viii. <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Genealogies</span>, system of, reprobated by St. Paul, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Genesis</span>, a famous passage in, how regarded by different critics, viii. <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gentiles</span>, method of the early Christians to convert, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how convinced by the argument of prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conversion foretold, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">took its rise by small beginnings, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prevailed by pacific means only, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">are a law unto themselves, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">force of conscience among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diversity of human judgment accounted for, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their debates concerning right and wrong evinced their sense of natural law, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">benefits of redemption extend to them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their notion of a temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conversion quick and general, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">condition of the poor among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">adversaries of the Christian religion among them, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_371">371</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the calling of, predicted by the expulsion of buyers and sellers from the temple, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gibbon</span>, Mr. his anonymous letter to Dr. Hurd, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">answered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">403</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">character of his <i>History</i>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_401">401</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Glorifying</span> of God, in our body and spirit, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gloucester</span>, Bishop of, his idea of the nature and character of an inspired language vindicated, viii. <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">obviates an objection made by Dr. Middleton, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">avows his notion of eloquence to be a paradox, and at the same time truth, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">nominal barbarity of the style of the New Testament, a mark of its miraculous original, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the inspiration comprehended the terms, and their grammatical congruity, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">circumstances, abilities, and qualifications of the Apostles who received it, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">opposes Dr. Middleton’s proposition concerning eloquence, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">proves that no archetype of that quality exists, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub3">that the sublime of eloquent expression depends on casual associations, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">shews that eloquence was not necessary to the Apostles, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his idea of the end of eloquence justified, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">considers clearness and precision as the aids common to all language, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tropes and figures when and in what sense vicious, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">God</span>, what must be done to obtain his favour, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">what that favour is, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Godliness</span>, the great mystery of, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gospel</span>, its connection with prophecy, iv. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54524/54524-h/54524-h.htm#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with that concerning its promulgation, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by whom announced, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">contrary to the structure of the Jewish law, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its use not discredited by the natural moral law, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its necessity not superseded, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_59">59</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">404</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">the eternal purpose of God declared in it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why not forced on the minds of men by irresistible evidence, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">stress laid on Faith, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">binds men together as brethren, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">illuminates and sanctifies men by successive improvements, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its doctrines and precepts forbid us to seek the honour of men, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its rapid propagation, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">if hid, is hid to them that are lost, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">appealed to, when written, as the ground of belief, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">preached to the poor, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">——, Sermon before the society for propagating, viii. <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Grace</span>, the law of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">some had rather trust to the law of nature, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">obligatory on those who do not receive it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gregory I.</span>, his dispute with the Bishop of Constantinople, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">disclaimed the title of universal Bishop, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Grotius, Hugo</span>, undertook to prove that the Pope was not Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">from what motives, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a conjecture of his confuted by Bishop Newton, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his comment on the washing of the disciples’ feet, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_152">152</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">H.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Half-belief</span>, a vice of the spirit, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hardwicke</span>, Lord Chancellor, his opinion concerning appeals at the University of Cambridge, supported, viii. <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">405</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hearing</span>, the way by which faith cometh, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">admonitions concerning, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diligence in, why requisite, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_203"><i>ib.</i></a> <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Heathens</span>, their quick conversion to Christianity, viii. <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">inquiry into their opinion of miracles, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hell</span>, the gates of, their signification in Scripture, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Heresies</span>, their origin, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hesiod</span>, his maxim on contention, viii. <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hieroglyphics</span>, their origin, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">means of learning them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hippias</span>, the Elean, boasted that he knew every thing, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Holy Ghost</span>, the living in communion with, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_382">382</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the possessor of the body of Christians, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">See <a href="#Spirit"><span class="smcap">Spirit</span></a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Honour</span>, the duty of preferring one another in, explained, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its nature and grounds, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">right application of it in practice, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">that only which cometh of God, to be sought, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Gothic principle of, inflames pride, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hope</span>, Christian, the precept of giving a reason for, explained, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to be given with meekness and fear, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Horace</span>, his indelicate encomium on Virgil, viii. <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Humanity</span>, its duties never overlooked by the inspired writers, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Humility</span>, Christian, how best expressed, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_186">186</a>.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">406</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">first acknowledged as a virtue by our Saviour, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why so rare among men, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_334"><i>ib.</i></a> <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of whom to be learned, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ensures rest to our souls, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hypocrites</span>, those who embrace Christianity from corrupt motives, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">I. and J.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">James I.</span> remark of Hume on his commentary on the Revelations, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Idolatry</span>, how designated in the language of Scripture, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of two sorts, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jerom</span>, states the notion of the ancient Fathers respecting Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Speaks of the fall of the Roman empire, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jerusalem</span>, destruction of, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">by the Romans, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">of the temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its mystical sense, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its destruction, of what emblematical, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jews</span>, their erroneous notion of the use and end of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divine communications concerning Christ, why appropriated to them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of their principal mistake respecting the Messiah, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophetic spirit, how employed under their system of polity, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why many of them not convinced by the argument of prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their incredulity foretold by their own prophets, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their invincible prejudices, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">driven to the necessity of supposing a two-fold Messias, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_123">123</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">407</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">destruction of their city and temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their dispersion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their number comparatively small in Judæa, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">distinguished by descent, as well as by religion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their language why figurative, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">hieroglyphic style common among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their ritual abounding in symbols, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their idolatry considered as adultery, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how far enabled to compute the time of the Messiah’s appearing, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a plain frugal people, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to what purpose their law was given, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how to be judged for disbelieving the Gospel, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">questions respecting wars and fightings among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their practice of conveying information by action, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">heterodoxy with them disloyalty, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their notion of a temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why our Lord spake to them in parables, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">and wrought few miracles among them who believed not, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">condition of the poor among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their prejudices against our Saviour, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">abused the right of retaliation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ashamed of Christ, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Christian religion prevailed over their prejudices, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the rejection of them prefigured, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conduct of their rulers, when our Lord had purged the temple, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Immanuel</span>, prophecy of Isaiah concerning, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Immortality</span>, a free gift to man, how forfeited, and restored, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_70">70</a>. vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Impenitence</span>, final, the issue of procrastination and vice, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Incense</span>, a symbol of prayer, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_263">263</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">408</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Incumbent</span>, the proper name of a parochial minister, viii. <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Independency</span>, a name comprehending a thousand sects, viii. <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Infidelity</span>, may proceed from the pride of reason, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Infidels</span>, their main argument against prophecy answered, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Inquiries</span>, religious, how to be conducted, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Intercession</span>, of Christians for each other, a duty, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">distinguished from the worship of saints, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Integrity</span>, requisite in judging of religion, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an admiration of, may lead to irreligion, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Job</span>, his complaint of being made to possess the iniquities of his youth, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">John</span>, St. his vision of the marriage of the Lamb, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his mention of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">designates the appearance of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Jortin"><span class="smcap">Jortin</span>, Dr. an address to, on the delicacy of friendship, viii. <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">happy in avoiding the offensive custom into which the learned have fallen, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conduct towards his friend the author of the D. L. <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">adopted his subject, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">wrote against him, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">glanced at him, <a href="#Page_285"><i>ib.</i></a> <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">spared his arguments, <a href="#Page_286"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-<li class="isub2">furnished him with others, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">quoted him, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">called his conjecture ingenious, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub3">nay elegant, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">409</span></li>
-<li class="isub2">and the writer a learned friend, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Josephus</span>, his account of the religion of his countrymen, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his praise of Daniel, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Irreligion</span>, not so general as is imagined, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Isaiah</span>, a remarkable prophecy addressed by him to Ahaz, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how he claimed belief of the Jews, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his prophecy respecting parables, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">considered two ways, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his prophecies, to what chiefly relating, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Judas</span>, his treachery foreseen, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">had no part with Jesus, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jus Talionis</span>, why necessary in the Mosaic institute, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Justice</span>, Civil, perverted by the lusts of men, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Justin Martyr</span>, urges the argument from prophecy in his apology to the Antonines, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">K.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Key</span> to the Revelations, by Mr. Mede, examined, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kingdom</span> of Christ, import of the prayer, that it may <i>come</i>, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Knowledge</span>, requisite to judge of Christianity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why productive of pride and vanity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its remedy, not ignorance, but charity, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_277"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-<li class="isub1">error in considering it the supreme good, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— religious, of the present age, compared with that in the times of the Reformation, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_189">189</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">410</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Knowledge of Life</span>, a name for fraud and disingenuity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">L.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lactantius</span>, his confidence in the spread of the Gospel, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Language</span>, original, of all nations imperfect, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— inspired, needs not be perfectly eloquent, viii. <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">must necessarily abound in the native idioms of the persons inspired, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">correspondency of terms, to give clear intelligence, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">impression of phrases and idioms not to be expected, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">no archetype in nature, to which eloquence refers, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">clearness and precision the aids common to all language, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Law</span> of the magistrate, by whom deemed an adequate rule of action, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Jewish, to what end instituted, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Natural, written in the heart, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">appealed to by heathens as well as Christians, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">necessary to the support of revelation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">does not discredit the use of the Gospel, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its existence presupposed by the Christian law, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its penalties, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lebanon</span>, a symbol of a city, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leland</span>, Dr. letter to, viii. <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Real subject of his dissertation on the principles of eloquence, <a href="#Page_307"><i>ib.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">411</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">his remark on the imperfect correspondency of words in languages, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his objections to the Bishop of Gloucester’s notion of inspired language refuted, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his opinion respecting eloquence controverted, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his appeal to the rules of rational criticism answered, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his misrepresentation of the Bishop’s remark on tropes and figures, exposed, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leo X.</span> issued an edict against the use of the term Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Letter</span>, anonymous, to Dr. Hurd, concerning the Apocalypse, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">answer to it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mr. Gibbon the writer of the letter, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Levity</span> of mind, a spiritual vice, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Liberty</span>, misused, its fatal effects, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">civil and religious, favoured by religion, viii. <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">questions respecting the abuse of the latter, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">of the former, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Life Eternal</span>, doctrine of, first delivered to us through Jesus Christ, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">scheme of God’s providence respecting, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">different degrees of happiness or misery in, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">may be taken in two senses, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Light</span>, the emblem of knowledge, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">that of revelation the most certain, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lightfoot</span>, Dr. his idea of the apocalyptic style, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Litigation</span>, ancient, a picture of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Liturgy</span> of the church of England, generally commended, viii. <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">412</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Longinus</span>, his opinion of a famous passage in Genesis, viii. <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lowth</span>, Dr. distinguished for a species of literary address, viii. <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lusts</span>, the origin of wars and fighting among men, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">perverted religion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">and civil justice, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Luther</span>, his resolution to break through the papal servitude, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dreaded the charge of schism, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">M.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mahometan</span> imposture, its success, to what owing, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Malachi</span>, foretold the precursor of the Messiah, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Malmesbury</span>, the philosopher of, how misled into infidelity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mammon</span> of unrighteousness, the precept of making friends of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Manichæan</span> doctrine, early prevalent in the East, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">spirit of Christianity abhorrent from it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mansions</span>, many in the house of our heavenly Father, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mantuan</span>, his character of a pope, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Marcellinus</span>, his mention of the fiery eruptions of Jerusalem, viii. <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Meaux</span>, Bishop of. See <a href="#Bossuet">Bossuet</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">413</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mede</span>, his observation on the prophetic chronology of Daniel, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_66">66</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the use and intent of prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_106">106</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the doctrine of Antichrist, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_195">195</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his opinion on the Apocalypse, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">sketch of his character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his disinterestedness and impartiality, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Key to the Revelations considered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Medes</span> and Persians, their law unalterable, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Meekness</span>, the virtue of, nearly dismissed from the world, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">not absolutely incompatible with resentment, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Messias</span>, a particular prophecy concerning, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">various specific characters in the prophecies respecting him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">contrast of the Christian and the Jewish interpretations, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Metaphors</span>, in the Oriental style, frequent, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the offspring of nature and necessity, viii. <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Middleton</span>, Dr. his objection to the notion of an inspired language, viii. <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Milton</span>, his allusion to an eclipse as ominous, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_246">246</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Minister</span> of the Gospel, for what use his stores of knowledge are destined, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his office, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">decorum of his character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the word to be dispensed to those who most need it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Miracles</span>, a great foundation of our faith, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">few wrought by our Saviour among the unbelieving Jews, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">because many were not necessary to their conviction, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">or to give a just proof of his mission, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">would have hindered the success of his ministry, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_167">167</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">414</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">and have violated a general rule of his conduct, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">opinion of the heathens concerning, viii. <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">many seeming ones imputed to the power of magic, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">difference of those wrought by Christ and his apostles, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Missionary</span>, Christian, his arduous duties, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moralist</span>, Pagan, his reproof of a young reveller, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moralities</span>, the lesser, what, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Morality</span>, some incline too much to it, at the expence of faith, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how relaxed by casuistry, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moses</span>, weight of his prophecy with the Jews, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">foretold their dispersion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mysteries</span> of God’s kingdom, declared in parables, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mystical</span> meanings, in the prophetic style, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">N.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nahum</span>, his prediction of the overthrow of Nineveh, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Names</span> of eminent persons, custom of changing in the ancient world, iii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54514/54514-h/54514-h.htm#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nature</span>, human, not a sufficient guide in religion, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a generous pride why implanted in it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nazareth</span>, why our Saviour wrought few miracles there, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_160">160</a>.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">415</span></li>
-<li class="isub2">evil disposition of the people towards him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nero</span>, by some considered as the Antichrist of a future age, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Newton</span>, Sir <span class="smcap">Isaac</span>, his remark on the prophecy of Revelations, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_226">226</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the prophetic characters of Antichrist, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his illustration of prophecy how considered by the infidels, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_265">265</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nicodemus</span>, ashamed of Christ, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">O.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Obedience</span>, perfect, to be attained by degrees, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the promise annexed to it, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oecumenical</span> (or universal) Bishop, a title assumed by the Bishop of Constantinople, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">accepted by Boniface VI. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Offences</span>, or scandals, mentioned by our Lord, what, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oneirocritics</span>, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their rules of use in explaining prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oracles</span>, Pagan, their design, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">wherein unlike scriptural prophecies, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Origen</span>, his reply to a remark of Celsus on miracles, viii. <a href="#Page_161">161</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">P.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pagans</span>, their superstitions whence derived, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">two religious topics on which their wise men were chiefly intent, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_241">241</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">416</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">ashamed of Christ, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Parables</span>, all the prophecies written in, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why addressed by our Saviour to the Jews, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what their subject, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paris, Matthew</span>, his testimony respecting the charge of Antichristianism on the see of Rome, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pascal</span>, his remark on the dispensation of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the danger of disbelief, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Patience</span>, requisite in judging of Christianity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paul</span>, St. his characteristic of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his remark on his appearance, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his awful warning against unbelief, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his zeal of persecution while a Jew, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why he called himself the chief of sinners, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">his error not innocent, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his address in reproving the Corinthians, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">substance of his remonstrance, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his preaching before Felix, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his divine encomium on our Lord’s ministry, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his labours at Ephesus how overturned, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of his preaching at Athens, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pearson</span>, Dr. an excellent commentator on the Catechism, viii. <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Persecution</span>, almost sanctioned by the Jewish law, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— of the Apostles, resistance to it forbidden, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of the first Christians by the Jews and Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Peter</span>, St. denied his Lord through shame, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">and fear, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his name why conferred on him, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_355">355</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">417</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">two prophecies thus given, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Petrarch</span>, applies the name of Babylon to Rome, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pharisees</span>, how reproved by our Saviour for infidelity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with what view they heard the word of the Lord, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why they derided our Saviour’s precepts, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip</span>, one of the Apostles, asks of Christ that he would shew them the Father, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philologist</span>, Italian, his objection to reading the Bible, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philosophers</span> of the Gentiles, ill treated the poor, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philosophy</span>, an inadequate rule of life, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">progress in, since the reformation, how far serviceable to religion, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Phinehas</span>, his act of zeal, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">had relation to religion and not morals, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Plato</span>, at one time gave law to the Christian world, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Play</span>, the favourite amusement, because the most violent, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pleasure</span>, the lover of, cannot be rich, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pleasures</span>, the pursuit of, to be restrained, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">when lawful, may not be expedient, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the mind should be independent of, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pliny</span>, abounded in fulsome encomiums, viii. <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Poets</span>, Greek and Latin, their works of use in the exposition of the ancient Prophets, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Politeness</span>, true, distinguished from false, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_139">139</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">418</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pompey</span>, his generosity in burning the papers of an enemy, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Poor</span>, the Gospel preached to the, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their condition when Saviour appeared among them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their hearts less perverse than those of the rich and great and wise, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pope</span>, the, styled Antichrist at the synod of Rheims in the tenth century, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his authority defined by the Abbé Fleury, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Popery</span>, how brought into disrepute among us, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Porphyry</span>, illustrated the book of Daniel, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Possessions</span>, demonic, explained, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Praise</span>, general, a woe denounced against those who obtain it, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">implies a mediocrity of virtue, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">frequently positive ill desert, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">and sometimes depravity and prostitution of character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prayer</span>, its efficacy considered, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— <span class="smcap">The Lord’s</span>, an instance of Oriental construction in, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Preacher</span>, Christian, character of one, viii. <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prejudice</span>, the strange power of, exemplified, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">among the Jews, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">among the Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">among the Heathens in the fourth century, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in later times, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pretences</span>, continued, become realities, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pride</span>, how generated, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to be corrected by philanthropy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_134">134</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">419</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">why a vice, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how counteracted by charity, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">mistaken for a natural principle, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">made sacred by fashion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">danger of indulging it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">intellectual and moral, productive of infidelity, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Procrastination</span>, the usual support of vice, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">is itself supported by sophistry, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">leads to final impenitence, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prophecy</span>, scriptural meaning of the term, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of false ideas respecting its subjects, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ultimate purpose, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">and dispensation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">questions to be answered by enquirers into its divine character, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">true idea of it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_27">27</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">our reasonings on the subject how to be regulated, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its ultimate accomplishment, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">considered as a system, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conclusions from the true idea of it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why obscurely delivered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its <i>double sense</i>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how distinguished from Pagan oracles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why confined to one nation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its obscurity affords no objection to it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">general argument from it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">instances of casual conjecture fulfilled by events, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">answer to objection on this ground, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">examples illustrating the general scheme of prophetic writings, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophecies concerning the Messiah’s first coming, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">unity of design with all the prophets, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">amount of evidence on comparing predictions with facts, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">the Jews why not convinced, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_119">119</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">420</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">its weight with the Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how connected with the evidence from miracles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prophecies concerning Christ’s second coming, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">and the Christian Church, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destruction of Jerusalem, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dispersion of the Jews, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">call and conversion of the Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">concerning Antichrist, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its declared end, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">style of prophetic writing considered, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">why more figurative than ours, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tinctured with the Hieroglyphic spirit, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">means of rendering it intelligible to us, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">some important prophecies delivered in the way of dreams, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">causes of the obscurity of prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">suspicions taken up against it, unfounded, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the symbolic style expedient in such writings, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its chronology not defined with historical exactness, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">uses of the inquiry into, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">chief evidences of religion drawn from, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">nature of the prophetic power, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how liable to be abused by pretenders to it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prophets</span>, Jewish, used similitudes, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Propitiation</span>, doctrine of, how inculcated by our Lord, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Protestants</span>, their tenets respecting Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how far their aversion to the Church of Rome properly extends, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their divines censured for temerity in fixing the fall of Antichrist, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">justified by the Apocalyptic prophecies, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_342">342</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">421</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">how secured against the charges of schism and heresy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Punishments</span>, future, how proved to be eternal, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Puritans</span>, their struggles for Church dominion, viii. <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Purity</span> of speech, what, viii. <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Q.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Queries</span>, respecting the right or appeal in the University of Cambridge, viii. <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">answers to, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the proper ones formerly put, and differently answered, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Quintilian</span>, his admiration of Plato’s eloquence, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his idea of the nature of eloquence, viii. <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his observation on verbal figures, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">R.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Reason</span>, its use, on the argument of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how to be employed on the evidences of religion, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with revelation as a guide in matters of religion, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why given to man, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its pride, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its true use in support of Christianity, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_250">250</a>, viii. <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how abused, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how unpropitious to revelation, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rebellion</span>, American, Sermon preached on account of, viii. <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">422</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Redemption</span>, the great scheme of Providence, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">through Christ extends to all men, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">brief account of, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">vastness of the scheme, viii. <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Reformation</span>, in Germany, not effected wholly in the spirit of the Gospel, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">begun and prosecuted on the principle that the Pope was Antichrist, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">that doctrine not an innovation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">two great principles on which it was conducted, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">question respecting the interpretation of Scripture, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_346"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-<li class="isub1">various considerations decisive of the controversy with the Papists, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an evil originating in, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Reformers</span>, their advancement in religious knowledge, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formed their idea of Religion from the scriptures, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_190"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-<li class="isub1">how enabled to understand them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">especially the most important points of doctrine, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Religion</span> of Nature, and of the Gospel, defined, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Christian, designed for the instruction of all degrees of men, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its truths how to be explained to wise men, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">high demands of evidence impertinent, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">improper to be complied with, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">presumptuous and unwarrantable, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">mischiefs arising from misapplication of, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">early attacked by superstition, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">by worldly policy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its whole system in what founded, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its doctrines objects of faith, and not of knowledge, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_197">197</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">423</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">its chief evidences drawn from prophecies, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">and miracles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its doctrines consistent with reason, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">does not oblige us to profess poverty, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">hath descended to us through two, the most enlightened ages of the world, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its power shewn in the zeal of Missionaries, viii. <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">most friendly to civil and religious liberty, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use and abuse of reason in, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its evidence the proper subject of enquiry, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Repentance</span>, what its merits and claims, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the great duty of, viii. <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in the hour of national distress, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Residence</span>, personal, of the clergy, its benefits, viii. <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Retaliation</span>, strict, forbidden by our Saviour, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">natural resentment not therefore superseded, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">true patriotism not injured, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">nor military spirit weakened, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the injunction consistent with the true interest of individuals, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Revelation</span>, the only sure guide in matters of religion, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how opposed by the pride of reason, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why not accompanied with the strongest possible evidence, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Revelations"><span class="smcap">Revelations</span>, book of, its prophecies in part fulfilled, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its character and authority, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its style, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its method, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">examined by means of Mr. Mede’s discovery, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what the chronological order of the visions, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_276">276</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">424</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">the prophecy made up of two great parts, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_279">279</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the book, of three, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of the residence of Antichrist, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">proved to be Rome Christian, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its predictions respecting the time of his appearing, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">foretels all the events of the Christian dispensation, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">utility of studying this prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Revolution</span>, the æra of our liberty, viii. <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Richard I.</span> heard a lecture against Antichrist at Messina, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ridicule</span>, the resource of sinners, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_3">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">especially when reproof comes home to them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roman Empire</span>, its reverse of fortune ascribed by the Heathens to Christianity, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Romans</span>, their nice sense of right and wrong, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">abuses in the administration of justice, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rome</span>, ancient, a supposition concerning, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Virgil’s allusion to its seven hills, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">modern, the throne of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical and not civil, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its idolatry how described, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">why a harlot and not an adulteress, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her pride and intolerance, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">professes and enjoins the worship of Saints, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its tenets respecting Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Antipopes branded each other with that name, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">denounced as Antichristian at various periods, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_191">191 to 201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Romulus</span>, famous omen of his twelve vultures, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_83">83</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">425</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rousseau</span>, disclaims the authority of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_77">77</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his reasons examined, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his strange boast of probity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">S.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sacraments</span>, Christian, on what principle founded, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saints</span>, the worship of, in the Romish Church, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">apology for, controverted, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sallust</span>, in his writings, appears a model of frugality, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salt</span>, allusion of our Saviour to, its two interpretations, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">applied to discipline as well as faith, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salvation</span> through the blood of Christ, the eternal purpose of God, viii. <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">danger of neglecting it, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">faith and morality its appointed means, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sanhedrin</span>, could not punish with death but by leave of the Roman governor, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Schism</span>, import and application of the term by the Church of Rome, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how introduced into the Church, viii. <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Science</span>, human, very limited, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scipio</span>, his continence, and frivolous curiosity, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scribe</span>, Christian, compared with a Jewish householder, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scorn</span>, irreligious, the sources of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_353">353</a>.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">426</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">admonition against, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sects</span>, fanatical, of the last century, confusion caused by, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Selden</span>, his notion on the expulsion of the buyers and sellers from the temple, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">where apparently taken up, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Self-denial</span>, its uses, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Self-love</span>, too frequently the parent of pride, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ends how answered by philanthropy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an instinctive sentiment, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Seneca</span>, an oracle of his, predicting the discoveries of Columbus, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sermons</span>, advice respecting, viii. <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">models proposed, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Shakespear</span>, various editions and criticisms of, how occasioned, viii. <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Shame</span> of Christ, what, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">cases which imply its existence among unbelievers, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">among professors of Christianity, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">shame of his words, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">of the doctrines contained in them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">of the precepts, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sherlock</span>, Bishop, his remark on the figurative language of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_68">68</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sibylline</span> oracles, general opinion concerning, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sign</span>, what is meant by the Jews requiring one, viii. <a href="#Page_168">168</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Silver</span>, the lover of, shall not be satisfied, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Simplicity</span> concerning evil, the virtue of, in what consisting, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the neglect of it has degraded religion, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">relaxed morality, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">and polluted common life, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_239">239</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">427</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">caution against evasive pleas and pretences to part with it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slavery</span>, personal, common among the Heathen, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Society</span> for the Propagation of the Gospel, its objects, viii. <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Socinianism</span>, what, viii. <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Socrates</span>, his prediction of his own death fulfilled, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_80">80</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">confessed that he knew nothing, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">uncertain in his hope of immortality, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Solomon</span>, prescribes the Fear of God as a rule of life, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">peculiar deference due to his judgment from men of the world, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">from politicians and philosophers, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Souls</span> of Men, influence of evil spirits on, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Speaking</span>, the rules of, more arbitrary than they are taken to be, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spendthrift</span>, more to be reprobated than the miser, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spenser</span>, his general purpose in the Faery Queen, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Spirit"><span class="smcap">Spirit</span>, Holy, he that soweth in, shall reap life everlasting, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in what sense the assertion understood, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in what way the blessing conferred, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">returns of duty thereby required, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">justification of God in, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Human, its vices, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">—a fluctuating faith, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">levity of mind, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">deadness of heart, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">perverse sophistry, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">State</span>, why it countenances the Church, viii. <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Statutes</span>, relating to the jurisdiction of Cambridge university, examined, viii. <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">428</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sublimity</span> of speech, what, viii. <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the definition illustrated, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">not united with simplicity, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sully</span>, the great, his situation somewhat similar to that of Daniel, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_374">374</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Superstition</span>, its early inroads into the Christian religion, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Symbols</span>, an early way of writing, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Synchronisms</span> of the book of Revelations, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">T.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tabor</span>, Mr. his mumpings against university-appeals, viii. <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Temple</span>, what the notion of one implies, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of God, an emblem of the Church of Christ, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— of Jerusalem, utterly destroyed, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">buyers and sellers driven from, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2">the act a prediction of the call of the Gentiles, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Temptation</span>, God’s providence respecting, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tertullian</span>, his remark on the rapid progress of Christianity, viii. <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Testament</span>, Old, considered by St. Austin, a prophecy to the New, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_53">53</a>. n.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the divinity of both inferred from the completion of prophecy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Testimony</span> of Jesus, the spirit of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_24">24</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">429</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Text</span>, which the most difficult in the four Gospels, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Theology</span>, dogmatical, essential to Christianity, viii. <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Theophrastus</span>, a name, why given, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thomas</span> the Apostle, admonished respecting faith, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tiberius</span>, the religion of Jesus first published in his reign, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tillotson</span>, Abp. his zeal against Antinomianism, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Time</span>, scriptural division of, respecting the coming of Christ, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Toleration</span>, not yet perfectly understood, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trinity</span> in Unity, where accurately distinguished, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tropes</span> and figures, when and in what sense vicious, viii. <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what forms of language so denominated by Quintilian, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">often a deviation from logical definition, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">when they may be allowed, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Truth</span>, the spirit of, promised by our Lord to his apostles, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the promise fulfilled by the event, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">U. &amp; V.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vanity</span>, why a vice, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vettius Valens</span>, augured the duration of the Roman empire, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_83">83</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">430</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vice</span>, naturally breeds a disposition to ridicule, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its usual support, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Virgil</span>, purpose of his predictions in the Æneid, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a passage from, descriptive of Rome, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">allusion to the predictions in his fourth eclogue, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_368">368</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the sixth book of his Æneid by whom finely criticized, viii. <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Virtue</span>, superior, excites envy, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">runs at times into excesses, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">can never obtain general praise, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an intermitting state of, most miserable, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">what its reasonable reward, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the pride of, by which the Gospel may be hid from us, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Virtues</span> of the Heathen, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ulpian</span>, his observation on the right of appeal, viii. <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Unbelief</span>, always owing to some or other of the passions, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">accounted for, from man’s pride, viii. <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">and indolence, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Uncleanness</span>, arguments against the sin of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its heinousness, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">inexcusable in Christians, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Voltaire</span>, his sarcasm on Sir Isaac Newton, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_265">265</a>. n.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">W.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Waldenses</span>, or <span class="smcap">Albigenses</span>, in what age they first appeared, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">leading principle of their heresy, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_196">196</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">431</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">crusades employed against them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_196"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">War</span>, civil, a most dreadful instrument of God’s government, viii. <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Washing</span> of the disciples’ feet, a lesson of humility, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its other, and more important signification, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wealth</span>, pernicious when over-rated, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_368">368</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">or when misapplied, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">always a snare, and too often a curse, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">has a tendency to corrupt manners, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Weston</span>, Mr. remarks on his inquiry into the rejection of Christian miracles by the heathens, viii. <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his negative testimonies examined, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his positive testimonies, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his charge on the fathers of the Church, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">claims the sanction of an apostle, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his strong hold proves to be magic, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">answer to his argument from the multiplication of Heathen Gods, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ground-work of his performance, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Western Empire</span>, the period of its dismemberment that of the rise of Antichrist, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wiclif</span> exposed the Antichristianism of the Roman pontiff, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">great effects of his writings, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Will-worship</span>, condemned in Scripture, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wisdom</span>, infinite, in the dispensation of prophecy, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Christian, its properties and characters, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">defects in our nature which hinder the attainment of it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">virtues, how to be rendered most graceful, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">how most reasonable, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_222">222</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">432</span></li>
-<li class="isub1">and how most attractive and efficacious, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">character of a wise Christian, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the duty of being simple concerning evil, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wise men</span>, invited to judge of Christianity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">qualities requisite for this, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wit</span>, the ostentation of, leads to infidelity, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Woe</span> to those of whom all men speak well, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Word of God</span>, admonitions respecting the hearing of, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the ministry of it, for what purposes destined, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">men will finally be judged by it, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">X.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Xenophon</span>, character of his writings, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_382">382</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his admirable way of recording his own acts, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Y.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Youth</span>, its peculiar sins, vi. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">just decrees of God against them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">guilt and remorse, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_395"><i>ib.</i></a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tyrannous habits produced by them, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">temporal afflictions which they entail, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_401">401</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">value of innocency and rectitude, <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54541/54541-h/54541-h.htm#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Z.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zedekiah</span>, two ænigmatical prophecies respecting him fulfilled, v. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/54539/54539-h/54539-h.htm#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zelotism</span>, its object, vii. <a href="https://gutenberg.org/files/69816/69816-h/69816-h.htm#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<h3>THE END.</h3>
-
-<p class="copy">Nichols and Son, Printers,<br />
-Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London.</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
-
-<p>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.</p>
-
-<p>Greek words beginning with ϖ have had the character replaced with π.</p>
-
-</div>
-
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