On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
giiial one of Christ hwnoself- The reason alleged for this supposed liberty having -been taken with our liord ' s own representation of the cause and . nature of his tri & ls
in the wilderness ^ is that the person who took it was apprehend ^ ive , that if he represented in plain and naked fomgu & ge such things as he was about to relate concerning Jesus they might
appear to the precipitate ^ and to any who werenot well-disposed towards hirrij to be u bhmish on his character * and not to consist well with
the appellation of Holyokeof God . But what probability can there be , that the evangelist , or first recorder of the temptation , should feel an apprehension which Oiir L 6 i * d himself cbtild not have
felt when he thotight proper to disclose the working ^ of his mind in the wilderness , the knowledge of which it was in his power to have confined to his oavji bosom feftd we have not the least
intimation of his prohibiting me individual or individuals , to whom he communicated it , from ithparting it to others ) if he had apprehended that the disclosure might prove
injurious to his reputation ! Beside the great improbability , that any disciple of Jesus should have pr ^ S um ^ d id give aja almost totally different aspect to the representation he Had iteeeived of what
befel his revered master m the wildefines , where can we find the shadow df a , proof , that an
evangelist of any other discijple a who might ftiake the first record of the temptation , did ri & Uy % through either design or ittiad viei tence vdt & P what lie had beett told aboiil
it , in so ^ xtraorditiary a manner ? I must own 1 | i ^ ftiund none I must , tfaeretbt ^ ^ he & leave to
Untitled Article
declare my want of ibbre cogent reasons than 1 have hitherto met with , for questioning the truth of either of the above-mentioned pro-. — _ —r — .- __ _ — — — __ . _ - ^ . ^ _^ ^^ j —w
^^ positit > ns ^ and for Hot considering the evangelical narratives as pre- * senting us with a faithful and uiw equivocal view of what our Lord really believed concerning the
existence and agency of the being said to have been his tempter—^ a view intended to be Regarded as free from idiom or figure .. I would here observe farther , that Mr . C . seems to have laboured under
another mistake in supposing the trials particularized in the gospeU to have happened at times * and places at considerable distances from one another . On this head
Mr . Farmer appears to me to have been right , who makes them to have occurred at one and the same place , and within the limits of the fortieth day of our Lord ' s retirement in the desert . See the
Inquiry , p . 82 , note p , and the passages there referred to . The note is worthy of attention . He there observes from Mat , iv . 2 , 3
and Luke iv . 2 , 3 , that the ' temp ** tatious recorded by those evangelists must have been proposed to Christ , not after the forty days were expired , and at three
different times , as some without any manner of reason have supposed , but after the commencement of the fortieth day , and yet before the expiration . of it . But iiiso short a time f ( he justly asks , uU
ludmg ^ to tjhe vulgar hypothesis * and with obviously equal propri ^ ety , " the same question , may be pijt \ yith reference to the times anci situations ,, j ^ viy & ich Mr * C
imagined the three trial © happened ) ri J ^ ow w ^ it possible , lhat Christ should hold a conversation with
Untitled Article
On the Temptationof Christ . —Letter IV * 641
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1810, page 641, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1708/page/21/
-