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
teriously united to divinity . '' Again ( 209 »; " Jesus was no longer in a state to be naturally visible to any man . His body was indeed risen , but it was become that body which St . Paul describes in the fifteenth
chapter of inn first epistle to the Cormthiuss , which , having no sympathy with the gross bodies of this earth ! . * sphere , nor any place among them must be indiscertiibie to the hum ;* n organs , till they shall have uMrierarone a similar refinement . The
divinity united to the blessed Jesus , produced in a short space that change in him , which , in other men , according to the mysterious physics of St . Paul , must be the effect of a slower
process every appearance of our Lord to the apostles after his resurrection , was iii truth an appearance of the great God , the Maker of heaven and earth , to mortal man . " Once
more ( QM ' y , ' * ' Would you now ask , why Jesus after his resurrection was not rendered visible to all the people ? Will \ ou not rather stand aghast at tlie impiety of the question ? Ask , win God is of purer eyes than to Uehold iiiiquity ? Ask , why he who conversed with Abraham as a man
talketh with his friend , conversed not but in judgment with the vile inhabitants of Sodom ? " &c . &c * But enough of such quotations . In the case described Bishop Horsley has thrown the reins on his
imagination : and the sacred writers are profoundly silent concerning these " mysterious physics / ' We hesitate not to say that the prelate ' s speculation destroys the testimony of the apostles to " the fact of our Lord ' s resurrection : "
for how could they be proper witnesses of the identity of his person if before that event he had a mortal and immediately on its taking place an immortal body ? Plain men will be satisfied with the declarations of the Christian scriptures , without additions and refinements : and it is « not
undeserving of our regard , that among the " many infallible proofs" by which Jesus " shewed himself alive , after his passion , " to his chosen associates , ° ne was his eating and drinking with them after he rose from the dead . * Indeed , they had the authority of nearly all their sensesf for considering him not as a phantom * but as a real * --,- ' - ¦ ' r
* Act * i . 3 . x . 41 . t 1 John i . 1 .
Untitled Article
man . The error of Dr . Horsley resembles " the error of the Docetae " ( 198 ) . To justify this fancy of his brain , he would translate Acts x . 40 , as follows : " Him God raised up the third
day , and gave him to be visible ; " as though he * ' was no longer in a state to be naturally visible . ' The words , in Hie original , are , eSujkbv clvIov gj&-tpayyj ysveirdzi , appointed him to be seen : and he who consults
Schleusner on the word s ^( pavTf g ^ and the passages where it is found in the LXX and in the Greek Testament , will be sensible that Bishop Horsley ' s version of it is not more accurate than that of KingJames ' s translators .
Of the five remaining sermons , the first is on Ps . xcvii . 7 . Worship him all ye Gods ; which text tlie preacher alleges in proof of our Lord ' s divinity . For this purpose , he appeals to . Heb . i . 6 , where these words of the
Psalmist are quoted from the Septuagint translation , and employed in illustrating the dignity of the Messiah ' s office , and not that of his person and nature . Gran tins : that this Psalm is " a orokj ran ring mat tnis rsaim is a
prophecy of the establishment of Christ ' s kingdom by the preaching of the gospel , and the general conversion of idolaters to the service of the true God , " still , the Bishop is unfortunate in the reasoning by which he
endeavours to sustain the proposition . In God ' s universal kingdom , says he , " great majority of the ancient world , the idolaters , were considered not as subjects who might rejoice in the glory of their monarch , but as rebels who had every thing to fear from
his just resentment ( 239 ) - " Rebels indeed they were : yet they were comprehended , nevertheless , under the Divine administration . Further ; it does not appear that they are exhorted to " rejoice in the glory of their monarch . " The invitation in is to
the first verse ^ addressed inanimate nature : that in the twelfth , to the Jews , the worshipers of Jehovah . Mudge % with reason considers the Psalm as €€ occasioned by some victory , in which God had declared , his award from heaven in favour of his people , by some extraordinary manifestation of his glory in storms of thun-¦¦ ¦ ¦ iii
111 - ' ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' --- - . -. njf % On tli « Psalms ( hi loo . ) .
Untitled Article
Review . —Bishop Horsley s Nine Sermons . 757
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1815, page 757, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1767/page/29/
-