On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
of ¦ lbs pHiiii ^ iw ^ I ^ j ^ iiistiai ^^ ' for' jSp ^ -mL " . * st mdst destructive inject ; htoqe , the lefttfer has ' the name of . Ahaddori ^> -6 r Af > dl ^ i * fl > ci ^ n him , for they both meaft a destroyj
er ; iudeedv the one i » Bierofy atr »^ isiation of the Other , la Jadge »> chi ^ p . vi . 3 , w * e re&d , that * the Midiaaitesy tire Amalekites , and other e ^^ rmiiatiotis , * L e . the various Arab tribes ;^; came against tile Israelites , encamping on thflfcir territory , ravaging the whofe produce of the
ground , as far as Gaza , leatiag them neither provisions , flocks nor herds . They came with their cattle and their tents , like a multitude of locusts without number , laying waste the land . * The f * foj > bet Joel ( ii . 3—5 ) speaks of the loCusts , and
describes the devastation iroy make in the following expressive Migiiage : ' Before them the land is as tfte ^ garden of Eden , and behind them a desdlate wilderness . ' He compares them io ' the appearance of horses ^ and like horsemen they run ; their leap is like the sound of
chariots on the tops of the mountains , and like the sound of a flame of fire , which devourelh stubble . ' Aftqr giving a further account of them , which , in many respects , resembles those mentioned by John , and of their rapid , irregular , destructive and overwhelming march , he says , Before them the sun and the moon are darkened , and the stars withdraw
their shining * These locusts are used figuratively to denote the misery , distress and ruin , occasioned by an irresistible attack of a numerous nost of enemies . This king of the locusts and his subjects were not , however , Utterly to destroy Christianity , nor to consign those who embraced it to the eternity of hell
torments , which , as the king of hell , he would have done had he been the Devil ; but to harass and persecute the Christians for a limited titne—five moriths ; upon the earth , and dot in hell . This period answers to the time that locusts generally make their appearattce arid commit their depredations—from the beghinrng of April to the end of Atigust . r to whatever ,
therefore , John referred by this deep pit , this abyssj hie couid hot intend to designate by it the future afttxle of the wicked , nor the residence of rife Devil , as must appear ftotn the natnWof the inhabitants of this pit ; who Trere , pidtoefoty , from the descrfjkidh of tf * e locusts , military men > fctapl 6 yed in tfrfe Work eff ftersecuttdti and death .
' * Smoke , fn the language of Scripti ! fre , does hot necessfcrfty im ^ ly the preseirfce t > f fire , * es its catosfe , (* ee &em xxix . 30 ; Psalm xviii . 7 9 8 , lxxiv . 1 , civ . 32 , cxliv . 5 ) : nor does John intimate that the tstdoHe -itrtrife froiA a fur-
Untitled Article
taiaed ¦ io t& ; ewe ^ ^ m ^ mmyt ^
eludes W t ^ ' % ^ WK- < ^ ] ai «;^ oe . ^ ovet * , and it ; had c ) htiflued pply Mvq months ; ^ hiAM . rjL ^ " morefe | ej yet to cftti' f ^ - ^^ M ^ Mptmixi ^ m ^ vf ) lent spirit , aft tjie advocates of the Devil \ te Mm $ i ?* . ^ # ^^ . ^ te ^ ed : % ^ this , . or in ^ m ^ m ^^ Mmi ^ " visions fif * John .-
-i-rPp- 193 ~^ tf 6 . ^ In concluding this Lector ^ , Mr . Scott exanixh& five passages " of this book in \ vhicb the term JSiabolos or DeHl occurs , iM contends that in all of them none trttt aihuraaa
adversary upon earth Is toeiiu ; a position which will scarcel y be disputed by any who hafe * inquired into the sense of the Apocalypse and endeavoured to find a clue to guide the mind through this labyrinth of oriental vision and Jewish allegory . [ To be continued . ]
Untitled Article
- *«~** - ~** mimBMmmir ....
Untitled Article
Art . II . — The Mutual Relation of the Unity of God and the Humanity of Christy as Doctrines of the Gospel : a Sermon , preached July 9 , 1823 , nt Bristol , before the Society of Unitarian Christians ,
established in the ff * e $ t of England , for promoting Christian Knowledge and the Practice of Virtue , by the Distribution of Books . By John Kentish . 12 nao . pp . 68 . Birmingham , p rinted and sold by J . Belcher and Scm ; sold also by R . Hunter * London *
MR . KENTISH has been lon £ distinguished as a learned , able , judiefotis &hd candid advocate of Unit&rifcn Christianity , and . the present difecoufse toys the denomination in Which he occupies an important station tmder new obligations to him . The Uftfty of God and the Humanity
of Christ have been often Well asserl&l ittni satisfactorily £ rt > ved from the ScVijptiifes *; btit We Hli 6 W of no sermon or treatise in which * ' the nmtiial relatloA" of these principles ife "doctrittes of the gospel ^ 19 6 ° concisely stated and argued , and so clearly established m in the present difccfttifise . ft adds so the merit of thk SerlHon Ifcal thfe Wli ^ le arg um en t ife deduced fr <^ a . and ^ % > ported hy
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1823, page 660, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1790/page/44/
-