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
m j $ 8 $$ ffl ^ $$ 4 tffe itflfetofr pro&ess Attidi isffajrte girand ^ ttf oF f ^ e ^^ 0 nj | ifig /* Wb&n Poij&jk l ooked hdoWfr upon a wandering teS ^ fd- * --lba alt that has been , now is , afrd will hereafter b $ , commenced . Amidst the elaborate attempts of Dr Buckland to reconcile the discoveries of Geology with the Bible account of Creation ,
we t | o not propose to tire and entangle our readers . An erudite discussion to prove they are not incompatible , occupies the whole of the second chapter of his work . To the support of a belief that all the writers in Scripture were inspired , it may be necessary to establish the above coincidence ; but it is strange that men of science should still be found who can hold or
promulgate such an opinion . It is a most gratuitous assumption of a claim to which the writers or compilers themselves never pretended and among the long list e > f errors which have afflicted the human race , it has been one of the most mischievous . How many truths it has retarded , how many miseries it has produced , would be difficult to enumerate . To the cause of revealed religion it has been a fatal
enemy ; staggering many a miud which might have recognized in the Scriptutes the history of a revelation , but could tijif reconcile the numerous and startling difficulties that present themselves with the idea that the entire book which cbhtairis them ifc itself a direct whole and indivisible revelation . * 5 The plan , however , of the ' Bridgewater Treatises '—requiring that all thei abstract ttuths of science , old and new , should
be made to fit every orthodox proposition of natural theology sis at present Cultivated—may easily account for Dr Bucfclapd ' s views in this respiect , not to mention his clerical profesion . ' . ' With all this confusion , and the controversies to which it gives rise , we have done long since ; but we have , neverthe ' - [ le&s , derived very great Pleasure from reading Dr Buckland'k
interpretation of the opening verse of the Bible , and we are # ery much disposed to believe that it is the correct ohe : — " * in the be ^ inniag" GoA created the heavens and the earth . ' It is uowhere aflirmed that God created the heaven arid the earth in the first Ijtay , but * in the beginning ; ' this beginning may have been viai epoch
it an unmeasured distance , followed by periods of undefined duration , liuring WMch aM the p hysical operations disclosed by geology Were going AMI ^* # ? fit , ' # No information is given Jas to events which inay liitfve toc ^ curxed upon the earth , uncownected with the history of man , be ^ vwee » the creatioifl of its . component matter ' recorded ia the first verse ^ d the ^ a / at ; wMcli its ' history 13 resumed in the second verse . * # \\\ , > § i MiUiow »« if iwilliohs of years may have occupied the indefinite ine ^ pvall ? etweew the be ^ imiing m Which Qpd created the hiavjej&a &i $ ' tj ^ e aa ^ th , a ^| i t ^ e evening or cQmmeiicement qf the first day of the Mosaic aaxrative /—pp , 21 , 22 * :
Untitled Article
116 BucBdk ^ € &cifoj $ .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), May 1, 1837, page 270, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1831/page/15/
-