On this page
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
into disgrace ,, was advancing under James II . Among other marve llous relations is an account of Constant ! ne ' b mother , Helena , discovering the true cross , 300 years after the crucifixion ^ and thus adding a festival to the church . An old English Homily for that day is quoted from the Roman Feativalc , p . 100 , That part of the quotation which Herder may be supposed to have
imitated , is verbatim et literatim as follows : « Whan Adam our fyrst fader was seke for aege , and would fayne have ben out of this world ; Adam sente Setb , his so » e to the aungcl-keeper o £ Paradyse , prayenge the aungel to sende him the oyle of mercy , to anoynt his body therewith whan he were dede . Tkan went Setb
to Paradyse , and sayd his message to tkc aungel . Than answered the aungel , and said , that he might not have it tyll the yercs were fulfilled . But have this branche of the tree that thy fader synned in , and set it on his grave , and whan it bereth fruyte , then shalt he have mercy , and not erste . Than toke Scth this
branche , and came home and found his fader dede ; than he set this branche on his fader ' s £ rave , as the aungel bfiddc him do . The whyche branche growed there , tyll Solomon was kinge ; and he made to fell it downe , for it was fayre to the werke of his temple , but it woldc not accord with the werke of his temple . Therefore Solomon made to cast it down
into the earth , and was hidde there to the tyme that the bishop of the temple let make a wayre in the same place whereas the tree laye , to washe in shepe that weare offred to the temple . Than whan this
wayre was made , they called it in their \ &T \ g \\ 3 . ge , firobatica phcina , tp the whyche water came an aungel certain times fro hcven , and did worship to the tree that lay in the ground qf the wayre , and
Untitled Article
xnoved the water ; and what man or woman that came to the water nexte afjter the aungel , was made hale , what seke 4 ness that ever he had , by virtue of the tree ; and so endured many wynters to the tyme Chryste was taken , and should be
done upon the crosse ; than this tree by the ordinance of Godde swamme upon the water ; and whan the Jetos had none other tree re 4 y to make the crosse of , for great haste that they had , they tokc the same tree , and made thereof a crosse , an < A
so dyed our Lord thereon , and than the tree bare that bles&yd fruyte , Chryste * body , of the whyche welleth tbe oyle of mercy to Adam and live , and all other o f their offspringe . " Hist , of Popery , i- 31 » 32 . ^
The work to which I am in ,, debted for this quotation , displays throughout too much of the ranL corous spirit of Calvinism , ventt . ing itself not only upon Popery ,
but also against every Protestant heresy . There have indeed been zealous Calvin is ts ( Top lady * for instance ) impartial enough in the case of Servetus to " execrate the
tyranny that doomed him to the flames , " though , as might have been expected , " they give the glorious sufferer little praise , " if they danot pass him over with silent neglect . But the murder of Servetus is
defended in this Protestant History of Popery , ( ii . 351 ) . Grotius had called Calvin Serveti exustoremy the burner of Servetus , which it seems " is a bold calumny , " because Calvin had " dissuaded /' not from the execution of his an .
tagonist , but ' from this kind of death , " though it is not said where even this tender niercy ap _
• In the " Historic Proof of the Doctrinal Calvinism of the Chprch of England ;" Toplady , whose generally abusive language in that "Wotk has so much discredited his cause , expresses himself justly as to the case of $ <; rv < 9 tu ? -. Adrpitly , Jteqpwg out of the question the name of his favourite , Calvin , he says , " la it not "VJ'yj ^ - traordinary , that a person of Melancthon ' s tender spirits , arid goodness of heart , « hould justify and applaud the magistrates 6 f Geneva , for punishing Servefcus ^ ir £ - ligious mistakes with death ? * They acted right / Bays Mckwicthon , « in bringing that blasphemer to the stake , after having first granted ; him tfcfi privilege of * fair trial i Ala # , what is man ! " Hiat . Pxwt & 70 $ .
Untitled Article
Origin of Ilerdeh \ s Story < jf t he Death of A dam i § f
Untitled Article
4
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1808, page 483, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2396/page/27/
-