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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.
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ration of the Spirit on the mind of Jesus , then the words in or by the Spirit cannot in this instance imply a vision * and if not , when manifestly used to denote the cause of our Lord ' s departure
from Jordan , ( and they are not employed afterwards in the narraxative ., ) there can be no just reason for assigning to them at the same time another import , 'and ipaking them denote also a vision , Unless the context force us to
understand them in a double sense , which it clearly does not . Before X conclude this paragraph , I shall avail myself of some passages in Mr . F . Vpiece , from which the same fact of Christ ' s removing in ger&on from the side of Jordan
under an impulse of the Spirit , ^ which , however , according to my apprehension has been satisfactorily established already , ) may be farther proved . In p . 62 . we rea 4 , " Though it could not with any propriety be said , that Christ was at this time carried into the
wilderness in a corporeal manner , in which sense he was there already ; yet there is nothing improper in saying , he was now conveyed into a wilderness in a spiritual manner . " The time here referred
to was when he was led by the Spirit . Jn page 82 . note p . Mr . F . says , It appears from the history , that Christ was in the wilderness bordering on - Jordan when the temptation ended , as well as when it btfgan , pursuing
Jiis journey into Galilee . " From note f . p . 55 . quoted above , it appears , that Mr . F . thought Jesus was not upon the banks of Jordan , when he was led by the Spirit into the wilderness . Now , if Christ was corporeally in the wilderness which bordered on Jordan ,
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but not on its banks , when the vision came upon him , he ipust have gone in person from the side of Jordan , before he fell iatd thg
vision or trance ; and ( sts before ^ observed ) it was , agreeably to the ? concurring testimony of the Qvangelists , some Operation of the Spirit on his mind , which made him go thence . The effect of this
operation , then , ' as already noticed , cannot be fairly concluded to have been also the exciting of a vision * I shall only add here * that the words which speak of the operation , whatever it was , are tho&e , 6 n which Mr . F . lays great stress in attempting to prove the tempta *
tion a vision . In direct opposition , as it should * seem , to this statement , Mr . F » in his explanation of Mark i . 10 —? 13 k p . 71 j " 74 .. observes , No
Sooner did the Spirit descend upon Jesus of his baptism , than by his inspiration fye was carried into sk frightful desert in a prophetic trance or vision . In this situatioa
and in this state he remained for forty days , during all which space he was , according to his own apprehension , assaulted by the temptations of Satan , and exposfed to danger from the fury of wild beasts /'— -Where and when it was
that the Spirit descended upon Jesus , the evangelists leave us no room to doubt . It was upon the banks of Jordan , * to which he went up straightway from the water
after he had been baptised , Matt , iii . l £ , Marki , 10 . Luke iii . » 1 , 2 $ . If , then , the Spirit descended upon him , while he was on the side of Jordan- and
certainly in the sight of John the baptist , ' who saw the Spirit descend upon him , and if , assoou as the Spirit descended upon him .
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Objections to Mr . farmers Hypothesis . 19
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1810, page 19, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2400/page/19/
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