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Untitled Article
( iM * against them teridlflg only to prove , um their use has been less hitherto , tjian it might have been , owing to the narrow principles on which they have been framed ; considerations which , in my op inion , do not 6 tfcweigh the objections stated by Dr . Balguy to having none at all
But satisfied as I should be for myself , with a subscription of some sort , and probably not a very general one neither , I cannot cotnply with th&t required of me to the present articles and liturgy ,
for ^ he following reasons : First , after bestowing all the pains which I am able to give , in informing myself what is the-true scripture doctrine of the trinity , the only conclusion I have been able to arrive at is , that I
see no sufficient proof of the Athauasian , and rather incline to the Arian
hypothesis . Secondly , I am clear that the very dangerous doctrine that uribaptized children are subject to the penalties of sin , is asserted in the ninth article , and still more strongly in the service for the public baptism of infants ; and that it is not taught in the Bible / ;
Thirdly , 1 cannot help thinking , notwithstanding what has been written by I ) r . Tucker , arid others , " upon the subject , that the seventeenth article does teach absolute predestination ; a doctrine likewise not found in the Bible , and of a still move destructive tendency than that of original sin . These arc my principal
objections : I have others to many parts of the service , but do not mention them , partly because they are to things generally complained of , and which will probably be removed whenever a revision takes place ; and partly because I do not know how far , had they ; been the only ones , they would have led nte to think < rfa separation .
This separation I do now think mysejf authorized to ; because , believing the doctrines themselves to be erroneous , I am not satisfied with any reasons that I have seen given for continuing to s \ ibscribe them under such a persuasion . I cannot be thoroughly satisfied , that either the words in which it is drawn , or the
king ' s declaration , justify me , who think "With Arminius on the subject , in subscribi ng the seventeenth article ; the n » ore , as it is a subject , which , in my opinion , is to be disputed upon , and the obvioua sense of die article preached against * whenever opportunity offers
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If the plea ibade for subscribing this one could avail me , I have ho - sticri ptea for subscribing the articles relative ^ t § the trinity , or continuing to reaidj the parts of the liturgy relative either > tf *
them , or the doctrine of original sin . These were not subjects of dispute f &t the time the articles were dra ^ rj ^ and of course no salvo was made for them , except the general one of the sixth
article . But surely Dr . Waterland very fully confuted Dr . ClarkeV ideaa on this , subject , in his case of Arian Subscriptions ; and if he had not , the author of the Confessional has unanswerably proved , that , if the sixth article had been designed to justify those , who , willingly
binding themselves to support the opinions of the majority , propagate opinions different from theirs , it might have justified the Roman Catholics , ; it might have justified the first seditious and mad disgracers of Protestanism , whereas , against both these the articles are well
known to have beep made . Neither Dr-Powell ' s plea in favour of first subscript tions , nor Mr . Hey ' s considerations ott obsolete ordinances , can be of service to » me , wKo , at this time of life , am hot at liberty to subscribe upon authority , arid whose objections both to articles and
liturgy are too extensive to find a solution ? in the doctrine of obsolete ordinances . Finally , 1 can neither submit to acquiesce in silence , after having rniade my objections known , nor take upon me to alter the service of th $ church , as long as I continue to prpfess myself a minister
of it . The latter , besides its being of dangerous example , I rather think niy voluntary promise to use the established liturgy precludes me from . With thfc former 1 could only have been satisfied ^ upon the supposition that the things complained of were indifferent , or , as they have been thought to be by many
good men , of / little importance ,:, but as I should in that case have thought . it my duty to have waited for a change by public authority , Without expressing any disapprobation , public or private ; so
being" of a very different opinion , 'that is , believing firmly that some of the qbq oxr ious doctrines strike at the root of aty religion , natural as well as revealed , and that nothing is of' little importance , whkh the Deists and Methodists can
make so formidable use of , as they a * e known to do of the subscription of $ hos $ amongst us , who subscribe what they profess not to believe 5 under these ch >
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Dr . Maty ^ s Reasons for Dissent . 443
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1810, page 443, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2408/page/19/
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