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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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In hu noteon John x » 34 . Dr . Clarke admits that judges are meant by the term gods , and refers to Psalrn lxxxii . 2 &ew as aprpafol it ; but add 5 , < 4 This is pr ^ feably the ' . only place where the word ££ 3 Vf ? J $ * applied to
any but ths t £ ue God . " Oft what does tlits probability rest f A few references to t te& 01 d Testa ment , out of many fclwtf might be made will be sufficient to show that the
' contrary is evident foct . Exed . * i iv 1 . " Jehovah said unto Mo-^ es , see I have made tfeeea god , " ffeb . ElohiiB / to < Pharaoh . *> This wowt is also applied to the
Judges oC Israel . Exodv xxi . 6 * xxiii ^ 9 . To the -golden cal f , xxxik ly & € . To other gods besides JekovaA * of whose name
¦» % lirkeliies w * cre to make no « B ^ iUbrt . ^ Exod . xxiii . 13 » The godd of the nations of Canaan are CftHed itfeeir Eiohim . Deut . vii . > &- * s > & . 'S 1 , ' xx * 18 . The atranoe gods turbo **) tbe Israelites
setved tit& « 1 sd ( failed Etohim ^ iri- ^ - 'SS i -a ^ d xxxit * 37 * The gods whom their fathers served beyond the Apod ar ^ called their Bfoiim , the gods of the Amorites , the / JEtoAi ^ of th e Amorites , Josh . xxiv * 15 * Dagon , the idol god of the ; Pfeilwtines , i « called their
Elohim ^ 1 Sam * v . 7 . It is said ( rf the nations whom the Assyrians planted in the land of Israel , 4 every nation made gods , * ' Heb . *? Elobitt ) , ^ of their ourn . They feared the Lcmr > and serve J their own gorfs , ^ Mtb . ¦* ' ¦ Elohina , ^
^ Kings Jcviu 29 , SS * The gods of Ha math , of Arpad , Sephar-^ im t Hena > and Iva , are called the Elohim of those countries , 2 tfi& 34 * W wouM be ^ tey to produce many fnc > re proofs but it canuofc be fM ^^ ssa ry in so plain H case .
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To what ^ t * ^ e fij £ aH ^ btitii strch egre ^ 6 # 4 ) Hitide ^ ^ ff § ti ^ wrHirigs of a ttian Wi&se teatbifljg is highly extolled fey his party ^ They cannot be imputed to igiiqranee ; could they arise fftfiii
carelessness ? or are they the effect of prejudice I Be this as it may a regard to scripture truth has led &ie to point then * out . Respectfully yours , &c . R . WRIGHT .
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. Juvenile Christian Library . Si * , ~ - " The inquiry of your correspondent ( p . 94 ) respecting proper books to furnish a - ^ Juf ^ Wfe
Christian Library , induces itip to recommend to his notice a small work which is littte kribvrn ^ &nd though composed merel y for the use of Sunday schools , appears to me calculated to be betiefitrfaj
on a mare extensive scale . It is entitled , " The Sunday Scholar ^ First Book ^ ^ ttnd may be hud at D . Eaton ' s , No . 1 ST , High Hbl . born .
I have in the course of several years * experience of its use for the designed purpose , had frequent occasion to observe its good effects on the minds of tbe children , many of whom have spontaneously
expressed to me the pleasure which th ^ y have felt while perusing its simple and artless page $ . In my own family , a child linder five years old , who is now saViiig daily lessons in it ^ ofte n $ tbps
while so doing to express her delight , and sometimes in hfer play hoars prefers reading over and over again what she has learnt , to any other amusement . It has ako ^ the testimony of Hie ^ f igr intilH ^ rtt mai ^ ^* of'd pr ^ aratory classical school , who assured me
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, ^< hft- - ^ JvttmU Chrisitan Library . ^ n : lk ^ 1
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1814, page 221, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2439/page/21/
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