On this page
-
Text (2)
-
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
ones , " &c- Harsh as are the language and the sentiment , criticism will not permit us to substitute any thing for diem , at the hazard of violating all the rules of analogy and evidence . The original words caunot be fairly translated , " dash thy idols * to the ground : " and the propriety and spirit of the two concluding verses would be destroyed by such an alteration . Besides , this part of the Psali » is not imprecatory , but prophetic : it represents , in exact aud lively colours , an cveut hereafter to take place , and wonderfully accords with Isaiah ' s prediction , xiii . 16 , of the same circumstance , " their children also shall be
dashed to pieces before their eyes . See likewise ver . 18 , of that chapter . Philip , ii . 5—1 ] , — " iu the form of God" Why should we conceive that
an allusion f is here intended , exclusively or specifically , to " the transfiguration on the mount ; " when the phraseology was justified and illustrated by the whole series of our Saviour ' s miracles ?
«¦ — thought it not robbery , ' &c . Translate , with the Editors of the Improved Version , " did not eagerly grasp at the resemblance to God . " The verb yyyyvafro means , considered , esteem ed * &c , and will not bear to be Teadexedbytli&ughtof , or meditated :
aor is apfoctyfjua , robbery > , but something U be seized . " — the frnmoft of a servant . " Here , again thealfusion is general ; agreeably to what our Lovd himself says , Matt . xx , £ 8 * *« The Son of man came not
to be ministered unto , but to minister , " and , in another passage , Luke * xii . % 7 % «* I am among you as one that ** neth > " The form of a servant , 18 resemblance to a servant : the form «/ GW , is resemblance to God .
•• Given him a name / ' &c—* * ha * in the nmme , " Ace . The word **** 4 lias no double sense in this pa-¦ ' ^ wph , but signifies throughout it , ** the mediatorial character of Jeaun £ h ritf j ' to which effect is th « clause ^ ihat every tongue vfo&nld confess , "
&c . Concerning the doctrine of ike fi * rf mrtitwtion of ail men to virtue a t& hmppint 9 § 9 the passage before ** *• profoundly sftent j every tongue jj ^ ttfpy kaQC signifying « 4 the whole ¦ townaii race / ' Gentiles as well (* s Jews . - ^_ N . Won . Repot . XII . p . 617 . f Ib -
Untitled Article
biblical Criticism . —Mr * Jones on . Epaphroditus . 7 $ 7
Untitled Article
December 4 , IS 17 * Sir , AM obliged to your Correspon-I dent A . X . [ pp . 674 , 675 , ] for bringing under review the subject of Epaphroditus . I will attempt to establish the facts stated in my Eccles . Researches , and I shall feel additional
obligation , if he or any other of your readers will refute my statement . The right plan is to plac <* before the reader , all that is said about him , from which we can draw any conclusion . And
thus says our apostle , Philip , ii . 25 , — ** I thought it necessary to send you Epaphroditus , my brother and fellowlabourer and fellow-soldier , your ambassador and minister to my wants , for he greatly longed after you all , and was full of anguish , because ye had heard that he was innrtrf , and indeed
he was infirm , so as to be nigh unto death ; but God had pity on him , and not on him only , but on me also , lest I should have sorrow upon sorrow ; receive him , therefore , in the Lord with all joy , and hold such in estimation ; because for the work of Christ he was near death , having hazarded his life to fill up the deficiency of your
service toward me . " Suetonius , Ch . 14—19 , " Domitian condemned Epapliroditus , his Se * cretary , because he is supposed to have assisted Nero in destroying him self : and finally , his own cousrn * Flav . Clement , a man of the most cjespicajble
inertness , he put to death , though l * e had as yet hardly laid down the Con ^ - sulship . " Dion Cassius , Lib . 77—r ! 4 » " In this same year , Domiiian put to death , with many others , Clepapnt , the Consul , for the crime of impiety , and for having embraced the Jewish institutions , Epaphroditus , a
freedman of Nero , whom he had before banished , he then slew , upder the charge of not having supported NeroJ In tae beginning of bis Antiquities , Josephus thus writes : —* ' There were some who , from their love to th | s subject , have encouraged me to undertaji ^
it , and especially Epapbroditus , a man who excels in eve > ry branch of lifcera * ture ; more particularly ia the lwowv ledge of history ; having beeii him * e # engaged in the un&n ^ Gwmt pf important affairs , and cxpervenced many vicissitudes of fortune : iji all w fcid ^ he displayed a tpind wpod ^ rf « Hy po Wr erful , and an inflexible adherence to
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1817, page 727, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2471/page/31/
-