On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (6)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
BIBLICAL CRITICISM.
-
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
clusively appropriated to the highest dignitaries of , religion , and which could only tend to bring religion into contempt ; aad , as his intention was inferred from this tendency r , it required no small interest to effect his liberation .
Untitled Article
Sir * Jan . 9 , 0 th , 1818 . WHEN you published an " Extract of a Letter from a Friend , *' [ VII . 173 , ] on John xii . 31 , in which the author attempted to maintain the idea of Mr . Wakefield , ( New Translation , ) that the " prince of thte world "
was Jesus himself , it was my intention , but I know not what prevented me , to have troubled you with some Extracts from a MS . in my possession which appeared to me to throw some just lights upon the passage . Perhaps your Correspondent , H . T . [ XII . 487 , 488 ] , may be disposed to pay some
particular attention to it , as it will confirm some of his observations , and throw light on some of his querfea . I therefore now transmit it , only just observing , that both Mr . WakefieM and your former Correspondent ap ^ pear to have overlooked John xiv * . > $ 0 P and also | Cor . ii . 0 , 8 ; and that the »« mie of Kpio-i s atfoptetjHn the foltowl flS paper , maty tldssiWKr liaVfe becfn »« ggest 6 # toy Letefr , w * o , to Kis < Crfe
Untitled Article
mind will he cdiapletely t > e < # ip * ed in arranging the ceremonial of my funeral and if nothing goes wrofrg in the pro cession , he will be quite eonsol ^ for his loss . " Thieufcalt adds * that the event ; proved the truth of t ^ e quee n ' * opinion of her cm # M $ f husbancL
Untitled Article
tica Sacra , says , " Est autem crisis subita m morbo ad salutem aut ad mortem -mutatio . " V . F . John xii . SI , 3 S . —" Now is thfc crisis of this world , now shall the ruler of this world be cast out : And
I , if I be lifted up from the earth , wiH draw all men unto-m 6 . " In the 20 th verse the Evangelist informs us , " that there were certain Greeks which came up to worship at the feast , " who , therefore , were pn > - bably proselytes to the Jewish religion ,
and , from their applying to Philip , who was of Bethsaida of Galilee , a country contiguous to Syria , were ttot unKkely some of the . descendants of those Greeks who settled in Syria under the Syro-Macedonian einpfrfc
established by the successors of Afefirahdlei * , which fedalfcd m the Bbdk of Maccabees the empire of -thef Gre «* il * : mratry of whotnr haif spread through * girat part of OaWe « , and mtugtod among the Jewk Whett * tt * JLeftl
Untitled Article
Biblical Criticism . —Ori J <> hn mi . S \ , SZ . ^ 65
Untitled Article
No . CCCXXX . Prussian Court Mourning . Thieubalt , in his " Souvenirs" of Frederick the Great , gives several amusing trails of the Brandenburg family » In his Biographical Sketch of Freking
derick the ^ r ^ of Prussia , who was an extremely vain man , and continually engaged in the most frivolous pursuits , he mentions the following anecdote of the queen , Sophia Charlotte , who was a woman of a very superior mind , and the sister of our George the First . In her last illness
the queen viewed the approach of death with much calmness and serenity , and when one of her attendants observed how severely it would afflict the king , and that the misfortune of losing her would plunge his majesty into the deepest despair— 4 < With respect to him , ' * said the queen , with a smile , "I am perfectly at ease . His
Untitled Article
No . CCGXXXL The Iat 0 Mr . Henry Erskine . Mr . Erskine ' s character was truly estimable ? and-the just ^ preriatipii of his virtues extended far beyo ^ the circle of his owa family a&d friends ; and it is a well authenticated
fact , that a writer ( or , a& we dbouM say , attorney ) in a distant pa $ t of Scotland , representing to a » oppressed and needy taeksman , who . had applied to him for advice , the futility of enterin pc into a law-suit with a wealthy neighbour , having himself no means
of defending his cause , received for answer , ** Yedinna ken what ye say , Maister ; there ' s nae a puir man in Scotland need to want ajri $ n& or Jew mi enemy , while Harry Erskine lives 1 " How much honour does that simple sentence convey to the generous aad benevolent object of it 1
Biblical Criticism.
BIBLICAL CRITICISM .
Untitled Article
VOJL . XIII . 2 M
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1818, page 265, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2475/page/41/
-