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has God any external form ? Does lie appear unto men under any sensible figure , which induces them to associate that figure with him as an index of his nature and essence ? If not ,
the maxim of Chrysostom is a piece of sophistry utterly unworthy of Dr . Smith . The form of a man may mean a real , perfect man , because that man and his form are in our minds the
result of invariable associations : but the form of God cannot mean God , because no such associations could ever take place in the human mind . And there must be an end to all rational criticism , if a word that implies
only a sensible appearance can be perverted to mean a Being who is infinitely remote from all perceptions of sense . And yet on this perversion , gross as it appears , is founded the interpretation of this passage given by the ortho'dox divines .
Dr . Smith supposes , that if the apostle alluded to the transfiguration , he would have used the past participle , vTvotpZotq , instead of vTzctpxuv , the present , as necessary to mark the previous change which Jesus underwent before his crucifixion . The remark is
ingenious , and argues a critical skill in the language . I will illustrate its justness by an example : —In the beginning of the Iliad , it is said of Agamemnon and Achilles , that , apio-oci / Sioc ^ rjTvjv , having quarrelled , they
separated . Here the past participle implies that they quarrelled before they separated , and was the cause of their separation : and the phrase might be rendered , they separated in
consequence of having quarrelled ; whereas , if tlie poet used ep ^ a / re , his meaning would have been that they separated while quarrelling . Let us * apply this remark to the disputed verse . The Doctor maintains , that while Jesus
suffered and died as a man , he was still alike incapable of suffering- in his divine character . Now , if the apostle entertained this notion , it would have been indispensable in him to mark the difference of the two natures , and this would have been effectually done by the use of the past in the room of the
present participle , as it would lead the reader to infer that Christ died on the cross in consequence of having previously disrobed himself of his divinity ; whereas the use of the present participle unequivocall y sanctions the
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conclusion , that he expired in the very nature and character which he possessed when in the form of God . This leads me to observe , that an obvious and marked contrast is intended between vTzocpxciov and ( Aopcpriy as the fo rmer comprehends the latent princi ples essential to the being and character of
our Lord , while the latter denotes only an external appearance . These latent principles which constituted his nature remained till death unchanged , but his splendid form vanished away previously to his dissolution .
The apostle opposes those men who taught the divinity of Christ . His reference to these impostors is certain , because he mentions them by name : " Many are now going about , whom I have often mentioned to you , and now mention with tears , as enemies
of the cross of Christ , whose end is their own destruction , ( and not , as they pretend , the salvation of those whom they deceive , ) whose God is their belly , and who glory in their shame . ' * They were enemies to the
cross of Christ because they maintained that he did not really suffer , he being a man only in appearance . But while they taught the divinity of our Saviour , they refused to acknowledge him as Lord ; in other words , thev
denied any obligation on the part of the converts to obey his moral precepts and to imitate his virtuous example , the end of his appearance being not to preach repentance and reformation to the world , but to annul the
righteous laws of the Creator , and to give full scope to the worst passions of the human heart . Their object , in short , was to neutralize the moral influence of the gospel , and this they sought to do by substituting in the room of its divine virtues the notions
which the Pagan philosophers had ot virtue , and to class the Founder with the Pagan gods . The high reputation of Aristotle , and the Ode which , though composed in praise ot Virtue , breathes a spirit hostile to the peace and happiness of society , sanecannoi ¦
turns an abomination that « - named , fell in with the views of the deceivers . They therefore introduced ^ into the church at Philippi . Of this the apostle , though at a distance , could not be long ignorant , as he corresponded . by every means with the several churches he had established . If tlie
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352 Dr . John Jones in ansioer to Dr . J . P . Smith
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1822, page 352, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2513/page/32/
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