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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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Letter of Dr . Matthew ffo te ' j op the Disuse of Hed&on in Religion . THIS letter was published as original in the Gentleman ' s Magazine for June . The writer is thare described as follows : " Matthew Uote : was admitted of
Exeter College , October 15 , 1661 , proceeded B . A . June 14 , 1664 , B . D . October 13 , 1674 , and D . D . October 13 , 1716 . He was Vicar of Stokegursey , SomerseVaad Rector of Exeter College , Oxford . He published seven volumes on the Liturgy , Epistles and Gospels ; two on the Church Catechism ; another on Matrimony ; another on Charity ; Letters to a Nonconformist Teacher on the Gift
of Prayer ; ' Our Saviour ' s Passion , in a . Sermon on Good Friday , April 1 , 1670 , at St . Peter ' s Cathedral Church , Exeter / on Acts ii . 23 ; and a Sermon preached at Taunton on the Feast of Epiphany , before the forces of the Militia of Somerset , sent there for the preservation of the peace of the town . "
The Sermon for which Dr . Hole thanks his correspondent , Dr . Walker , was probably an Assize Sermon , published in 8 vo . 1723 , from the text 1 Cor . i . 20 , and entitled , " No Contradiction in the received Doctrine of the Blessed Trinity /* The contributor of the letter to
Mn Sylvnnus Urban calls the writer " a truly orthodox divine , " and certainly his sentiments are those of a large proportion of the church visible , upwards to the Fathers : whether they are the more worthy of credit on that account , we must leave the reader to determine .
It is curious to see how the sceptical Montaigne plays off his own " orthodox < y" on this point : 4 Our faith is not of our own
acquiring , but purely the gift of an-Cher ' s bounty . 'Tia not by reason-Jng or by virtue of our understanding , that we have acquired our Religion , but «> y foreign authority and command ; and the weakness or our judgment is ° * more assistance to us in it , than lhc strength of it- and our blindness m ( j re than the clearness of our shrlit . "
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> A&wtTii '; - * ' " ^ ''{?> ***! # y >; ftR ^' f To ^ ffcee * w ^ f ^ fricredibtei ia ah ' dc&sfttf * 6 € 3 « sflils to b eilteve i &nd the in tfrfe it WbMiH ^ e tx > liuman reasdn the more > Se ^ bMtt | e is stteh f&ith . If ir wete accdrtliiigto reasoa , it wouM be no longer a tniracle ; and if there was a precedent ; for it , 'twould be no longer a singularity
St . Augustine says , MeUusscifctir / Deus nesciendo , i . e . God is better kibAvHi by submitting not to know him . *** It is strange that ^ ProtestahtS do not see that by decrying reasbn they must take up either with the Boiiikn Catholics , who have an infallible
church and head , or with the Quakers , each of whom is under the guidance of infallible divine inspiration .
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Thtty for the Reverend Doctor IValher , Minister of St . Maty Moor [ Major ] in R # ony Devon . Rbverend Sir , I receivM your very good Sermon , and return you my hearty thanks for it . I bare read and perus'd it over with a due
jntention of mind , and vpon y * whole thinks you bave sufficientiie prOvM that y « difficulties , absurdities , contradictions , and pretended jnipossibilities in yc doctrine of ye Trinity are farr more and greater on y « heretical opposers than the orthodox assertors of it . ;
Both of them seem to agree that reason can be no competent jutlg in this sublime and mysterious affair ; for y ^ ohe side declare it to be above reais 6 ^ , iihd ye other contrary to it . So thiat jf tWnk reason ought in a great meaaiur ^ fo 'be Jaid aside , and to put it wholly on ye foot of Revelation , which none that awti yc
divine authority of ye Holy S ^ riptutfe can gainsay or resist . Reason indeed h a good rule and judg on things that are within its reach ; but is not to be extended to things that are out of its sphere ,- and cannot be comprehended toy it . And such this mystery must be own'd to be .
Hence we find y « Fathers and Schoolmen in their discourses on tJhis subject , generally waveiog all arguments taken from reason , and makeing it entirely a matter of faith grounded upon divine
Revelation , which is the truest and safest bottom we can put it upon . Tertull&a ' s Credo quia eU jmpossibile , is a reniarkable instance hereof ; he made it ye object of his faith vpon y « autority of / God ' s word , because it seemed jmpossible to his reason .
• Essays . Apol . for Rami . uc St :-bondc . B . ii . ch . xii .
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Letter ofJStf ^^ Mtihew ' -MMi ^ on the BUm& nf ^^ a ^ n ^ Religion . W $
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fediog *** &kmAdffliiM ' ^ of what a ^ caSl" ^ 1 ^' ttowoAM ? Itey \ ViU not fail to disavow the advel-tfaerjand to repTobnte ys wickedness in their next number ;
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1826, page 537, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2552/page/29/
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