On this page
-
Text (1)
-
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
cannot be a ground to receive any doctrine not conformable to reason . In the next place , let us see how far inspiration can enforce on the mind any opinion concerning God or his worship , when accompanied with a power to do a miracle ; and here , too , I say , the last determination must be that o / ¦
reason . . " 1 st . Because reason must be the judge what is a miracle and what not ; which , not knowing how far the power of natural causes do extend themselves , and what strange effects they may produce , is very hard to determine . " 2 d . It will always be as great a miracle , that God should alter the course of natural things to overturn the principles of knowledge and understanding in a man , by setting up any thing to be received by him as a truth , which his
reason cannot assent to , as the miracle itself ; and so at best it will be but one miracle against another , and the greater still on reason ' s side ; it being harder to believe that God should alter , and put out of its ordinary course some phenomenon of the great . world for once , and make things act contrary to their ordinary rule , purposely that the inind of man might 4 o so always afterwards , than that this is some fallacy or natural effect of which he knows not the cause , let it look never so strange . €€ 3 d . Because man does not &nojy whether there be not several sorts of creatures above him , and between him and the Supreme , amongst which there may be some that have the power to produce ua Nature jjuch
extraordinary effects as we call miracles , and may have the will to do it , for other reasons than the confirmation of truth ; for the magicians of Egypt turned their rods . into serpents as well as Moses ; and since so great a miracle as that was done in opposition to the true God , and the revelation sent by him , what miracle can have certainty and assurance greater than that of a man ' s reason ? " And if inspiration have so much the disadvantage of reason in the man himself who is inspired , it has much more so in him who receives the revelation only by tradition from another , and that too very remote in time and
piace " I . do not hereb y deny in the least that God can do , or hath done , miracles for the confirmation of truth ; but I only say that we cannot think he should do them to enforce doctrines or notions of himself , or any worship of him not conformable to reason , or that we can receive such for truth for the miracle '© sake : and even in those books which have the greatest proof of revelation from God , and the attestation of miracles to confirm their being so , the miracles are to be judged by the doctrine , and not the doctrine by the miracles , # . Deut . xiii . 1 ; Matt . xxiv . 24 . And St . Paul says , ' If an angel from heaven should teach any other doctrine /* ' &c . &c . ?—Pp . 123—126 .
We cannot resist quoting the following directions , written ip 167 $ , as instructions to some Foreigner as to " the Lions" to be seen in Eqgland . They form an admirable picture of manners , &c , to contrast with spnie af aur modern thick octavo " Pictures of London , " &c . " Tftie sports of Eiigla ^ i dV W ^ ich , perhaps ^ a curious stranger would ^ ie glad to s ^ e , are liprse ^ racin ^* hacking , and hunting . Bawl ^ gfc ™^ t Mare |) 9 ne and Putney he , may see * e # eralpesFS 0 iJ 8 of quality bowling two , ortliree tunes ji week all the summer ; wrestling , in Lincoln ' s Inne Tield every evening all
the summer ; bear and bullTbaitingv and J sometime W ^^ , atthc < Bew ^ J V W ^ r den i shooting in the Jong-bow an , d 8 tob- > aJl , j ^ % >^ i # 4 g ; * uJg 4- »! - ing ? ija eeversd places in the cpuntry ; aud hvrliijff , ^^ QrnwaA ^ _ , " toNDON ;—See tfce East-India House , and their magazmea ; theiJuatoni House ; the Thames , by water , irom London Bridge to Deptford ; and the King ' s Yard at Daptford ; the sawing-windmill ^ Tradeseant ' s garden And closet ; Sir James Marland ' sclo ^ t and wate ^ r ^ wqnJcB ; the kon milla mi WanOe worth , four mil ^ s above l « ondon , upooi the Tljtamefi ^ or rather those in Sussex ; Paradise by Hatton Garden \ the glass-house «* t the Savoy , and at
Untitled Article
life of John Locke . 64 B
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1829, page 643, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2576/page/43/
-