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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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af Jesqs , ^ e are tyot favoured , vfith any direct information , e ^ pept in the appearance of Moses and Elias to him . Perhaps it may be found tp be as
complete as the prospective assuredly is . The declaration of Dr . Watson , which occurs in his correspondence with Mr . Gibbon , will , on this view , appear equally reputable to the philosopher and divine : " I have no hope of a future existence * except that which is grounded on the truth of Christianity" [ Mon . Repos . XIII . 130 . ]
In submitting these thoughts to the Monthly Repository , I feel considerable reluctance on account of their singularity . On lighter subjects novelty , if attainable , is not devoid of
peculiar recommendation , but where the ground has been so often beaten over by the greatest of minds , any ney ¥ mode of scriptural investigation must necessarily excite , in a
considerable degree , hesitation and doubt as to its accuracy . Aware of this disadvantage , and conscious of great inability , compared with the importance of the subject , if I lose my way , where others have gone in perfect safety , or
sink where they have soared ; mistake is , perhaps , preferable to want of effort , and involuntary error to total inactivity . W . H .
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Such , at least , we fiud to be the effect of this persuasion on the minds of Christians . Scarcely can a page be rea < J , either in the New Testament of
or in the theological writing ^ Christians in after ages , Wtthout finding tl ) e future existence of man either plainly stated or implied . How comes it to pass then , if the Jews possessed this belief , that in places innumerable ,
where we might expect to meet this doctrine , it is passed over in silence > What pious Christian parent , in the affecting situation of Israel blessing his sons , ^ whom he had collected around him in his last hours , would
have omitted to mention this grand article of his creed , this reviving hope , which disarms death of its terror * , and is the best consolation to survivors , as it allows them to entertain the hope of a reunion beyond the gravel
We are filled with just admiration at , the noble and exalted sentiments of the Jewish writers , respecting the being , perfections and universal daminion of the one true God $ bat why , when they speak of his mpral government of the world , do they
not illustrate the doctrine of his providence , by adverting to a future economy of things , where a just retribution will take place ? The Psalmist confessed that his feet had well nigh slipped , when he beheld the prosperity of the wicked ; and that , for the
moment , he ^ was ready to conclude that in vain had he washed his hands in innocency , for he / was plagued all the day , and chastened every morning ; and when , at length , having reflected more maturely oi ) the subject , he is able to reconcile these dispensations with the equity of Divine
Providence , it is not by looking forward to another state of being , where the righteous will be rewarded * a # d t ) ie wicked suffer according to their crimes ; for he looks no farther tfrfto the grave , and considers the suddpn destruction and premature end of tfie ungodly as their punishment .
What fairer opportunity could ** e afforded for bringing forward to advantage the doctrine of a future ( state than in the famous controversy ip ,-tfc £ book of Job , respecting the , JDiy w * e purposes in the ajE&jctipns of maukifid ? fttow is it than , if Job / and , liifo tferee friends believed in tfei * doctrine * that
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g # t Silence of the Old Testament on future Life .
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Si # f March Q 4 , 1819 . f 11 HE silence of the Jewish Scrip-JL tures respecting a future state of existence , has often appeared to me a very surprising- circumstance * Did the patriarchs , and after them the Jewish nation , down to the time of Christ , believe that the existence of
man would be perpetuated beyond death * or did they not ? I should be greatly obliged to any . of your learned correspondents , to throw some light o # this * to me , interesting subject . "VVliMchever supposition is , adopted , it seems alt en fled with difficulties .
If tl | e Jews believed in the immortality of many why do we And the subject so seldom , or as some will sayt never hinted at in their writings ? Qne would have expected that its
importance woulq so fill their minds , that iu ; writing professedly on religio ^^ subj ect it would perpetually re ^ Ur ^ an ^ be ctearJy » nrf dietiuctly sfata ) , 9 g bath a motive to obedience W& % ^ p »*^ latory ground of hope
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1819, page 364, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1773/page/20/
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