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Christ either in person or in vision ; if he meant thereby to recommend his proposals . " ( Must not Mr . F . then make the author of th 6 -vision represent the devil as
acting out of character , contrary to what he elsewhere supposes ? See No ; 11 . ) " But what would have been absurd in this
malignant spirit , whose business it is to stdncey was a wise conduct in the Deity ^ ( the autho r of this vision , ) because his intention was ^ o forewarn Christ of his danger , and to
arm him against it . " . And Mr . F . as if he had thought this to have been the whole of the divine intention ^ adds , " It was on purpose to lead Christ to regard the present proposals , ( which were afterwards to
occur in real life , ) as highly criminal in their nature ; that the vision represented them as made to him by the devil , as the temptations of that great enemy of Gocf whom it is virtue to resist But
always . the premonition of approac / w / g trials , is a different thing from a present trial , which latter it was his business here to show the temptation to have been , according to positions laid down b y himself , but which it will be evident to
the reader it could hot have been , if he will look back to Nos . 4 and 5 , and attend to what is said at the top of p . 177 . Accordingly , Mr . F ' s next sentence is quite irrelevant to the subject immediately before him , which was , not to prove that the appearance of tlfe devil in vision was proper
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the vision being considered ag prophetical of future trials , but that it was Consiste ? it with the vision ' s beiiig a present trial ; which ihe places just referred to
show it not to have been , as truly on Ids hypothesis as on the common one . The sentence is . * ' Thus the very same circufristanCe , ihe
appearance of the devil which was proper in the vision , suitable to both its divine author , and benevolent intention , would have been absurd upon the common 1
hypothesis . ' Presuming that it must now he sufficiently manifest ? that Mr . F . has been unsuccessful in proving the supposed vision to have been a present trial ,
I proceed to examine his reply to an objection , which it seems ^ had been made to his hypothesis * —viz . — That the apprehended presence of Satan in vision would produce the same general effect ,
as his real presence at a » y other time . 'V p . 176 . Unless I very much mistake the meaning of our author in some of lm position ^ already quoted , the . objection asserts no more than he had hinw
self allowed and advanced . JIow ^ ever , as he must have entertained a different idea of the import q £ those positions , it is but fair to give his own statement of the * oh * jection v and to let the reader see how he endeavours to parry iu cc is farther urged , ( he says ^ p . 177 y ) that the reasonings em- * ployed to abate * the force of the second temptation , upon the com *
* He should have used a stronger word than abate . For where he is considering this temptation on the common hypothesis , he asks , " What inducement coulcj Christ have for a compliance with the proposal suggested ? Would hq be ; disposed to gratify Satan , by doing an act at his mere motion ? It is absurd to suppose it ** ( p . 10 . ) According to this remark , the force of the second temptation would not only have been abated , but entirely destroyed upon the common hypothesis the proposal havipg nothing in it , which could operate on the mind of Christ in the way of inducement . Neither could it hare any force on Mr . F * 6 , ajs mu ^ fye manifest from Nos * 4 , and 5 .
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74 Objections to Mr . Farmer ' s Hypothesis * — Letter II .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1810, page 74, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2401/page/26/
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