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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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reader ^ : ) r . Spry ay be essential or useful ; nevertheless , it should have escaped his censure . Our author charges Mr . Laadsey with having made a rash and unfounded assertion , when he declared
that the fecnous clause in Rom . ix . 5 , was read so as not to appear to belpfig- to Christ , at least for the first tliree cejatories . However , adds the select preacher , * Mt is not accessary to suppose that he knew * tins not to be true . But Mr . Belsham either
Jknew it , or he has never read all that Whifcby wrote upon this very passage / ' With the same want of candour and of justice , the select jpEeacher levels a sarcasm at €€ Mr . LdndseyV fidelity and the easy credulity of Mr . Bebhan , " -p . 117 .
The truth is , that Mr . Lindsey * has expressed himself with his characteristic modesty and caution : on the passage before us he observes , " It would seem that it was read /' &c . &zc . If some of the early fathers cited and understood the last clause as re *
ferring to Jesus Christ , still a powerful stress may with reason be placed on the opposing statements found in others of them , and produced by Dr . S . Clarke f whose argument , certainly , goes to shew , that neither in point of principle nor of fact can the text be serviceable to Trinitarianism *
Mr . liiadeey ' s remark , we admit , would . have been more correct , had it been still more qualified . We take the ca 6 e to have been , that of this famous passage no such application was generally made by Christian writers of the earliest ages . \ Learned halls and academic bowers
are occasionall y visited by Dr . Spry , who , nevertheless , could not have been at Oxford when he penned the sentence , I have no present means of reference to Origen . " How scanty then must have been Mr , Lindsey ' s ' * means of reference" to that father , when he drew up the Sequel to the Apology ! §
* Sequel , &c , pp . 204 , &c . f Scrip . Doct . of the Trinity , No . 539 . J Our copy of Bowyer ' s Conjectures belonged formerly to a distinguished scholar , who , in the margin , ad loc . has put his broad negative onWhitby ' s statement in the Commentary . § His note is taken mainly from Clarke .
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< 3 oatirovdrsial writers wortftf be more readily disposed to allow for each other ' s omissions , &c . ^ did they bear in mind the frequeift , n $ y palpable , errors , into which learned and worthy men , of various communion s ^ have fallen , as the effect of a too
rapid glance of the eye at the pages of their predecessors . In Bowyer ' s Conjectures , under this very text , Mill is represented as affirming that of Rom . ix . 5 , which , in reality , he does not say of it , but of 1 Tim , iii . 16 . Clarke , * too , is cited as the
authority for such a representation : whereas Clarke gives the words of Mill under No . 540 , and not under No . 539 } and the mistake of Bowyer , or his friend , has plainly arisen from the circumstance of his having overlooked the distinction .
With regard to Coloss . i . 15 , we shall simply lay before our readers Mr . Weiibeteved ' s convincing note on Gen . i . 27 : " The Apostle Paul evidently conceived that the power of man constituted his resemblance to God . See 1 Cor . xi . TV
[ See , too , Ps . viii . 5 , 6 . ] As to the passages which are usually produced from his writings ( Eph . iv . 24 , Col . iii . 10 ) to prove that holiness , righteousness , and knowledge , were also qualities which the historian of the creation had in view
when he spake of the image of God , a careful and impartial attention to these passages will shew , that they refer not at all to what Ad ^ iri was , but to what the professors of the gospel ougbt to be . "
That the preposition ev has various signification may be allowed : that it has quite so many as Sclileusncr assigns to it , we nasty fairly question ; and it were to be wished , that this otherwise excellent lexicographer had been more studious of condensation and perspicuity in liis statements of
the secondary meanings of words . If Col . i . 15 , be compared with th £ seventeenth verse of the same ; cbQptei \ tlie passages will be found illustrative of each other ( j j / covrep £ kti < t 9 y } tu KOCVTCC , K . T . X . * * * TCfc TtOLVTCl BV UVTG > o-vi / ea-Tvjyce ] . No different ' . principle of criticism can be legitimate . Let us next attend to the select
preacher ' s additional remarks on * Scrip . Doctrine , &c .
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tq it ' O ' 360 R % &i # w ** $ lpt # s Zfoo Serwvns before the University qf # fenL
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1825, page 360, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2537/page/34/
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