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            <title type="main">Reason the only oracle of man: a compendious system of natural religion </title>
            <author>Allen, Ethan, 1738-1789</author>
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            <idno type="isbn10">1106001591</idno>
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                  <title>Reason the only oracle of man, or, A compenduous system of natural religion </title>
                  <author>Allen, Ethan, 1738-1789</author>
               </titleStmt>
               <extent>169 p. ; 19 cm.</extent>
               <publicationStmt>
                  <publisher>J. P. Mendum, Cornhill</publisher>
                  <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
                  <date>1854</date>
               </publicationStmt>
               <notesStmt>
                  <note>First edition published in 1784</note>
                  <note>From RLIN: This is the first publication in the United States in direct opposition to the Christian religion; cf. NUC-pre-56</note>
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         <titlePage>
            <docTitle>
               <titlePart type="main">
                  <title type="main">Reason: The Only Oracle Of Man</title>
                  <title type="sub">A Compendious System Of Natural Religion</title>
               </titlePart>
            </docTitle>
            <byline>by 
<docAuthor>Col. Ethan Allen</docAuthor>
            </byline>
            <docImprint>Boston: J.P. Mendum, Cornhill. 1854.</docImprint>
         </titlePage>
         <div type="Introduction">
            <head>INTRODUCTION to 1854 Edition</head>
            <p>Colonel Ethan Allen, the author of Oracles of Reason, was the 
son of Joseph Allen, a native of Coventry, Connecticut, a farmer in 
moderate circumstances. He afterwards resided in Litchfield, where 
Ethan was born in the year 1739. The family consisted of eight 
children, of whom our author was the eldest. But few incidents 
connected with his early life are known. We are appraised, however, 
that notwithstanding his education was very limited, his ambition 
to prove himself worthy of that attention which superior intellect 
ever commands, induced him diligently to explore every subject that 
came under his notice. A stranger to fear, his opinions were ever 
given without disguise or hesitation; and an enemy to oppression, 
he sought every opportunity to redress the wrongs of the oppressed. 


</p>
            <p>At the braking out of the Revolutionary War, he raised in 
Vermont, where he had resided, a company of volunteers, consisting 
of two hundred and thirty, with which he surprised the fortress of 
Ticonderoga, May 10, 1775, containing about forty men, and one 
hundred pieces of cannon. He was unfortunately taken prisoner in 
September following, in an attempt on Montreal, and suffered a 
cruel imprisonment for several years. For an account of which, the 
reader is referred to his narrative, contained in a memoir of the 
author, by Mr. Hugh Moore, Plattsburg, 1834. 


</p>
            <p>Soon after the close of the revolution, Col. Allen composed 
following work; which, on account of the bold and unusual manner, 
particularly in this country, that the subject of religion is 
treated, he had great difficulty to get published. It lay a long 
time in the hands of a printer at Hartford, who had not the moral 
courage to print it. 


</p>
            <p>It was finally printed by a Mr. Haswell, of Bennington, Vt. in 
1784. Not long after its publication, a part of the edition, 
comprising the entire of several signatures, was accidentally 
consumed by fire. Whether Mr. H. deemed this fire a judgment upon 
him for having printed the work or not, is unknown — but, the fact 
is, he soon after committed the remainder of the edition to the 
flames, and joined the Methodist Connection; so that but few copies 
were circulated. 


</p>
            <p>Col. Allen died in the town of Burlington, Vt., on the 12th of 
February, 1789, of apoplexy. 

</p>
         </div>
         <div type="preface">
            <head>PREFACE</head>
            <p>An apology appears to me to be impertinent in welters who 
venture their works to public inspection, for this obvious reason, 
that if they need it, they should have been stifled in the birth, 
and not permitted a public existence. I therefore offer my 
composition to the candid judgment of the impartial world without 
it, taking it for granted that I have as good a natural right to 
expose myself to public censure, by endeavoring to subserve 
mankind, as any of the species who have published their productions 
since the creation; and I ask no favor at the hands of 
philosophers, divines or critics, but hope and expect they will 
severely chastise me for my errors and mistakes, least they may 
have a share in perverting the truth, which is very far from my 
intention. 


</p>
            <p>In the circle of my acquaintance, (which has not been small,) 
I have generally been denominated a Deist, the reality of which I 
never disputed, being conscious I am no Christian, except mere 
infant baptism make me one; and as to being a Deist, I know not, 
strictly speaking, whether I am one or not, for I have never read 
their writings; mine will therefore determine the matter; for I 
have not in the least disguised my sentiments, but have written 
freely without any conscious knowledge of prejudice for, or against 
any man, sectary or party whatever; but wish that good sense, truth 
and virtue may be promoted and flourish in the world, to the 
detection of delusion, superstition, and false religion; and 
therefore my errors in the succeeding treatise, which may be 
rationally pointed out, will be readily rescinded. 


</p>
            <p>By the public's most obedient and humble servant. 


</p>
            <p>ETHAN ALLEN 

</p>
         </div>
      </front>
      <body>
         <div xml:id="c1" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER I</head>
            <div xml:id="s1.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - OF REFORMING MANKIND FROM SUPERSTITION AND ERROR, AND THE GOOD CONSEQUENCES OF IT</head>
               <p>The desire of knowledge has engaged the attention of the wise 
and curious among mankind in all ages which has been productive of 
extending the arts and sciences far and wide in the several 
quarters of the globe, and excited the contemplative to explore 
nature's laws in a gradual series of improvement, until philosophy, 
astronomy, geography, and history, with many other branches of 
science, have arrived to a great degree of perfection. 


</p>
               <p>It is nevertheless to be regretted, that the bulk of mankind, 
even in those nations which are most celebrated for learning and 
wisdom, are still carried down the torrents of superstition, and 
entertain very unworthy apprehensions of the BEING, PERFECTIONS, 
CREATION) and PROVIDENCE Of GOD, and their duty to him, which lays 
an indispensable obligation on the philosophic friend an nature, 
unanimously to exert themselves in every lawful, wise, and prudent 
method, to endeavor to reclaim mankind from their ignorance and 
delusion, by enlightening their minds in those great and sublime 
truths concerning God and his providence? and their obligations to 
moral rectitude, which in this world, and that which is to come, 
cannot fail greatly to affect their happiness and well being. 


</p>
               <p>Though “none by searching can find out God, or the Almighty to 
perfection,” yet I am persuaded, that if mankind would dare to 
exercise their reason as freely on those divine topics as they do 
in the common concerns of life, they would, in a great measure, rid 
themselves of their blindness and superstition, gain more exalted 
ideas of God and their obligations to him and one another, and be 
proportionally delighted and blessed with the views of his moral 
government, make better members of society, and acquire, manly 
powerful incentives to the practice of morality, which is the last 
and greatest perfection that human nature is capable of. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s1.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - OF THE BEING OF A GOD</head>
               <p>THE laws of nature having subjected mankind to a state of 
absolute dependence on something out of it, and manifestly beyond 
themselves, or the compound exertion of their natural powers, gave 
them the first conception of a superior principle existing; 
otherwise they could have had no possible conception of a 
superintending power. But this sense of dependency, which results 
from experience and reasoning on the facts, which every day cannot 
fail to produce, has uniformly established the knowledge of our 
dependency to every individual of the species who are rational, 
which necessarily involves, or contains in it, the idea of a ruling 
power, or that there is a God, which ideas are synonymous. 


</p>
               <p>The globe with its productions, the planets in their motions, 
and the starry heavens in their magnitudes, surprise our senses and 
confound our reason, in their munificent lessons of instruction 
concerning God, by means whereof, we are apt to be more or less 
lost in our ideas of the object of divine adoration, though at the 
same time every one is truly sensible that their being and 
preservation is from God. We are too apt to confound our ideas of 
God with his works, and latter for the former. Thus barbarous and 
unlearned nations have imagined, that inasmuch as the sun in its 
influence is beneficial to them in bringing forward the spring of 
the year, causing the production of vegetation, and food for their 
subsistence, that therefore it is their God: while others have 
located other parts of creation, and ascribe to them prerogatives 
of God; and mere creatures and images have been substituted for 
Gods by the wickedness or weakness of man, or both together. It 
seems that mankind in most ages and parts of the world have been 
fond of corporeal Deities with whom their outward senses might be 
gratified, or as fantastically diverted from the just apprehension 
of the true God, by a supposed supernatural intercourse with 
invisible and mere spiritual beings, to whom they ascribe divinity, 
so that through one means or other, the character of the true God 
has been much neglected, to the great detriment of truth, justice, 
and morality in the world that mankind can be uniform in their 
religious opinions, or worship God according to knowledge, except 
they can form a consistent arrangement of ideas of the Divine 
character. 


</p>
               <p>Although we extend our ideas retrospectively ever so far upon 
the succession, yet no one cause in the extended order of 
succession, which depends upon another prior to itself, can be the 
independent cause of all things: nor is it possible to trace the 
order of the succession of causes back to that self-existent cause, 
inasmuch as it is eternal and infinite, and cannot therefore be 
traced out by succession, which operates according to the order of 
time, consequently can bear no more proportion to the eternity of 
God, than time itself may be supposed to do, which has no 
proportion at all; as the succeeding arguments respecting the 
eternity and infinity of God will evince. But notwithstanding the 
series of the succession of causes cannot be followed in a 
retrospective succession up to the self-existent or eternal cause, 
it is nevertheless a perpetual and conclusive evidence of a God. — 
For a succession of causes considered collectively, can be nothing 
more than effects of the independent cause, and as much dependent 
on it as those dependent causes are upon one another; so that we 
may with certainty conclude that the system of nature, which we 
call by the name of natural causes, is as much dependent on a self-existent 
cause, as an individual of the species in the order of 
generation is dependent on its progenitors for existence. Such part 
of the series of nature's operations, which we understand, has a 
regular and necessary connection with, and dependence on its parts, 
which we denominate by the names of cause and effect. From hence we 
are authorized from reason to conclude, that the vast system of 
causes and effects are thus necessarily connected, (speaking of the 
natural world only,) and the whole regularly and necessarily 
dependent on a self-existent cause: so that we are obliged to admit 
an independent cause, and ascribe self-existence to it, otherwise 
it could not be independent, and consequently not a God. But the 
eternity or manner of the existence of a self-existent and 
independent being is to all finite capacities utterly 
incomprehensible; yet this is so far from an objection against the 
reality of such a being, that it is essentially necessary to 
support the evidence of it; for if we could comprehend that being 
whom we call God, he would not be God, but must have been finite 
and that in the same degree as those may be supposed to be who 
could comprehend him; therefore so certain that God is, we cannot 
comprehend his essence, eternity, or manner of existence. This 
should always be premised, when we assay to reason on the being, 
perfection, eternity, and infinity of God, or of his creation and 
providence. As far as we understand nature, we are become 
acquainted with the character of God, for the knowledge of nature 
is the revelation of God. If we form in our imagination a 
compendious idea of the harmony of the universe, it is the some as 
calling God by the name of harmony, for there could be no harmony 
without regulation, and no regulation without a regulator, which is 
expressive of the idea of a God. Nor could it be possible, that 
there could be order or disorder, except we admit of such a thing 
as creation, and creation contains in it the idea of a creator, 
which is another appellation for the Divine Being, distinguishing 
God from his creation. Furthermore, there could be no proportion, 
figure, or motion, without wisdom and power; wisdom to plan, and 
power to execute, and these are perfections, when applied to the 
works of nature, which signify the agency or superintendency of 
God. If we consider nature to be matter, figure, and motion, we 
include the idea of God in that of motion: for motion implies a 
mover as much as creation does a creator. If from the composition, 
texture, and tendency of the universe in general, we form a complex 
idea of general good resulting therefrom to mankind, we implicitly 
admit a God by the name of good, including the idea of his 
providence to man. And from hence arises our obligations to love 
and adore God, because he provides for, and is beneficent to us. 
Abstract the idea of goodness from the character of God, and it 
would cancel all our obligations to him, and excite us to hate and 
detest him as a tyrant: hence it is, that ignorant people are 
superstitiously misled into a conceit that they hate God, when at 
the same time it is only the idol of their own imagination, which 
they truly ought to hate and be ashamed of; but were such persons 
to connect the ideas of power, wisdom, goodness, and all possible 
perfection in the character of God, their hatred towards him would 
be turned into love and adoration. 


</p>
               <p>By extending our ideas in a larger circle, we shall perceive 
our dependence on the earth and waters of the globe which we 
inhabit, and from which we are bountifully fed and gorgeously 
arrayed; and next extend our ideas to the sun, whose fiery mass 
darts its brilliant rays of light to our terraqueous ball with 
amazing velocity, and whose region of inexhaustible fire supplies 
it with fervent heat, which causes vegetation, and gilds the 
various seasons of the year with ten thousand charms: this is not 
the achievement of man, but the workmanship and providence of God. 
But how the sun is supplied with materials, thus to perpetuate its 
kind influences, we know not. But deny the reality of those 
beneficial influences, because we do not understand the manner of 
the perpetuality of that fiery world, or how it became fire? or 
will any one deny the reality of nutrition by food, because we do 
not understand the secret operation of the digesting powers of 
animal nature or the minute particulars of its cherishing 
influence? None will be so stupid as to do it. Equally absurd would 
it be for us to deny the providence of God, by “whom we live, move, 
and have oar being,” because we cannot comprehend it. 


</p>
               <p>We know that earth, water, fire and air, in their various 
compositions subserve us, and we also know that these elements are 
devoid of reflection, reason, or design; from whence we may easily 
infer, that a wise, understanding, and designing being has ordained 
them to be thus subservient. Could blind chance constitute order 
and decorum, and consequently a providence? That wisdom, order, and 
design should be the production of nonentity, or of chaos, 
confusion, and old night, is too absurd to deserve a serious 
confutation, for it supposeth that there may be effects without a 
cause, viz. produced by nonentity, or that chaos and confusion 
could produce the effects of power, wisdom, and goodness. Such 
absurdities as these we must assent to, or subscribe to the 
doctrine of a self-existent and providential being. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s1.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - THE MANNER OR DISCOVERING THE MORAL PERFECTIONS AND ATTRIBUTES OF GOD</head>
               <p>HAVING in a concise mariner offered a variety of indisputable 
reasons to evince the certainty of the being and providence of God, 
and of his goodness to man through the intervention of the series 
of nature's operations, which are commonly described by the name of 
natural causes, we come now more particularly to the consideration 
of his moral perfections; and though all finite beings fall as much 
short of an adequate knowledge thereof as they do of perfection 
itself, nevertheless through the intelligence of our own souls we 
may have something of a prospective idea of the divine perfections. 
For though the human mind bears no proportion to the divine, yet 
there is undoubtedly a resemblance between them. For instance, God 
knows all things, and we know some things, and in the things which 
we do understand, our knowledge agrees with that of the divine, and 
cannot fail necessarily corresponding with it. To more than know a 
thing, speaking of that thing only, is impossible even to 
omniscience itself; for knowledge is but the same in both the 
infinite and finite minds. To know a thing is the same as to have 
right ideas of it, or ideas according to truth, and truth is 
uniform in all rational minds, the divine mind not excepted. It 
will not be disputed but that mankind in plain and common matters 
understand justice from injustice, truth from falsehood, right from 
wrong, virtue from vice, and praise-worthiness from blame-worthiness, 
for other wise they could not be, accountable 
creatures. This being admitted, we are capable of forming a complex 
idea of a moral character, which when done in the most deliberate, 
the wisest, and most rational manner in our power, we are certain 
bears a resemblance to the divine perfections. For as we learn from 
the works of nature an idea of the power and wisdom of God, so from 
our own rational nature we learn an idea of his moral perfections. 


</p>
               <p>From what has been observed on the moral perfections of God, 
we infer that all rational beings, who have an idea of justice, 
goodness, and truth, have at the same time either a greater or less 
idea of the moral perfections of God. It is by reason that we are 
able to compound an idea of a moral character, whether applied to 
God or man; it is that which gives us the supremacy over the 
irrational part of the creation. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s1.4" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION IV - THE CAUSE OF IDOLATRY, AND THE REMEDY OF IT</head>
               <p>INASMUCH as God is not corporeal, and consequently does not 
and cannot come within the notice of our bodily sensations, we are 
therefore obliged to deduce inferences from his providence, and 
particularly from our own rational nature, in order to form our 
conceptions of the divine character, which through inattention, 
want of learning, or through the natural imbecility of mankind, or 
through the artifice of designing men, or all together, they have 
been greatly divided and subdivided in their notions of a God. Many 
have so groped in the dark as wholly to mistake the proper object 
of divine worship, and not distinguishing the creator from his 
creation, have paid adoration to “four footed beasts and creeping 
things.” And some have ascribed divine honors to the sun, moon, or 
stars, while others have been infatuated to worship dumb, 
senseless, and unintelligent idols, which derived their existence 
as Gods, partly from mechanics, who gave them their figure, 
proportion, and beauty, and partly from their priests, who gave 
them their attributes; whose believers, it appears, were so wrought 
upon, that they cried out in the ecstasy of their deluded zeal, 
“Great is Diana.” Whatever delusions have taken place in the world 
relative to the object of divine worship, or respecting the 
indecencies or immoralities of the respective superstitions 
themselves, or by what means soever introduced or perpetuated, 
whether by designing men whose interest it has always been to 
impose on the weakness of the great mass of the vulgar; or as it is 
probable, that part of those delusions took place in consequence of 
the weakness of uncultivated reason, in deducing a visible instead 
of an invisible God from the works of nature. Be that as it will, 
mankind are generally possessed of an idea that there is a God, 
however they may have been mistaken or misled as to the object. 
This notion of a God, as has been before observed, must have 
originated from a universal sense of dependence, which mankind have 
on something that is more wise, powerful, and beneficent than 
themselves, or they could have had no apprehensions of any 
superintending principle in the universe, and consequently would 
never have sought after a God, or have had any conception of his 
existence, nor could designing men have imposed on their credulity 
by obtruding false Gods upon them; but taking advantage of the 
common belief that there is a God, they artfully deceive their 
adherents with regard to the object to be adored. There are other 
sorts of idols which have no existence but in the mere imagination 
of the human mind; and these are vastly the most numerous, and 
universally (either in the greater or less degree) dispersed over 
the world; the wisest of mankind are not and cannot be wholly 
exempt from them, inasmuch as every wrong conception of God is (as 
far as the error takes place in the mind) idolatrous. To give a 
sample, an idea of a jealous God is of this sort. Jealousy is the 
offspring of finite minds, proceeding from the want of knowledge, 
which in dubious matters makes us suspicious and distrustful; but 
in matters which we clearly understand, there can be no jealousy, 
for knowledge excludes it, so that to ascribe it to God is a 
manifest infringement on his omniscience. [NOTE: The Lord thy God 
is a jealous God.”] 


</p>
               <p>The idea of a revengeful God is likewise one of that sort, but 
this idea of divinity being borrowed from a savage nature, needs no 
further confutation. The representation of a God, who (as we are 
told by certain divines) from all eternity elected an 
inconsiderable part of mankind to eternal life, and reprobated the 
rest to eternal damnation, merely from his own sovereignty, adds 
another to the number; — this representation of the Deity 
undoubtedly took its rise from that which we discovered in great, 
powerful, and wicked tyrants among men, however tradition may since 
have contributed to its support, though I am apprehensive that a 
belief in those who adhere to that doctrine, that they themselves 
constitute that blessed elect number, has been a greater inducement 
to them to close with it, than all other motives added together. It 
is a selfish and inferior notion of a God void of justice, 
goodness, and truth, and has a natural tendency to impede the cause 
of true religion and morality in the world, and diametrically 
repugnant to the truth of the divine character, and which, if 
admitted to be true, overturns all religion, wholly precluding the 
agency of mankind in either their salvation or damnation, resolving 
the whole into the sovereign disposal of a tyrannical and unjust 
being, which is offensive to reason and common sense, and 
subversive of moral rectitude in general. But as it was not my 
design so much to confute the multiplicity of false representations 
of a God, as to represent just and consistent ideas of the true 
God, I shall therefore omit any further observation on them in this 
place, with this remark, that all unjust representations, or ideas 
of God, are so many detractions from his character among mankind. 
To remedy these idolatrous notions of a God, it is requisite to 
form right and consistent ideas in their stead. 


</p>
               <p>The discovery of truth necessarily excludes error from the 
mind, which nothing else can possibly do; for some sort of God or 
other will crowd itself into the conceptions of dependent 
creatures, and if they are not so happy as to form just ones, they 
will substitute erroneous and delusive ones in their stead; so that 
it serves no valuable purpose to mankind, to confute their 
idolatrous opinions concerning God, without communicating to them 
just notions concerning the true one, for if this is not effected, 
nothing is done to the purpose. For, as has been before observed, 
mankind will form to themselves, or receive from others, an idea of 
Divinity either right or wrong: this is the universal voice of 
intelligent nature, from whence a weighty and conclusive argument 
may be drawn of the reality of a God, however inconsistent most of 
their conceptions of him may be. The fact is mankind readily 
perceives that there is a God, by feeling their dependence on him, 
and as they explore his works, and observe his providence, which is 
too sublime for finite capacities to understand but in part, they 
have been more or less confounded in their discoveries of a just 
idea of a God and of his moral government. Therefore we should 
exercise great applications and care whenever we assay to speculate 
upon Divine character, accompanied with a sincere desire after 
truth, and not ascribe anything to his perfections or government 
which is inconsistent with reason or the best information which we 
are able to apprehend of moral rectitude, and be at least wise 
enough not to charge God with injustice and contradictions which we 
should scorn to be charged with ourselves. No king, governor, or 
parent would like to be accused of partiality in their respective 
governments, “Is it fit to say unto Princes, ye are ungodly, how 
much less to him that regardeth not the persons of princes, or the 
rich more than the poor, for they are all the work of his hands.” 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c2" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER II</head>
            <div xml:id="s2.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - OF THE ETERNITY OF CREATION</head>
               <p>As creation was the result of eternal and infinite wisdom, 
justice, goodness, and truth, and effected by infinite power, it is 
like its great author, mysterious to us. How it could be 
accomplished, or in what manner performed, can never be 
comprehended by any capacity. 


</p>
               <p>Eternal, whether applied to duration, existence, action, or 
creation, is incomprehensible to us. but implies no contradiction 
in either of them; for that which is above comprehension we cannot 
perceive to be contradictory, nor on the other hand can we perceive 
its rationality or consistency. We are certain that God is a 
rational, wise, understanding Being, because he has in degree made 
us so, and his wisdom, power, and goodness is visible to us in his 
creation, and government of the world. From these facts we are 
rationally induced to acknowledge him, and not because we can 
comprehend his being, perfections, creation or providence. Could we 
comprehend God, he would cease to be what he is. The ignorant among 
men cannot comprehend the understanding of the wise among their own 
species, much less the perfection of a God; nevertheless, in our 
ratiocination upon the works and harmony of nature, we are obliged 
to concede to a self-existent and eternal cause of all things, as 
has been sufficiently argued; though at the same time it is 
mysterious to us, that there should be such a being as a self-existent 
and eternally independent one; — thus we believe in God, 
although we cannot comprehend anything of the how, why or wherefore 
it was possible for him to be; and as creation was exertion of such 
an incomprehensible and perfect being, it must of necessary 
consequence be, in a great measure, mysterious to us. We can be 
certain, that it has been of an equal eternity and infinitude of 
extension with God. 


</p>
               <p>Immensity being replete with creation, the omniscient 
omnipresent, omnipotent, eternal, and infinite exertion of God in 
creation, is incomprehensible to the understanding or the weakness 
of man, and will eternally remain the prerogative of infinite 
penetration, sagacity, and uncreated intelligence to understand. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s2.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - OBSERVATIONS OF MOSES'S ACCOUNT OF CREATION</head>
               <p>The foregoing theory of creation and providence will probably 
be rejected by most people in this country, inasmuch as they are 
prepossessed with the theology of Moses, which represents creation 
to have a beginning. “In the beginning God created the heavens and 
the earth.” In the preceding part of this chapter it has been 
evinced that creation and providence could not have had a 
beginning, and that they are not circumscribed, but unlimited yet 
it seems that Moses limited creation by a prospective view of the 
heavens, or firmament from this globe, and if creation was thus 
limited, it would consequently have circumscribed the dominion and 
display of the divine providence or perfection; but if Moses's idea 
of the creation of “the heavens and the earth,” was immense, ever 
so many days of progressive work could never have finished such a 
boundless creation; for a progressive creation is the same as a 
limited one; as each progressive day's work would be bounded by a 
successive admeasurement, and the whole six days' work added 
together could be but local, and bear no manner of proportion to 
infinitude, but would limit the dominion, and consequently the 
display of the divine perfections or providence, which is 
incompatible with a just idea of eternity and infinity of God, as 
has been argued in the foregoing pages. 


</p>
               <p>There are a variety of other blunders in Moses's description 
of creation, one of which I shall mention, which is to be found in 
his history of the first and fourth day's work of God: “And God 
said, let there be light, and there was light; and God called the 
light day, and the darkness he called night: and the evening and 
the morning were the first day.” Then he proceeds to the second and 
third day's work, and so on to the sixth; but in his chronicle of 
the fourth day's work, he says that “God made two great lights, the 
greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the 
night.” This appears to be an inconsistent history of the origin of 
light. Day and night were ordained the first day, and on the fourth 
day the greater and less lights were made to serve the same 
purposes; but it is likely that manly errors have crept into his 
writings, through the vicissitudes of learning, and particularly 
from the corruptions of translations, of his as well as the 
writings of other ancient authors; besides, it must be acknowledged 
that those ancient writers labored under great difficulties in 
writing to posterity, merely from the consideration of the infant 
state of learning and knowledge then in the world, and consequently 
we should not act the part of severe critics, with their writings, 
any further than to prevent their obtrusion on the world as being 
infallible. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s2.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - OF THE ETERNITY AND INFINITUDE OF DIVINE PROVIDENCE</head>
               <p>WHEN we consider our solar system, attracted by its fiery 
center, and moving in its several orbits, with regular, majestic, 
and periodical revolutions, we are charmed at the prospect and 
contemplation of those worlds of motions, and adore the wisdom and 
power by which they are attracted, and their velocity regulated and 
perpetuated. And when we reflect that the blessings of life are 
derived from, and dependent on, the properties, qualities, 
constructions, proportions and movements, of that stupendous 
machine, we gratefully acknowledge the divine beneficence. When we 
extend our thoughts (through our external sensations) to the vast 
regions of the starry heavens, we are lost in the immensity of 
God's works. Some stars appear fair and luminous, and others 
scarcely discernible to the eye, which by the help of glasses make 
a brilliant appearance, bringing the knowledge of others far 
remote, within the verge of our feeble discoveries, which merely by 
the eye could not have been discerned or distinguished. These 
discoveries of the works of God naturally prompt the inquisitive 
mind to conclude that the author of this astonishing part of 
creation which is displayed to our view, has still extended his 
creation; so that if it were possible that any of us could be 
transported to the farthest extended star, which is perceptible to 
us here, we should from thence survey worlds as distant from that 
as that is from this, and so on 'ad infinitum.' 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, it is altogether reasonable to conclude that the 
heavenly bodies, alias worlds, which move or are situate within the 
circle of our knowledge, as well all others throughout immensity, 
are each and every one of them possessed or inhabited by some 
intelligent agents or other. however different their sensations or 
manners of receiving or communicating their ideas may be from ours, 
or however different from each other. For why would it not have 
been as wise or as consistent with the perfections which we adore 
in God, to have neglected giving being to intelligence in this 
world as in those other worlds, interspersed with another of 
various qualities in his immense creation? And inasmuch as this 
world is thus replenished, we may, with the highest rational 
certainty infer, that as God has given us to rejoice, and adore him 
for our being, he has acted consistent with his goodness, in the 
display of his providence throughout the university of worlds. 


</p>
               <p>To suppose that God Almighty has confined his goodness to this 
world, to the exclusion of all others, is much similar to the idle 
fancies of some individuals in this world, that they, and those of 
their communion or faith, are the favorites of heaven exclusively; 
but these are narrow and bigoted conceptions, which are degrading 
to a rational nature, and utterly unworthy of God, of whom we 
should form the most exalted ideas. 


</p>
               <p>It may be objected that a man cannot subsist in the sun; but 
does it follow from thence, that God cannot or has not constituted 
a nature peculiar to that fiery region, and caused it to be as 
natural and necessary for it to suck in and breathe out flames of 
fire, as it is for us to do the like in air. Numerous are the kinds 
of fishy animals which can no other way subsist but in the water, 
in which other animals would perish, (amphibious ones excepted,) 
while other animals, in a variety of forms, either swifter or 
slower move on the surface of the earth, or wing the, air. Of these 
there are sundry kinds, which during the season of winter live 
without food; and many of the insects which are really possessed of 
animal life, remain frozen, and as soon as they are let loose by 
the kind influence of the sun, they again assume their wonted 
animal life; and if animal life may differ so much in the same 
world, what inconceivable variety may be possible in worlds 
innumerable, as applicable to mental, cogitative, and organized 
beings. Certain it is, that any supposed obstructions, concerning 
the quality or temperature of any or every one of those worlds, 
could not have been any bar in the way of God Almighty, with regard 
to his replenishing his universal creation with moral agents. The 
unlimited perfection of God could perfectly well adapt every part 
of his creation to the design of whatever rank or species of 
constituted beings, his Godlike wisdom and goodness saw fit to 
impart existence to; so that as there is no deficiency of absolute 
perfection in God, it is rationally demonstrative that the immense 
creation is replenished with rational agents, and that it has been 
eternally so, and that the display of divine goodness must have 
been as perfect and complete, in the antecedent, as it is possible 
to be in the subsequent eternity. 


</p>
               <p>From this theological way of arguing on the creation and 
providence of God, it appears that the whole, which we denominate 
by the term nature, which is the same as creation perfectly 
regulated, was eternally connected together by the creator to 
answer the same all glorious purpose, to wit: the display of the 
divine nature, the consequences of which are existence and 
happiness to beings in general, so that creation, with all its 
productions operates according to the laws of nature, and is 
sustained by the self-existent eternal cause, in perfect order and 
decorum, agreeable to the eternal wisdom, unalterable rectitude, 
impartial justice, and immense goodness of the divine nature, which 
is a summary of God's providence. It is from the established order 
of nature. that summer and winter, rainy and fair seasons, 
moonshine, refreshing breezes, seed time and harvest, day and 
night, interchangeably succeed each other, and diffuse their 
extensive blessings to man. Every enjoyment and support of life is 
from God, delivered to his creatures in and by the tendency, 
aptitude, disposition, and operation of those laws. Nature is the 
medium, or intermediate instrument through which God dispenses his 
benignity to mankind. The air we breathe in, the light of the sun, 
and the waters of the murmuring rills, evince his providence: and 
well it is, that they are given in so great profusion, that they 
cannot by the monopoly of the rich be engrossed from the poor. 


</p>
               <p>When we copiously pursue the study of nature, we are certain 
to be lost in the immensity of the works and wisdom of God we may 
nevertheless, in a variety of things discern their fitness, happy 
tendency and sustaining quality to us ward, from all which, as 
rational and contemplative beings we are prompted to infer, that 
God is universally uniform and consistent in his infinitude of 
creation and providence, although we cannot comprehend all that 
consistency, by reason of infirmity; yet we are morally sure, of 
all possible plans, infinite wisdom must have eternally adopted the 
best, and infinite goodness have approved it, and infinite power 
have perfected it. And as the good of beings in general must have 
been the ultimate end of God in his creation and government of his 
creatures, his omniscience could not fail to have it always present 
in his view. Universal nature must therefore be ultimately 
attracted to this single point, and infinite perfection must have 
eternally displayed itself in creation and providence. From hence 
we infer, that God is as eternal and infinite in his goodness, as 
his self-existent and perfect nature is omnipotently great. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s2.4" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION IV - THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD DOES NOT INTERFERE WITH THE AGENCY OF MAN</head>
               <p>THE doctrine of Fate has been made use of in armies as a 
policy to induce soldiers to face danger. Mahomet taught his army 
that the “term of every man's life was fixed by God, and that none 
could shorten it, by any hazard that he might seem to be exposed to 
in battle or otherwise,” but that it should be introduced into 
peaceable and civil life, and be patronized by any teachers of 
religion, is quite strange, as it subverts religion in general, and 
renders the teaching of it unnecessary, except among other 
necessary events it may be premised that it is necessary they teach 
that doctrine, and that I oppose it from the influence of the same 
law of fate upon which thesis we are all disputing and acting in 
certain necessary circles, and if so, I make another necessary 
movement, which is, to discharge the public teachers of this 
doctrine, and expend their salaries in an economical manner, which 
might better answer the purposes of our happiness, or lay it out in 
good wine or old spirits to make the heart glad, and laugh at the 
stupidity or cunning of those who would have made us mere machines. 


</p>
               <p>Some advocates for the doctrine of fate will also maintain 
that we are free agents, notwithstanding they tell us there has 
been a concatenation of causes and events which has reached from 
God down to this time, and which will eternally be continued — 
that has and will control, and bring about every action of our 
lives, though there is not anything in nature more certain than 
that we cannot act necessarily and freely in the same action, and 
at the same time; yet it is hard for such persons, who have verily 
believed that they are elected, (and thus by a predetermination of 
God become his special favorites,) to give up their notions of a 
predetermination of all events, upon which system their election 
and everlasting happiness is nonsensically founded; and on the 
other hand, it is also hard for them to go so evidently against the 
law of nature (or dictates of conscience) which intuitively evinces 
the certainty of human liberty, as to reject such evidence; and 
therefore hold to both parts of the contradiction, to wit, that 
they act necessarily and freely, upon which contradictory principle 
they endeavored to maintain the dictates of natural conscience, and 
also their darling folly of being elected and exclusively favorites 
of God. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c3" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER III</head>
            <div xml:id="s3.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - THE DOCTRINE OF THE INFINITY OF EVIL AND OF SIN CONSIDERED</head>
               <p>THAT God is infinitely good in the eternal displays of his 
providence, has been argued in the third section of the second 
chapter, from which we infer that there cannot be an infinite evil 
in the universe, inasmuch as it would be incompatible with infinite 
good; yet there are many who imbibe the doctrine of the infinite 
evil of sin, and the maxim on which they predicate their arguments 
in its support, are, that the greatness of sin, or adequateness of 
its punishment, is not to be measured, or its viciousness 
ascertained by the capacity and circumstances of the offender, but 
by the capacity and dignity of the being against whom the offence 
is committed; and as every transgression is against the authority 
and law of God, it is therefore against God, and as God is 
infinite, therefore, sin is an infinite evil, and from hence infer 
the infinite and vindictive wrath of God against sinners, and of 
his justice in dooming them, as some say to infinite, and others 
say to eternal misery; the one without degree or measure, and the 
other without end or duration. 


</p>
               <p>Admitting this maxim for truth, that the transgressions or 
sins of mankind are to be estimated by their heinousness, by the 
dignity and infinity of the divine nature, then it will follow that 
all sins would be equal, which would confound all our notions of 
the degrees or aggravations of sin; so that the sin would be the 
same to kill my neighbor as it would be to kill his horse. For the 
divine nature, by this maxim, being the rule by which man's sin is 
to be estimated, and always the same, there could therefore be no 
degrees in sin or guilt, any more than there are degrees of 
perfection in God, whom we all admit to be infinite, and who for 
that reason only cannot admit of any degrees or enlargement. 
Therefore as certain as there are degrees in sin, the infinity of 
the divine nature cannot be the standard whereby it is to be 
ascertained, which single consideration is a sufficient confutation 
of the doctrine of the infinite evil of sin, as predicated on that 
maxim, inasmuch as none are so stupid as not to discern that there 
are degrees and aggravations in sin. 


</p>
               <p>I recollect a discourse of a learned Ecclesiastic, who was 
laboring in support of this doctrine. His first proposition was, 
“That moral rectitude was infinitely pleasing to God;” from which 
he deduced this inference, viz., “That a contrariety to moral 
rectitude was consequently infinitely displeasing to God and 
infinitely evil.” That the absolute moral rectitude of the divine 
nature is infinitely well pleasing to God, will not be disputed; 
for this is none other but perfect and infinite rectitude; but 
there cannot in nature be an infinite contrariety thereto, or any 
being infinitely evil, or infinite in any respect whatever, except 
we admit a self-existent and infinite diabolical nature, which is 
too absurd to deserve argumentative confutation. Therefore, as all 
possible moral evil must result from the agency of finite beings, 
consisting in their sinful deviations from the rules of eternal 
unerring order and reason, which is moral rectitude in the 
abstract, we infer that, provided 'all finite beings in the 
universe' had not done anything else but sin and rebel against God, 
reason and moral rectitude in general; all possible moral evil 
would fall as much short of being infinite, as all finite 
capacities, completely considered, would fail of being infinite, 
which will bear no proportion at all. For though finite minds, as 
has been before argued, bear a resemblance to God, yet they bear no 
proportion to his infinity; and therefore there is not and cannot 
be any being, beings or agency of being or beings, complexly 
considered or otherwise, which are infinite in capacity, or which 
are infinitely evil and detestable in the sight of God, in that 
unlimited sense; for the actions or agency of limited beings, are 
also limited, which is the same as finite: so that both the virtues 
and vices of man are finite; they are not virtuous or vicious but 
in degree; therefore, moral evil is finite and bounded. 


</p>
               <p>Though there is one, and but one infinite good, which is God, 
and there can be no dispute, but that God judges, and approves or 
disapproves of all things and beings, and agencies of beings, as in 
truth they are, or in other words judges of every thing as being 
what it is; but to judge a finite evil to be infinite, would be 
infinitely erroneous and disproportionable; for so certain as there 
is a distinction between infinity and infinitude, so certain finite 
sinful agency cannot be infinitely evil; or in other words finite 
offenses cannot be infinite. Nor is it possible that the greatest 
of sinners should in justice deserve infinite, punishment, or their 
nature sustain it; finite beings may as well be supposed to be 
capable of infinite happiness as of infinite misery, but the rank 
which they hold in the universe exempts them from either; it 
nevertheless admits them to a state of agency, probation or trial, 
consequently to interchangeable progressions in moral good and 
evil, and of course to alternate happiness or misery. We will 
dismiss the doctrine of the 'infinite evil of sin' with this 
observation, that as no mere creature can suffer an infinitude of 
misery or of punishment, it is therefore incompatible with the 
wisdom of God, so far to capacitate creatures to sin, as in his 
constitution of things to foreclose himself from adequately 
punishing them for it. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s3.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - THE MORAL GOVERNMENT OF GOD AS INCOMPATIBLE WITH ETERNAL PUNISHMENT</head>
               <p>WE may for certain conclude, that such a punishment will never 
have the divine approbation, or be inflicted on any intelligent 
being or beings in the infinitude of the government of God. For an 
endless punishment defeats the very end of its institution, which 
in all wise and good governments is as well to reclaim offenders, 
as to be examples to others; but a government which does not admit 
of reformation and repentance, must unavoidably involve its 
subjects in misery; for the weakness of creatures will always be a 
source of error and inconstancy, and a wise Governor, as we must 
admit God to be, would suit his government to the capacity and all 
other circumstances of the governed and instead of inflicting 
eternal damnation on his offending children, would rather 
interchangeably extend his beneficence with his vindictive 
punishments, so as to alienate them from sin and wickedness, and 
incline them to morality; convincing them from experimental 
suffering, that sin and vanity are their greatest enemies, and that 
in God and moral rectitude their dependence and true happiness 
consists, and by reclaiming them from wickedness and error to the 
truth, and to the love and practice of virtue, give them occasion 
to glorify God for the wisdom and goodness of his government, and 
to be ultimately happy under it. But we are told that the eternal 
damnation of a part of mankind greatly augments the happiness of 
the elect, who are represented as being vastly the less numerous, 
(a diabolical temper of mind in the elect:) besides, how narrow and 
contractive must such notions of infinite justice and goodness be? 
Who would imagine that the Deity conducts his providence similar to 
the detestable despots of this world? Oh horrible? most horrible 
impeachment of Divine Goodness! Rather let us exaltedly suppose 
that God eternally had the ultimate best good of beings generally 
and individually in his view, with the reward of the virtuous and 
the punishment of the vicious, and that no other punishment will 
ever be inflicted, merely by the divine administration, but that 
will finally terminate in the best good of the punished, and 
thereby subserve the great and important ends of the divine 
government, and be productive of the restoration and felicity of 
all finite rational nature. 


</p>
               <p>The most weighty arguments deducible from the divine nature 
have been already offered, to wit, ultimate end of God, in creation 
and providence, to do the greatest possible good and benignity to 
beings in general, and consequently, that the great end and design 
of punishment, in the divine government, must be to reclaim, 
restore, and bring revolters from moral rectitude back to embrace 
it and to be ultimately happy; as also, that an eternal punishment, 
would defeat the very end and design of punishment itself; and that 
no good consequences to the punished could arise out of a never 
ending destruction; but that a total, everlasting, and irreparable 
evil would take place on such part of the moral creation, as may be 
thus sentenced to eternal and remediless perdition; which would 
argue imperfection either in the creation, or moral government of 
God, or in both. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s3.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - HUMAN LIBERTY, AGENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY, CANNOT BE ATTENDED WITH ETERNAL CONSEQUENCES, EITHER GOOD OR EVIL</head>
               <p>FROM what has been argued in the foregoing section, it appears 
that mankind in this life are not agents of trial for eternity, but 
that they will eternally remain agents of trial. To suppose that 
our eternal circumstances will be unalterably fixed in happiness or 
misery, in consequence of the agency or transactions of this 
temporary life, is inconsistent with the moral government of God, 
and the progressive and retrospective knowledge of the human mind. 
God has not put it into our power to plunge ourselves into eternal 
woe and perdition; human liberty is not so extensive, for the term 
of human life bears no proportion to eternity succeeding it; so 
that there could be no proportion between a momentary agency, 
(which is liberty of action,) or probation, and any supposed 
eternal consequences of happiness or misery resulting from it. Our 
liberty consists in our power of agency, and cannot fall short of, 
or exceed it, for liberty is agency itself, or is that by which 
agency or action is exerted; it may be that the curious would 
define it, that agency is the effect of liberty, and that liberty 
is the cause which produces it; making a distinction between action 
and the power of action; be it so, yet agency cannot surpass its 
liberty to suppose otherwise, would be the same as to suppose 
agency without the power of agency, or an effect without a cause; 
therefore, as our agency does not extend to consequences of eternal 
happiness or misery, the power of that agency, which is liberty, 
does not. Sufficient it is for virtuous minds, while in this life, 
that they keep “Consciences void of offence towards God and towards 
man.” And that in their commencement in the succeeding state, they 
have a retrospective knowledge of their agency in this, and retain 
a consciousness of a well spent life. Beings thus possessed of a 
habit of virtue, would enjoy a rational felicity beyond the reach 
of physical evils which terminate with life; and in all rational 
probability would be advanced in the order of nature, to a more 
exalted and sublime manner of being, knowledge and action, than at 
present we can conceive of, where no joys or pains can approach, 
but of the mental kind in which elevated state virtuous minds will 
be able, in a clearer and more copious manner in this life, to 
contemplate the superlative beauties of moral fitness; and with 
ecstatic satisfaction enjoy it, notwithstanding imperfection and 
consequently agency, proficiency and trial, of some kind or other, 
must everlastingly continue with finite minds. 


</p>
               <p>And as to the vicious, who have violated the laws of reason 
and morality, lived a life of sin and wickedness, and are at as 
great a remove from a rational happiness as from moral rectitude; 
such incorrigible sinners, at their commencing existence in the 
world of spirits, will undoubtedly have opened to them a tremendous 
scene of horror, self-condemnation and guilt, with an anguish of 
mind; the more so, as no sensual delights can there, (as in this 
world,) divert the mind from its conscious guilt; the clear sense 
of which will be the more pungent, as the mind in that state will 
be greatly enlarged, and consequently more capaciously susceptible 
of sorrow, grief, and conscious woe, from a retrospective 
reflection of a wicked life. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s3.4" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION IV - OF PHYSICAL EVILS</head>
               <p>PHYSICAL evils are in nature inseparable from animal life, 
they commenced existence with it, and are its concomitants through 
life; so that the same nature which gives being to the one, gives 
birth to the other also; the one is not before or after the other, 
but they are coexistent together, and contemporaries; and as they 
began existence in a necessary dependance on each other, so they 
terminate together in death and dissolution. This is the original 
order to which animal nature is subjected, as applied to every 
species of it. The beasts of the field, the fowls of the air, the 
fishes of the sea, with reptiles, and all manner of beings, which 
are possessed with animal life; nor is pain, sickness, or mortality 
any part of God's Punishment for sin. On the other hand sensual 
happiness is no part of the reward of virtue: to reward moral 
actions with a glass of wine or a shoulder of mutton, would be as 
inadequate, as to measure a triangle with sound, for virtue and 
vice pertain to the mind, and their merits or demerits have their 
just effects on the conscience, as has been before evinced: but 
animal gratifications are common to the human race 
indiscriminately, and also, to the beasts of the field: and 
physical evils as promiscuously and universally extend to the 
whole, so “That there is no knowing good or evil by all that is 
before us, for all is vanity.” It was not among the number of 
possibles, that animal life should be exempted from mortality: 
omnipotence itself could not have made it capable of 
externalization and indissolubility; for the self same nature which 
constitutes animal life, subjects it to decay and dissolution; so 
that the one cannot be without the other, any more than there could 
be a compact number of mountains without valleys, or that I could 
exist and not exist at the same time, or that God should effect any 
other contradiction in nature; all contradictions being equally 
impossible, inasmuch as they imply an absolute incompatibility with 
nature and truth; for nature is predicated on truth, and the same 
truth which constitutes mountains, made the valleys at the some 
time; nor is it possible that they could have a separate existence. 
And the same truth which affirms my existence, denies its negative; 
so also the same law of nature, which in truth produceth an animal 
life and supports it for a season, wears it out, and in its natural 
course reduces it to its original elements again. The vegetable 
world also presents us with a constant aspect of productions and 
dissolutions; and the bustle of elements is beyond all conception; 
but the dissolution of forms is not the dissolution of matter, or 
the annihilation of it, nor of the creation, which exists in all 
possible forms and fluxilities; and it is from such physical 
alterations of the particles of matter, that animal or vegetable 
life is produced and destroyed. Elements afford them nutrition, and 
time brings them to maturity, decay and dissolution; and in all the 
prolific production of animal life, or the productions of those of 
a vegetative nature, throughout all, their growth, decay and 
dissolution, make no addition or diminution of creation; but 
eternal nature continues its never ceasing operations, (which in 
most respects are mysterious to us) under the unerring guidance of 
the providence of God. 


</p>
               <p>Animal nature consists of a regular constitution of a variety 
of organic parts, which have a particular and necessary dependance 
on each other, by the mutual assistance whereof the whole are 
animated. Blood seems to be the source of life, and it is requisite 
that it have a proper circulation from the heart to the extreme 
parts of the body, and from thence to the heart again, that it may 
repeat its temporary rounds through certain arteries and veins, 
which replenish every minutia part with blood and vital heat; but 
the brain is evidently the seat of sensation, which through the 
nervous system conveys the animal spirits to every part of the 
body, imparting to it sensation and motion, constituting it a 
living machine, which could never have been produced, or exercised 
its respective functions in any other sort of world but this; which 
is in a constant series of fluxilities, and which causeth it to 
produce food for its inhabitants. An unchangeable world could not 
admit of production or dissolution, but would be identically the 
same, which would preclude the existence and nutriment of such 
sensitive creatures as we are. The nutrition extracted from food by 
the secret aptitudes of the digesting powers (by which mysterious 
operation it becomes incorporated with the circulating juices, 
supplying the animal functions with vital heat, strength and vigor) 
demands a constant flux and reflux of the particles of matter, 
which is perpetually incorporating with the body, and supplying the 
place of the superfluous particles that are constantly discharging 
themselves by insensible perspiration; supporting, and at the same 
time, in its ultimate tendency, destroying animal life. Thus it 
manifestly appears, that the laws of the world in which we live, 
and the constitution of the animal nature of man, are all but one 
uniform arrangement of cause and effect; and as by the course of 
those laws, animal life is propagated and sustained for a season, 
so by the operation of the same laws, decay and mortality are the 
necessary consequences. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c4" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER IV</head>
            <div xml:id="s4.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - SPECULATION ON THE DOCTRINE OF THE DEPRAVITY OF HUMAN REASON</head>
               <p>IN the course of our speculation on Divine Providence we 
proceed next to the consideration of the doctrine of the depravity 
of human reason: a doctrine derogatory to the nature of man, and 
the rank and character of being which be holds in the universe, and 
which, if admitted to be true overturns knowledge and science and 
renders learning, instruction and books useless and in pertinent; 
inasmuch as reason, depraved or spoiled, would cease to be reason; 
as much as the mind of a raving madman would of course cease to be 
rational: admitting the depravity of reason, the consequence would 
unavoidably follow, that as far as it may be supposed to have taken 
place in the midst of mankind, there could be no judges of it, in 
consequence of their supposed depravity; for without the exercise 
of reason, we could not understand what reason is, which would be 
necessary for us previously to understand, in order to understand 
what it is not; or to distinguish it from that which is its 
reverse. But for us to have the knowledge of what reason is, and 
the ability to distinguish it from that which is depraved, or is 
irrational, is incompatible with the doctrine of the depravity of 
our reason. Inasmuch as to understand what reason is, and to 
distinguish it from that which is marred or spoiled, is the same to 
all intents and purposes, as to have, exercise and enjoy, the 
principle of reason itself, which precludes its supposed depravity: 
so that it is impossible for us to understand what reason is, and 
at the same time determine that oar reason is depraved; for this 
would be the same as when we know that we are in possession and 
exercise of reason, to determine that we are not in possession or 
exercise of it. 


</p>
               <p>It may be, that some who embrace the doctrine of the depravity 
of human reason, will not admit that it is wholly and totally 
depraved, but that “it is in a great measure marred or spoiled. But 
the foregoing arguments are equally applicable to a supposed 
depravity in parts, as in the whole; for in order to judge whether 
reason be depraved in part or not, it would be requisite to have an 
understanding of what reason may be supposed to have been, previous 
to its premised depravity; and to have such a knowledge of it, 
would be the same as to exercise and enjoy it in its lustre and 
purity, which would preclude the notion of a depravity in part, as 
well as in the whole; for it would be utterly impossible for us to 
judge of reason undepraved and depraved, but by comparing them 
together. But for depraved reason to make such a comparison, is 
contradictory and impossible; so that, if our reason had been 
depraved, we could not have had any conception of it any more than 
a beast. Men of small faculties in reasoning cannot comprehend the 
extensive reasonings of their superiors, how then can a supposed 
depraved reason comprehend that reason which is uncorrupted and 
pure? To suppose that it could, is the same as to suppose that 
depraved and undepraved reason is alike, and if so, there needs no 
farther dispute about it. 


</p>
               <p>There is a manifest contradiction in applying the term 
'depraved' to that of reason, the ideas contained in their 
respective definitions will not admit of their association 
together, as the terms convey heterogeneous ideas; for reason 
spoiled, marred, or robbed of its perfection, ceaseth to be 
rational, and should not be called reason; inasmuch as it is 
premised to be depraved, or degenerated from a rational nature; and 
in consequence of the deprivation of its nature, should also be 
deprived of its name, and called subterfuge, or some such like 
name, which might better define its real character. 


</p>
               <p>Those who invalidate reason, ought seriously to consider, 
“whether they argue against reason, with or without reason; if with 
reason, then they establish the principle, that they are laboring 
to dethrone;” but if they argue without reason, (which, in order to 
be consistent with themselves, they must do,) they are out of the 
reach of rational conviction, nor do they deserve a rational 
argument. 


</p>
               <p>We are told that the knowledge of the depravity of reason, was 
first communicated to mankind by the immediate inspiration of God. 
But inasmuch as reason is supposed to be depraved, what principle 
could there be in the human irrational soul, which could receive or 
understand the inspiration, or on which it could operate so as to 
represent to those whom it may be supposed were inspired, the 
knowledge of the depravity of (their own and mankind's) reason (in 
general:) for a rational inspiration must consist of rational 
ideas, which pre-supposes that the minds of those who were 
inspired, were rational previous to such inspiration, which would 
be a downright contradiction to the inspiration itself; the import 
of which was to teach the knowledge of the depravity of human 
reason, which without reason could not be understood, and with 
reason it would be understood, that the inspiration was false. 


</p>
               <p>Will any advocates for the depravity of reason suppose, that 
inspiration ingrafts or superadds the essence of reason itself to 
the human mind? Admitting it to be so, yet such inspired persons 
could not understand any thing of reason, before the reception of 
such supposed inspiration; nor would such a premised inspiration 
prove to its possessors or receivers, that their reason had ever 
been depraved. All that such premised inspired persons could 
understand, or be conscious of, respecting reason, would be after 
the inspiration may be supposed to have taken effect, and made them 
rational beings, and then instead of being taught by inspiration, 
that their reason had been previously depraved, they could have had 
no manner of consciousness of the existence or exercise of it, 
until the impairing the principle of it by the supposed energy of 
inspiration; nor could such supposed inspired persons communicate 
the knowledge of such a premised revelation to others of the 
species, who for want of a rational nature, could not be supposed, 
on this position, to be able to receive the impressions of reason. 


</p>
               <p>That there are degrees in the knowledge of rational beings, 
and also in their capacities to acquire it, cannot be disputed, as 
it is so very obvious among mankind. But in all the retrospect 
gradations from the exalted reasonings of a Locke or a Newton, down 
to the lowest exercise of it among the species, still it is reason, 
and not depraved; for a less decree of reason by no means implies 
a depravity of it. nor does the imparting of reason argue its 
depravity, for what remains of reason, or rather of the exercise of 
it, is reason still. But there is not, and cannot be such a thing 
as depraved reason, for that which is rational is so, and for that 
reason cannot be depraved, whatever its degree of exercise may be 
supposed to be. 


</p>
               <p>A blow on the head, or fracture of the cranium, as also 
palsies and many other casualties that await our sensorium, retard, 
and in some cases wholly prevent the exercise of reason for a 
longer or shorter period; and sometimes through the stage of human 
life; but in such instances as these, reason is not depraved, but 
ceases in a greater or less degree, or perhaps wholly ceases its 
rational exertions or operations; by reason of the breaches or 
disorders of the organs of sense, but in such instances, wherein 
the organs become rectified, and the senses recover their 
usefulness, the exercise of reason returns, free from any blemish 
or depravity. For the cessation of the exercise of reason, by no 
means depraves it. 


</p>
               <p>From what has been argued on this subject, in this and the 
preceding chapters, it appears that reason is not and cannot be 
depraved, but that it bears a likeness to divine reason, is of the 
same kind, and in its own nature as uniform as truth, which is the 
test of it; though in the divine essence, it is eternal and 
infinite, but in man it is eternal only as it respects their 
immortality, and finite as it respects capaciousness. Such people 
as can be prevailed upon to believe, that their reason is depraved, 
may easily be led by the nose, and duped into superstition at the 
pleasure of those in whom they confide, and there remain from 
generation to generation: for when they throw by the law of reason 
the only one which God gave them to direct them in their 
speculations and duty, they are exposed to ignorant or insidious 
teachers, and also to their own irregular passions, and to the 
folly and enthusiasm of those about them, which nothing but reason 
can prevent or restrain: nor is it a rational supposition that the 
commonality of mankind would ever have mistrusted that their reason 
was depraved, had they not been told so, and it is whispered about, 
that the first insinuation of it was from the Priests; (though the 
Armenian Clergymen in the circle of my acquaintance have exploded 
the doctrine.) Should we admit the depravity of reason, it would 
equally affect the priesthood, or any other teachers of that 
doctrine, with the rest of mankind; but for depraved creatures to 
receive and give credit to a depraved doctrine, started and taught 
by depraved creatures, is the greatest weakness and folly 
imaginable, and comes nearer a proof of the doctrine of total 
depravity, than any arguments which may have been advanced in 
support of it. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s4.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - CONTAINING A DISQUISITION OF THE LAW OF NATURE, AS IT RESPECTS THE MORAL SYSTEM, INTERSPERSED WITH OBSERVATIONS ON SUBSEQUENT RELIGIONS.</head>
               <p>THAT mankind are by nature endowed with sensation and 
reflection, from which results the power of reason and 
understanding, will not be disputed. The senses are well calculated 
to make discoveries of external objects and to communicate those 
notices, or simple images of things to the mind, with all the 
magnificent simplicity of nature, which opens an extensive field of 
contemplation to the understanding, enabling the mind to examine 
into the natural causes and consequences of things, and to 
investigate the knowledge of moral good and evil, from which, 
together with the power of agency, results the human conscience. 
This is the original of moral obligation and accountability, which 
is called natural religion; for without the understanding of truth 
from falsehood, and right from wrong, which is the same as justice 
from injustice, and a liberty of agency, which is the same as a 
power of proficiency in either moral good or evil: mankind would 
not be rational or accountable creatures. Undoubtedly it was the 
ultimate design of our Creator, in giving us being, and furnishing 
us with those noble compositions of mental powers and sensitive 
aptitudes, that we should, in, by, and with that nature, serve and 
honor him; and with those united capacities, search out and 
understand our duty to him, and to one another, with the ability of 
practicing the same as far as may be necessary for us in this life. 
To object against the sufficiency of natural religion, to effect 
the best ultimate good of mankind, would be derogating from the 
wisdom, goodness, and justice of God, who in the course of his 
providence to us, has adopted it: besides, if natural religion may 
be supposed to be deficient, what security can we have that any 
subsequently revealed religion should not be so also? For why might 
not a second religion from God be as insufficient or defective as 
a first religion may be supposed to be? From hence we infer that if 
natural religion be insufficient to dictate mankind in the way of 
their duty and make them ultimately happy, there is an end to 
religion in general. But as certain as God is perfect in wisdom and 
goodness, natural religion is sufficient and complete; and having 
had the divine approbation, and naturally resulting from a rational 
nature, is as universally promulgated to mankind as reason itself. 
But to the disadvantage of the claim of all subsequent religions, 
called revelations, whether denominated inspired, external, 
supernatural, or what not, they came too late into the world to be 
essential to the well being of mankind, or to point out to heaven 
and ever-lasting blessedness: inasmuch as for the greatest part of 
mankind who have ever lived in this world, have departed this life 
previous to the eras and promulgations of such revelations. 
Besides, those subsequent revelations to the law of nature, began 
as human traditions have ever done in very small circumferences, in 
the respective parts of the world where they have been inculcated, 
and made their progress, as time, chance, and opportunity 
presented. Does this look like the contrivance of heaven, and the 
only way of salvation? Or is it not more like this world and the 
contrivance of man? Undoubtedly the great parent of mankind laid a 
just and sufficient foundation of salvation for every one of them; 
for otherwise such of them, who may be supposed not to be thus 
provided for would not have whereof to glorify God for their being, 
but on the contrary would have just matter of complaint against his 
providence or moral government for involuntarily necessitating them 
into a wretched and miserable existence, and that without end or 
remedy: which would be ascribing to God a more extensive injustice 
than is possible to be charged on the most barbarous despots that 
ever were among mankind. 


</p>
               <p>But to return to our speculations on the law of nature. That 
this divine Law surpasses all positive institutions, that have ever 
been ushered into the world since its creation as much as the 
wisdom and goodness of God exceeds that of man, is beautifully 
illustrated in the following quotation: “But it may be said what is 
virtue? It is the faithful discharge of those obligations which 
reason dictates. And what is wisdom itself, but a portion of 
intelligence? with which the creator has furnished us, in order to 
direct us in our duty? It may be further asked, what is this duty? 
whence does it result? and by what law is it prescribed? I answer 
that the law which prescribed it is the immutable will of God; to 
which right reason obliges us to conform ourselves, and in this 
conformity virtue consists. No law which has commenced since the 
creation, or which may ever cease to be in force, can constitute 
virtue; for before the existence of such a law mankind could not be 
bound to observe it; but they were certainly under an obligation to 
be virtuous from the beginning. Princes may make laws and repeal 
them, but they can neither make nor destroy virtue, and how indeed 
should they be able to do what is impossible to the Deity himself? 
Virtue being as immutable in its nature as the divine will which is 
the ground of it. [NOTE: Virtue did not derive its nature merely 
from the omnipotent will of God, but also from the eternal truth 
and moral fitness of things; which was the eternal reason why they 
were eternally approved of by God, and immutably established by 
him, to be what they are; and so far as our duty is connected with 
those eternal measures of moral fitness, or we are able to act on 
them, we give such actions or habits the name of virtue or 
morality. But when we, in writing or conversation, say that virtue 
is grounded on the divine will, we should at the same time include 
in the complex idea of it, that the divine will which constituted 
virtue, was eternally and infinitely reasonable.] 


</p>
               <p>A Prince may command his Subjects to pay taxes or besides, may 
forbid them to export certain commodities, or to introduce those of 
a foreign country. The faithful observance of these laws make 
obedient subjects, but does not make virtuous men; and would any 
one seriously think himself possessed of a virtue the more for not 
having dealt in painted calico; or if the Prince should by his 
authority abrogate these laws, would any one say he had abrogated 
virtue? It is thus with all positive laws; they all had a beginning 
— are all liable to exceptions, and may be dispensed with and even 
abolished. That law alone which is engraven on our hearts by the 
hand of our creator, is unchangeable and of universal and eternal 
obligation. The law, says Cicero, is not a human invention, nor an 
arbitrary political institution, it is in its nature eternal and of 
universal obligation. The violence Tarquin offered to Lucretia, was 
a breach of that eternal law, and though the Romans at that time 
might have no written law which condemned such kind of crimes, his 
offence was not the less heinous; for this law of reason did not 
then begin, when it was first committed to writing; its original is 
as ancient as the divine mind. For the true, primitive and supreme 
law, is no other than the unerring reason of the great Jupiter. And 
in another place be says, this law is founded in nature, it is 
universal, immutable, and eternal, it is subject to no change from 
any difference of place, or time, it extends invariably to all ages 
and nations, like the sovereign dominion of that Being, who is 
author of it.” 


</p>
               <p>The promulgation of this supreme law to creatures, is co-extensive 
and coexistent with reason, and binding on all 
intelligent beings in the universe; and is that eternal rule of 
fitness, as applicable to God, by which the creator of all things 
conducts his infinitude of providence, and by which he governs the 
moral system of being, according to the absolute perfection of his 
nature. From hence we infer, that admitting those subsequent 
revelations, which have more or less obtained credit in the world, 
as the inspired laws of God, to be consonant to the laws of nature, 
yet they could be considered as none other but mere transcripts 
therefrom, promulgated to certain favorite nations, when at the 
same time all mankind was favored with the original. 


</p>
               <p>The moral precepts contained in Moses' decalogue to the people 
of Israel, was previously known to every nation under heaven, and 
in all probability by them as much practiced as by the tribes of 
Israel. Their keeping the seventh day of the week as a sabbath was 
an arbitrary imposition of Moses, (as many other of his edicts 
were) and not included in the law of nature. But as to such laws of 
his, or those of any other legislator, which are morally fit, agree 
with, and are a part of the natural law, as for instance; “Thou 
shalt not covet,” or ,kill.” These positive injunctions cannot add 
anything to the law of nature, inasmuch as it contains an entire 
and perfect system of morality; nor can any positive injunctions or 
commands enforce the authority of it, or confer any additional 
moral obligation on those to whom they are given to obey; the 
previous obligation of natural religion, having ever been as 
binding as reason can possibly conceive of, or the order and 
constitution of the moral rectitude of things, as resulting from 
God, can make it to be. 


</p>
               <p>To illustrate the argument of the obligatory nature of the 
natural law let us reverse the commandments of the decalogue, by 
premising that Moses had said thou shalt covet; thou shalt steal 
and murder; would any one conclude, that the injunctions would have 
been obligatory? surely they would not, for a positive command to 
violate the law of nature could not be binding on any rational 
being. How then came the injunctions of Moses, or any others, to be 
binding in such cases, in which they coincide with the law of 
nature? We answer, merely in consequence of the obligatory 
sanctions of the natural law, which does not at all depend on the 
authority of Moses or of any other legislator, short of him who is 
eternal and infinite; nor is it possible that the Jews, who adhere 
to the law of Moses, should be under greater obligation to the 
moral law, than the Japanese; or the Christians than the Chinese; 
for the same God extends the same moral government over universal 
rational nature, independent of Popes, Priests and Levities. But 
with respect to all mere positive institutions, injunctions, rites 
and ceremonies, that do not come within the jurisdiction of the law 
of nature, they are political matters, and may be enacted, 
perpetuated, dispensed with, abolished, re-enacted, compounded or 
diversified, as convenience, power, opportunity, inclination, or 
interest, or all together may dictate; inasmuch as they are not 
founded on any stable or universal principle of reason, but change 
with the customs, fashions, traditions and revolutions of the 
world; having no center of attraction, but interest, power and 
advantages of a temporary nature. 


</p>
               <p>Was the creator and governor of the universe to erect a 
particular academy of arts and sciences in this world, under his 
immediate inspection, with tutors rightly organized, and 
intellectually qualified to carry on the business of teaching, it 
might like other colleges, (and possibly in a superior manner,) 
instruct its scholars. But that God should have given a revelation 
of his will to mankind, as his law, and to be continued to the 
latest posterity as such, which is premised to be above the 
capacity of their understanding, is contradictory and in its own 
nature impossible. Nor could a revelation to mankind, which comes 
within the circle of their knowledge, be edifying or instructing to 
them, for it is a contradiction to call that which is above my 
comprehension, or that which I already, (from natural sagacity) 
understand, a revelation to me: to tell me, or inspire me, with the 
knowledge of that which I knew before, would reveal nothing to me, 
and to reveal that to me which is supernatural or above my 
comprehension, is contradictory and impossible. But the truth of 
the matter is, that mankind are restricted by the law of nature to 
acquire knowledge or science progressively, as before argued. From 
which we infer the impropriety, and consequently the impossibility 
of God's having ever given us any manuscript copy of his eternal 
law: for that to reveal it at first would bring it on a level with 
the infancy of knowledge then in the world, or (fishermen, 
shepherds, and illiterate people could not have understood it,) 
which would have brought it so low that it could not be instructive 
or beneficial to after generations in their progressive advances in 
science and wisdom. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c5" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER V</head>
            <div xml:id="s5.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - ARGUMENTATIVE REFLECTIONS ON SUPERNATURAL AND MYSTERIOUS REVELATION IN GENERAL</head>
               <p>THERE is not anything which has contributed so much to delude 
mankind in religious matters, as mistaken apprehensions concerning 
supernatural inspiration or revelation; not considering that all 
true religion originates from reason, and can not otherwise be 
understood but by the exercise and improvement of it; therefore 
they are apt to confuse their minds with such inconsistencies. In 
the subsequent reasonings on this subject, we shall argue against 
supernatural revelation in general, which will comprehend the 
doctrine of inspiration or immediate illumination of the mind. And 
first — we will premise, that a revelation consists of an 
assemblage of rational ideas, intelligibly arranged and understood 
by those to whom it may be supposed to be revealed, for otherwise 
it could not exist in their minds as such. To suppose a revelation, 
void of rationality or understanding, or of communicating rational 
intelligence to those, to whom it may be supposed to be given, 
would be a contradiction; for that it could contain nothing except 
it were unintelligibleness which would be the same as to reveal and 
not to reveal; therefore, a revelation must consist of an 
assemblage of rational ideas, intelligibly communicated to those 
who are supposed to have been the partakers or receivers of it from 
the first supposed inspiration, down to this or any other period of 
time. But such a revelation as this, could be nothing more or less 
than a transcript of the law of nature, predicated on reason, and 
would be no more supernatural, than the reason of man may be 
supposed to be. The simple definition of supernatural is, that 
which is “beyond or above the powers of nature,” which never was or 
can be understood by mankind; the first promulgators of revelation 
not excepted; for such revelation, doctrine, precept or instruction 
only, as comes within the powers of our nature, is capable of being 
apprehended, contemplated or understood by us, and such as does 
not, is to us incomprehensible and unknown, and consequently cannot 
for us compose any part of revelation. 


</p>
               <p>The author of human nature impressed it with certain sensitive 
aptitudes and mental powers, so that apprehension, reflection or 
understanding could no otherwise be exerted or produced in the 
compound nature of man, but in the order prescribed by the creator. 
It would therefore be a contradiction in nature, and consequently 
impossible for God to inspire, infuse, or communicate the 
apprehension, reflection or understanding of any thing whatever 
into human nature, out of, above, or beyond the natural aptitudes, 
and mental powers of that nature, which was of his own production 
and constitution; for it would be the same as to inspire, infuse, 
or reveal apprehension, reflection or understanding, to that which 
is not; inasmuch as out of, beyond or above the powers of nature, 
there could be nothing to operate upon, as a prerequisite principle 
to receive the inspiration or infusion of the revelation, which 
might therefore as well be inspired into, or revealed to nonentity, 
as to man. For the essence of man is that, which we denominate to 
be his nature, out of or above which he is as void of sensation, 
apprehension, reflection and understanding, as nonentity may be 
supposed to be; therefore such revelation as is adapted to the 
nature and capacity of man, and comes within his powers of 
perception and understanding, is the only revelation, which he is 
able to receive from God or man. Supernatural revelation is as 
applicable to beasts, birds and fishes, as it is to us; for neither 
we nor they are capable of being acted upon supernaturally, as all 
the possible exertions and operations of nature, which respect the 
natural or moral world, are truly natural. Nor does God deviate 
from his rectitude of nature in matters of inspiration, revelation 
or instruction to the moral world, any more than in that of his 
government of the natural. 


</p>
               <p>The infinitude of the wisdom of God's creation, providence and 
moral government will eternally remain supernatural to all finite 
capacities, and for that very reason we can never arrive to the 
comprehension of it, in any state of being and improvement 
whatever; inasmuch as progression can never attain to that which is 
infinite, so that an eternal proficiency in knowledge could not be 
supernatural, but on the other hand would come within the limits 
and powers of our nature, for otherwise such proficiency would be 
impossible to us; nor is this infinite knowledge of God 
supernatural to him, for that his perfection is also infinite. But 
if we could break over the limits of our capacity, so as to 
understand any one supernatural thing, which is above or beyond the 
power of our natures, we might by that rule as well understand all 
things, and thus by breaking over the confines of finite nature and 
the rank of being which we hold in the universe, comprehend the 
knowledge of infinity. From hence we infer, that every kind and 
degree of apprehension, reflection and understanding, which we can 
attain to in any state of improvement whatever, is no more 
supernatural than the nature of man, from whence perception and 
understanding is produced, may be supposed to be so: nor has or 
could God Almighty ever have revealed himself to mankind in any 
other way or manner, but what is truly natural. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - CONTAINING OBSERVATIONS ON THE PROVIDENCE AND AGENCY OF GOD, AS IT RESPECTS THE NATURAL AND MORAL WORLD, WITH STRICTURES ON REVELATION IN GENERAL</head>
               <p>THE idea of a God we infer from our experimental dependence on 
something superior to ourselves in wisdom, power and goodness, 
which we call God; our senses discover to us the works of God which 
we call nature, and which is a manifest demonstration of his 
invisible essence. Thus it is from the works of nature that we 
deduce the knowledge of a God, and not because we have, or can have 
any immediate knowledge of, or revelation from him. But on the 
other hand, all our understanding of, or intelligence from God, is 
communicated to us by the intervention of natural causes, (which is 
not of the divine essence;) this we denominate to be natural 
revelation, for that it is mediately made known to us by our 
senses, and from our sensations of external objects in general, so 
that all and every part of the universe, of which we have any 
conception, is exterior from the nature or essence of God; nor is 
it in the nature of things possible for us to receive, or for God 
to communicate any inspiration or revelation to us, but by the 
instrumentality of intermediate causes, as has been before 
observed. Therefore all our notions of the immediate interposition 
of divine illuminations, inspiration, or infusion of ideas or 
revelations into our minds, is mere enthusiasm and deception; for 
that neither the divine mind, nor those of any finite intelligences 
can make any representation to, or impression on our external 
senses without the assistance of some adequate, intermediate cause. 
The same is the case between man and man, or with mankind in 
general; we can no otherwise hold a correspondence but by the 
aptitude, and through the medium of our senses. Since this is the 
only possible way in nature by which we can receive any notices, 
perceptions, or intelligence from God or man. 


</p>
               <p>Nothing can be more unreasonable than to suppose, because God 
is infinitely powerful, that he can therefore inspire or infuse 
perception, reflection or revelation into the mind of man in such 
a way or manner as is incompatible with the aptitudes and powers of 
their nature: such a revelation would be as impossible to be 
revealed by God, as by a mere creature. For though it is a maxim of 
truth, “That with God all things are possible,” yet it should be 
considered, that contradictions, and consequently impossibilities 
are not comprehended in the definition of things, but are 
diametrically the reverse of them, as may be seen in the definition 
of the word THINGS, to wit: “whatever is.” There is no 
contradiction in nature or truth, which comprehends or contains all 
things, therefore the maxim is just, “That with God all things are 
possible,” viz: all things in nature are possible with God; but 
contradictions are falsehoods which have no positive existence, but 
are the negatives to THINGS, or to nature, which comprehends, 
“Whatever is;” so that contradictions are opposed to nature and 
truth, and are no THINGS, but the chimeras of weak, unintelligent 
minds who make false application of things to persons, or ascribe 
such powers, qualities, dispositions and aptitudes to things as 
nature never invested them with; such are our deluded notions of 
the immediate operations of the holy spirit, or of any mere spirit, 
on our minds independent of the intervention of some adequate, 
natural or intermediate cause. To make a triangle four square, or 
to make a variety of mountains contiguously situated, without 
valleys, or to give existence to a thing and not to give existence 
to it at the same time, or to reveal anything to us incompatible 
with our capacity of receiving the perception of it, pertains to 
those negatives to nature and truth, and are not things revealed, 
nor have they any positive existence as has been before argued; for 
they are inconsistent with themselves, and the relations and 
effects which they are supposed to have upon and with each other. 
It derogates nothing from the power and absolute perfection of God 
that he cannot make both parts of a contradiction to be true. 


</p>
               <p>But let us reverse the position concerning revelation, and 
premise that it is accommodated to our capacity of receiving and 
understanding it, and in this case it would be natural, and 
therefore possible for us to receive and understand it; for the 
same truth which is predicated on the sufficiency of our capacity 
to receive and understand a revelation, affirms at the same time 
the possibility of our receiving and understanding it. But to 
suppose that God can make both parts of a contradiction to be true, 
to reveal and not reveal, would be the same as ascribing a 
falsehood to him and to call it by the name of power. 


</p>
               <p>That God can do anything and everything, that is consonant to 
his moral perfections, and which does not imply a contradiction to 
the nature of the things themselves, and the essential relation 
which they bear to each other, none will dispute. But to suppose, 
that inasmuch as God is all-powerful, he can therefore do 
everything, which we in our ignorance of nature or of moral fitness 
may ascribe to him, without understanding, whether it is either 
consonant to moral rectitude, or to the nature of the things 
themselves, and the immutable relations and connections which they 
bear to each other, or not, is great weakness and folly. That God 
cannot in the exercise of his providence or moral government, 
counteract the perfections of his nature, or do any manner of 
injustice, is manifestly certain; nor is it possible for God to 
effect a contradiction in the natural world, any more than in the 
moral. The impossibility of the one results from the moral 
perfections of God, and the impossibility of the other from the 
immutable properties, qualities, relations and nature of the things 
themselves, as in the instances of the mountains, valleys, &amp;c., 
before alluded to, and in numberless other such like cases. 


</p>
               <p>Admitting a revelation to be from God, it must be allowed to 
be infallible, therefore those to whom it may be supposed to have 
been first revealed from God, must have had an infallible certainty 
of their inspiration: so likewise the rest of mankind, to whom it 
is proposed as a Divine Law, or rule of duty, should have an 
infallible certainty, that its first promulgators were thus truly 
inspired by the immediate interposition of the spirit of God, and 
that the revelation has been preserved through all the changes and 
revolutions of the world to their time, and that the copies extant 
present them with its original inspiration and unerring composure, 
or are perfectly agreeable to it. All this we must have an 
infallible certainty of, or we fail of an infallible certainty of 
revelation, and are liable to be imposed upon by impostors, or by 
ignorant and insidious teachers, whose interest it may be to 
obtrude their own systems on the world for infallible truth, as in 
the instance of Mahomet. 


</p>
               <p>But let us consult our own constitutions and the world in 
which we live, and we shall find that inspiration is, in the very 
nature of thins, impossible to be understood by us, and of 
consequence not in fact true. What certainty can we have of the 
agency of the divine mind on ours? Or how can we distinguish the 
supposed divine illuminations or ideas from those of our own which 
are natural to us? In order for us to be certain of the 
interposition of immediate divine inspiration in our minds we must 
be able to analyze, distinguish, and distinctly separate the 
premised divine reflections, illuminations or inspiration from our 
own natural cogitations, for otherwise we should be liable to 
mistake our reflections and reasonings for God's inspiration, as is 
the case with enthusiasts, or fanatics, and thus impose on 
ourselves, and obtrude our romantic notions on mankind, as God's 
revelation. 


</p>
               <p>None will, it is presumed, pretend that the natural 
reflections of our minds are dictated by the immediate agency of 
the divine spirit; for if they were thus dictated, they would be of 
equal authority with any supposed inspired revelation. How then 
shall we be able to distinguish or understand our natural 
perceptions, reflections or reasonings, from any premised 
immediately inspired ones? Should God make known to us, or to any 
of us, a revelation by a voice, and that in a language which we 
understand, and admitting that the propositions, doctrines, or 
subject matter of it, should not exceed our capacity, we could 
understand it the same as we do in conversation with one another; 
but this would be an external and natural revelation, in which God 
is supposed to make use of language, grammar, logic and sound, 
alias of intermediate causes, in order to communicate or reveal it, 
which would differ as much from an immediately inspired revelation, 
as this book may be supposed to do; for the very definition of 
immediate inspiration precludes all natural or immediate causes. 
That God is eternally perfect in knowledge, and therefore knows all 
things, not by succession or by parts, as we understand things by 
degrees, has been already evinced; nevertheless all truth, which we 
arrive at the understanding of, accords with the divine 
omniscience, but we do not come at the comprehension of things by 
immediate infusion, or inspiration, but from reasoning; for we 
cannot see or hear God think or reason any more than man, nor are 
our senses susceptible of a mere mental communion with him, nor is 
it in nature possible for the human mind to receive any 
instantaneous or immediate illuminations or ideas from the divine 
spirit (as before argued,) but we must illuminate and improve our 
minds by a close application to the study of nature, through the 
series whereof God has been pleased to reveal himself to man, so 
that we may truly say, that the knowledge of nature is the 
revelation of God. In this there can be no delusion, it is natural, 
and could come from none other but God. 


</p>
               <p>Unless we could do this, we should compound them together at 
a venture, and form a revelation like Nebuchadnezzar's idol, 
“partly iron and partly clay,” alias partly divine and partly 
human. The Apostle Paul informs us, that sometimes he “spake, and 
not the Lord,” and at other times speaks doubtfully about the 
matter, saying, “and I THINK also that I have the spirit of God,” 
and if he was at a loss about his inspiration, well may we be 
distrustful of it. From the foregoing speculations on the subject 
of supernatural inspiration, it appears, that there are insuperable 
difficulties in a mere mental discourse with the divine spirit; it 
is what we are unacquainted with, and the law of our nature forbids 
it. Our method of conversation is vocal, or by writing, or by some 
sort of external symbols which are the mediate ground of it, and we 
are liable to errors and mistakes in this natural and external way 
of correspondence; but when we have the vanity to rely on dreams 
and visions to inform ourselves of things, or attempt to commune 
with invisible finite beings, or with the holy spirit, our 
deceptions, blunders and confusions are increased to fanaticism 
itself; as the diverse supposed influence of the spirit, on the 
respective sectaries, even among Christians, may witness, as it 
manifestly, in their empty conceit of it, conforms to every of 
their traditions. Which evinces, that the whole bustle of it is 
mere enthusiasm, for was it dictated by the spirit of truth and 
uniformity itself, it would influence all alike, however zealots 
persuade themselves and one another that they have, supernatural 
communion with the Holy Ghost, from whence they tell us they derive 
their notions of religion, and in their frenzy are proof against 
reason and argument, which if we tender them, they tell us, that it 
is carnal and depraved reasoning, but that their teachings are 
immediately from God, and then proceed to vent upon us all the 
curses and punishments, which are written in the book of the law. 


</p>
               <p>There has in the different parts and ages of the world, been 
a multiplicity of immediate and wonderful discoveries, said to have 
been made to godly men of old by the special illumination or 
supernatural inspiration of God, every of which have, in doctrine, 
precept and instruction, been essentially different from each 
ether, which are consequently as repugnant to truth, as the 
diversity of the influence of the spirit on the multiplicity of 
sectaries has been represented to be. 


</p>
               <p>These facts, together with the premises and inferences as 
already deduced, are too evident to be denied, and operate 
conclusively against immediate or supernatural revelation in 
general; nor will such revelation hold good in theory any more than 
in practice. Was a revelation to be made known to us, it must be 
accommodated to our external senses, and also to our reason, so 
that we could come at the perception and understanding of it, the 
same as we do to that of things in general. We must perceive by our 
senses, before we can reflect with the mind. Our sensorium is that 
essential medium between the divine and human mind, through which 
God reveals to man the knowledge of nature, and is our only door of 
correspondence with God or with man. 


</p>
               <p>A premised revelation, adapted to our external senses, would 
enable our mental powers to reflect upon, examine into, and 
understand it. Always provided nevertheless, that the subject 
matter of such revelation, or that of the doctrines, precepts or 
injunctions therein contained, do not exceed our reason, but are 
adapted to it as well as to our external senses. 


</p>
               <p>To suppose that God, merely from his omnipotence, without the 
intervention of some adequate intermediate cause could make use of 
sound, or grammatical and logical language, or of writing, so as to 
correspond with us, or to reveal any thing to us, would run into 
the same sort of absurdity, which we have already confuted; for it 
is the same as to, suppose an effect without a suitable or a 
proportionable cause, or an effect without a cause; whereas, 
effects must have adequate causes or they could not be produced. 
God is the self-existent and eternal cause of all things, but the 
eternal cause can no otherwise operate on the eternal succession of 
causes and effects, but by the mutual operation of those causes on 
each other, according to the fixed laws of nature. For as we have 
frequently observed before that of all possible systems, infinite 
wisdom comprehended the best; and infinite goodness and power must 
have adopted and perfected it; and being once established into an 
ordinance of nature, it could not be deviated from by God: for that 
it would necessarily imply a manifest imperfection in God, either 
in its eternal establishment, or in its premised subsequent 
alteration, which will be more particularly considered in the next 
chapter. 


</p>
               <p>To suppose that Almighty power could produce a voice, language 
grammar, or logic, so as to communicate a revelation to us, without 
some sort of organic or instrumentated machine or intermediate 
vehicle, or adequate constituted external cause, would imply a 
contradiction to the order of nature and consequently to the 
perfection of God, who established it; therefore, provided God has 
ever given us any particular revelation, we must suppose, that he 
has made use of a regular and natural constituted and mediate 
cause, comprehended in the external order of nature, rightly fitted 
and abilitated to make use of the vocal power of language, which 
comprises that of characters, orthography, grammar and logic, all 
which must have been made use of, in communicating a supposed 
revelation to mankind, which forecloses inspiration. 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, this heavenly dictating voice should have been 
accommodated to all languages, grammars and logical ways of 
speaking, in which a revelation may have been divulged, as it would 
be needful to have been continued from the beginning to every 
receiver, compiler, translator, printer, commentator on and teacher 
of such revelation, in order to have informed mankind in every 
instance, wherein at any time they may have been imposed upon by 
any spurious adulterations or interpolations, and how it was in the 
original. These, with the refinements of languages and 
translations, are a summary of the many ways, wherein we may have 
been deceived by giving credit to antiquated written revelation, 
which would need a series of miracles to promulgate and perpetuate 
it in the world free from mistakes and frauds of one kind or other, 
and which leads me to the consideration of the doctrine of 
miracles. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c6" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER VI</head>
            <div xml:id="s6.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - OF MIRACLES</head>
               <p>PREVIOUS to the arguments concerning miracles, it is requisite 
that, we give a definition of them, that the arguments may be 
clearly opposed to the doctrine of miracles, the reality of which 
we mean to negative; so that we do not dispute about matters in 
which we are all agreed, but that we may direct our speculations to 
the subject matter or essence of the controversy. 


</p>
               <p>We will therefore premise, that miracles are opposed to, and 
counteract the laws of nature, or that they imply an absolute 
alteration in either a greater or less degree, the eternal order, 
disposition and tendency of it; this, we conclude, is a just 
definition of miraculousness, and is that for which the advocates 
for miracles contend, in their defining of miracles. For if they 
were supposed to make no alteration in the natural order of things, 
they could have no positive existence, but the laws of nature would 
produce their effects, which would preclude their reality, and 
render them altogether fictitious, inasmuch as their very existence 
is premised to consist in their opposition to, and alteration of 
the laws of nature so that if this is not effected, miracles can 
have no positive existence, any more than nonentity itself; 
therefore, if in the course of the succeeding arguments, we should 
evince that the laws of nature have not and cannot be perverted, 
altered or suspended, it will foreclose miracles by making all 
things natural. Having thus defined miracles, and stated the 
dispute, we proceed to the arguments. 


</p>
               <p>Should there ever have been a miraculous suspension and 
alteration of the laws of nature, God must have been the immediate 
author of it, as no finite beings may be supposed to be able to 
alter those laws or regulations, which were established by 
omnipotent power and infinite perfection, and which nothing short 
of such power and perfection can perpetuate. This then is the 
single point at issue, viz: whether God has, or can, consistent 
with his nature as God, in any instance whatever, alter or deviate 
from the laws, with which he has eternally impressed the universe, 
or not. 


</p>
               <p>To suppose that God should subvert his laws, (which is the 
same as changing them) would be to suppose him to be mutable; for 
that it would necessarily imply, either that their eternal 
establishment was imperfect, or that a premised alteration thereof 
is so. To alter or change that which is absolutely perfect, would 
necessarily make it cease to be perfect, inasmuch as perfection 
could not be altered for the better, but for the worse, and 
consequently an alteration could not meet with the divine 
approbation; which terminates the issue of the matter in question 
against miracles, and authorizes us to deduce the following 
conclusive inference, to wit: that Almighty God, having eternally 
impressed the universe with a certain system of laws, for the same 
eternal reason that they were infinitely perfect and best, they 
could never admit of the least alteration, but are as unchangeable, 
in their nature, as God their immutable author. To form the 
foregoing argument into syllogisms, it would be thus: — 


</p>
               <p>
                  <hi>God is perfect — the laws of nature were established by God; 
therefore, the laws of nature are perfect.</hi>
               </p>
               <p>But admitting miracles, the syllogism should be thus: — 


</p>
               <p>
                  <hi>The laws of nature were in their eternal establishment 
perfect; — the laws of nature have been altered; therefore, the 
alteration of the laws of nature is imperfect.</hi>
               </p>
               <p>Or thus: <hi>the laws of nature have been altered the alternation 
has been for the better; therefore, the eternal establishment 
thereof was imperfect.</hi>


               </p>
               <p>Thus it appears, from a syllogistical as well as other methods 
of reasoning that provided we admit of miracles, which are 
synonymous to the alterations of nature, we by so doing derogate 
from the perfection of God, either in his eternal constitution of 
nature, or in a supposed subsequent miraculous alteration of it, so 
that take the argument either way, and it preponderates against 
miracles. 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, was it possible, that the eternal order of nature 
should have been imperfect, there would be an end to all 
perfection. For God might be as imperfect in any supposed 
miraculous works, as in those of nature; nor could we ever have any 
security under his natural or moral government, if they were liable 
to change; for mutability is but another term for imperfection, or 
is inseparably connected with it. 


</p>
               <p>God, the great architect of nature, has so constructed its 
machinery, that it never needs to be altered or rectified. In vain 
we endeavor to search out the hidden mystery of a perpetual motion, 
in order to copy nature, for after all our researches we must be 
contented with such mechanism as will run down, and need 
rectification again; but the machine of the universe admits of no 
rectification, but continues its never ceasing operations, under 
the unerring guidance of the providence of God. Human architects 
make and unmake things, and alter them as their invention may 
dictate, and experience may determine to be most cotenant and best. 
But that mind, which is infinitely perfect, gains nothing by 
experience, but surveys the immense universality of things, with 
all their possible relations, finesses and unfitness, of both a 
natural or moral kind, with one comprehensive view. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s6.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - A SUCCESSION OF KNOWLEDGE, OR OF THE EXERTION OF POWER IN GOD, INCOMPATIBLE WITH HIS OMNISCIENCE OR OMNIPOTENCE, AND THE ETERNAL AND INFINITE DISPLAY OF DIVINE POWER FORECLOSES ANY SUBSEQUENT EXERTION OF IT MIRACULOUSLY</head>
               <p>THAT creation is as eternal and infinite as God, has been 
argued in chapter second; and that there could be no succession in 
creation, or the exertion of the power of God, in perfecting the 
boundless work, and in impressing the universe with harmonious 
laws, perfectly well adapted to their design, use and end. 


</p>
               <p>First.    These arguments may be further illustrated, and the 
evidence of the being of a God more fully exhibited, from the 
following considerations, to wit: dependant beings and existences 
must be dependent on some being or cause that is independent, for 
dependent beings, or existences, could not exist independently; 
and, in as much as by retrospectively tracing the order of the 
succession of causes, we cannot include in our numeration the 
independent cause, as the several successive causes still depend on 
their preceding cause, and that preceding cause on the cause 
preceding, it, and so on beyond numerical calculations, we are 
therefore obliged (as rational beings) to admit an independent 
cause of all things, for that a mere succession of dependent causes 
cannot constitute an independent cause; and from hence we are 
obliged to admit a self-existent and sufficient cause of all 
things, for otherwise it would be dependent and insufficient to 
have given existence to itself, or to have been the efficient cause 
of all things. 


</p>
               <p>Having thus established the doctrine of a self-sufficient, 
self-existent, and consequently all-powerful cause of all things, 
we ascribe an eternal existence to this cause of all causes and 
effects, whom we call God. And, inasmuch, as from the works of 
nature it is manifest, that God is possessed of almighty power, we 
from hence infer his eternal existence. Since his premised 
existence at (and not before) any given era, would be a conclusive 
objection to the omnipotency of his power, that he had not existed 
before, or eternally. For as God is a being self-sufficient, self-existent, 
and almighty, (as before argued) his power must apply to 
his own existence as well as to the existence of things in general, 
and therefore, if he did not eternally exist, it must be because he 
had not the almighty power of existence in himself, and if so, he 
never could have existed at all; so that God must have eternally 
existed or not have existed at all; and inasmuch as the works of 
nature evince his positive existence, and as he could not be 
dependent on the power, will, or pleasure of any other being but 
himself for his existence, and as an existence in time would be a 
contradiction to his almighty power of self-existency, that he had 
not eternally existed; therefore, his existence must have been (in 
truth) eternal. 


</p>
               <p>Although it is to us incomprehensible that any being could be 
self-existent or eternal (which is synonymous,) yet we can 
comprehend, that any being that is not self-existent and eternal 
and dependent and finite, and consequently not a God. Hence we 
infer, that though we cannot comprehend the true God (by reason of 
our own finiteness,) yet we can negatively comprehend that an 
imperfect being cannot be God. A dependent being is finite, and 
therefore imperfect, and consequently not a God. A being that has 
existed at a certain era (and not before) is a limited one for 
beyond his era he was not, and therefore finite, and consequently 
not a God. Therefore, that being only who is self-existent, 
infinitely perfect and eternal, is the true God: and if eternally 
and infinitely perfect, there must have been an eternal and 
infinite display, and if an eternal and infinite display, it could 
be nothing short of an eternal and infinite creation and 
providence. 


</p>
               <p>As to the existence of a God, previous to Moses's era of the 
first day's work, he does not inform us. The first notice he gives 
us of a God was of his laborious working by the day, a theory of 
creation (as I should think) better calculated for the servile 
Israelitish Brick-makers, than for men of learning and science in 
these modern times. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s6.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - RARE AND WONDERFUL PHENOMENA NO EVIDENCE OF MIRACLES, NOR ARE DIABOLICAL SPIRITS ABLE TO EFFECT THEM, OR SUPERSTITIOUS TRADITIONS TO CONFIRM THEM, NOR CAN ANCIENT MIRACLES PROVE RECENT REVELATIONS</head>
               <p>COMETS, earthquakes, volcanoes, and northern lights (in the 
night,) with many other extraordinary phenomena or appearances 
intimidate weak minds, and are by them thought to be miraculous, 
although they undoubtedly have their proper natural causes, which 
have been in a great measure discovered. Jack-with-a-lantern is a 
frightful appearance to some people, but not so much as the 
imaginary specter. But of all the scarecrows which have made human 
nature tremble, the devil has been chief; his family is said to be 
very numerous, consisting of “legions,” with which he has kept our 
world in a terrible uproar. To tell of all the feats and diabolical 
tricks, which this infernal family is said to have played upon our 
race, would compose a volume of an enormous size. All the 
magicians, necromancers, wizards, witches, conjurors, gypsies, 
sibyls, hobgoblins, apparitions and the like, are supposed to be 
under their diabolical government: old Beelzebub rules them all. 
Men will face destructive cannon and mortars, engage each other in 
the clashing of arms, and meet the horrors of war undaunted, but 
the devil and his banditti of fiends and emissaries fright them out 
of their wits, and have a powerful influence in plunging them into 
superstition, and also in continuing them therein. 


</p>
               <p>This supposed intercourse between mankind and those infernal 
beings, is by some thought to be miraculous or supernatural; while 
others laugh at all the stories of their existence, concluding them 
to be mere juggle and deception, craftily imposed on the credulous, 
who are always gaping after something marvelous, miraculous, or 
supernatural, or after that which they do not understand: and are 
awkward and unskillful in their examination into nature, or into 
the truth or reality of things, which is occasioned partly by 
natural imbecility, and partly by indolence and inattention to 
nature and reason. 


</p>
               <p>That any magical intercourse or correspondence of mere spirits 
with mankind, is contradictory to nature, and consequently 
impossible, has been argued in chapter sixth. And that nothing 
short of the omnipotent power of God, countermanding his eternal 
order of nature, and impressing it with new and contrary law, can 
constitute a miracle has been argued in this, and is an effect 
surpassing the power of mere creatures, the diabolical nature not 
excepted. From hence we infer, that devils cannot work miracles. 
Inattention to reason, and ignorance of the nature of things makes 
many of mankind give credit to miracles. It seems that by this 
marvelous way of accounting for things, they think to come off with 
reputation in their ignorance; for if nature was nothing but a 
supernatural whirligig, or an inconstant and irregular piece of 
mechanism, it would reduce all learning and science to a level with 
the fanaticism and superstition of the weak and credulous, and put 
the wise and unwise on a level in point of knowledge, as there 
would not, on this thesis, be any regular standard in nature, 
whereby to ascertain the truth and reality of things. What is 
called sleight-of-hand, is by some people thought to be miraculous. 
Astrological calculations of nativities, lucky and unlucky days and 
seasons, are by some regarded, and even moles on the surface of the 
skin are thought to be portentive of good or bad fortune. 


</p>
               <p>“The Swedish Laplanders, the most ignorant mortals in Europe,” 
are “charged with being conjurors, and are said to have done such 
feats, by the magic art, as do not at all fall far short of 
miracles; that they will give the sailors such winds as they want 
in any part of their voyage; that they can inflict and cure 
diseases at any distance; and insure people of success in their 
undertakings; and yet they are just such poor miserable wretches as 
used to be charged with witchcraft here,” viz: in England and in 
New England, “and cannot command so much as the necessaries of 
life: and indeed, none but very credulous and ignorant people give 
credit to such fables at this day, though the whole world seems to 
have been bewitched in believing them formerly.” “The 24th of 
March, 1735, an act passed in the Parliament of Great Britain to 
repeal the statute of I Jac's, entitled an act against conjugating 
witchcraft, and dealing with evil and wicked spirits, and to repeal 
an act in Scotland entitled Amentis Witchcraft.” It is but forty-six 
years since the supreme legislature became apprized of the 
natural impossibility of any magical intercourse between mankind 
and evil and wicked spirits; in consequence whereof they repealed 
their statute laws against it, as they were naturally void, 
unnecessary, and unworthy of their legislative restriction. For 
that such a crime had no possible existence in nature, and 
therefore could not be acted by mankind; though previous to the 
repeal of those laws, more or less of that island had fallen a 
sacrifice to them; and the relations of those imaginary criminals 
were stamped with infamy by such executions, which had the sanction 
of law, alias of the legislature and the judges, and in which many 
learned attorneys have demonstrated the turpitude of such capital 
offenses, and the just sanction of those laws in extirpating such 
pests of society from the earth; to which the clergy have likewise 
given their approbation, for that those capital transgressors made 
too free with their devils. 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, the repeal of those laws, as far as the wisdom 
and authority of the British Parliament may be supposed to go, 
abrogated that command of the law of Moses, which saith, “Thou 
shalt not suffer a witch to live,” and not only so, but the 
doctrine of the impossibility of intercourse, or of dealing with 
wicked spirits, forecloses the supposed miraculous casting out of 
devils, of which we have sundry chronicles in the New Testament. 


</p>
               <p>But to return to the annals of my own country, it will present 
us with a scene of superstition in the magical way, which will 
probably equal any that is to be met within history, to wit: the 
Salem witchcraft in New England; great numbers of the inhabitants 
of both sexes were judicially convicted of being wizards and 
witches, and executed accordingly; some of whom were so infatuated 
with the delusion, that at their execution they confessed 
themselves guilty of the sorcery for which they were indicted; nor 
did the fanaticism meet with a check until some of the first 
families were accused with it, who made such an opposition to the 
prosecutions, as finally to put an end to any further execution of 
the Salemites. 


</p>
               <p>Those capital offenders suffered in consequence of certain 
laws, which, by way of derision, have since been called the Blue 
Laws, in consequence of the multiplicity of superstition, with 
which they abounded, most of which are repealed; but those that 
respect sorcery have had favorite legislators enough to keep them 
alive and in force to this day. 


</p>
               <p>I recollect an account of prodigies said to have been carried 
on by the Romish Clergy in France, upon which his most Christian 
Majesty sent one of his officers to them with the following 
prohibition, to wit: “by the command of the king, God is forbid to 
work any more miracles in this place; “upon which the marvelous 
work ceased. 


</p>
               <p>There has been so much detection of the artifice, juggle and 
imposture of the pretenders to miracles, in the world, especially 
in such parts where Teaming and science have prevailed, that it 
should prompt us to be very suspicious of the reality of them, even 
without entering into any lengthy arguments from the reason and 
nature of things to convince the utter impossibility of their 
existence in the creation and providence of God. 


</p>
               <p>We are told, that the first occasion and introduction of 
miracles into the world, was to prove the divine authority of 
revelation, and the mission of its first teachers; be it so. Upon 
this plan of evincing the divinity of revelation, it would be 
necessary that its teachers should always be vested with the power 
of working miracles; so that when their authority or the 
infallibility of the revelation which they should teach, should at 
any time be questioned, they might work a miracle; or that in such 
a case God would do it; which would end the dispute, provided 
mankind were supposed to be judges of miracles, which may be 
controverted. However, admitting that they are possible, and 
mankind in the several generations of the world to be adequate 
judges of them, and also, that they were necessary to support the 
divine mission of the first promulgators of revelation, and the 
divinity which they taught; from the same parity of reasoning, 
miracles ought to be continued to the succeeding generations of 
mankind, coextensive with its divine authority or that of its 
teachers. For why should we in this age of the world be under 
obligation to believe the infallibility of revelation, or the 
heavenly mission of its teachers, upon less evidence than those of 
mankind who lived in the generations before us? For that which may 
be supposed to be a rational evidence, and worthy to gain the 
belief and assent of mankind at one period of time, must be so at 
another; so that it appears, from the sequel of the arguments on 
this subject, that provided miracles were requisite to establish 
the divine authority of revelation originally, it is equally 
requisite that they be continued to the latest posterity, to whom 
the divine legislator may be supposed to continue such revelation 
as his law to mankind. 


</p>
               <p>Nothing is more evident to the understanding part of mankind, 
than that in those parts of the world where learning and science 
has prevailed, miracles have ceased; but in such parts of it as are 
barbarous and ignorant, miracles are still in vogue; which is of 
itself a strong presumption that in the infancy of letters, 
learning and science, or in the world's non-age, those who confided 
in miracles, as a proof of the divine mission of the first 
promulgators of revelation, were imposed upon by fictitious 
appearances instead of miracles. 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, the author of Christianity warns us against the 
impositions of false teachers, and ascribes the signs of the true 
believers, saying, “And these signs shall follow them that believe, 
in my name shall they cast out devils, they shall speak with new 
tongues, they shall take up serpents, and if they drink any deadly 
thing it shall not hurt them, they shall lay hands on the sick and 
they shall recover.” These are the express words of the founder of 
Christianity, and are contained in the very commission, which he 
gave to his eleven Apostles, who were to promulgate his gospel in 
the world; so that from their very institution it appears that when 
the miraculous signs, therein spoken of, failed, they were 
considered as unbelievers, and consequently no faith or trust to be 
any longer reposed in them or their successors. For these signs 
were those which were to perpetuate their mission, and were to be 
continued as the only evidences of the validity and authenticity of 
it, and as long as these signs followed, mankind could not be 
deceived in adhering to the doctrines which the Apostles and their 
successors taught; but when these signs failed, their divine 
authority ended. Now if any of them will drink a dose of deadly 
poison, which I could prepare, and it does not “hurt them,” I will 
subscribe to their divine author and end the dispute; not that I 
have a disposition to poison any one, nor do I suppose that they 
would dare to take such a dose as I could prepare for them, which, 
if so, would evince that they were unbelievers themselves, though 
they are extremely apt to censure others for unbelief, which 
according to their scheme is a damnable sin. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s6.4" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION IV - PRAYER CANNOT BE ATTENDED WITH MIRACULOUS CONSEQUENCES</head>
               <p>PRAYER to God is no part of a rational religion, nor did 
reason ever dictate it, but, was it duly attended to, it would 
teach us the contrary. 


</p>
               <p>To make known our wants to God by prayer, or to communicate 
any intelligence concerning ourselves or the universe to him, is 
impossible, since his omniscient mind has a perfect knowledge of 
all things, and therefore is beholden to none of our correspondence 
to inform himself of our circumstances, or of what would be wisest 
and best to do for us in all possible conditions and modes of 
existence, in our never ending duration of being, These, with the 
infinitude of things, have been eternally deliberated by the 
omniscient mind, who can admit of no additional intelligence, 
whether by prayer or otherwise, which renders it nugatory. 


</p>
               <p>We ought to act up to the dignity of our nature, and demean 
ourselves, as creatures of our rank and capacity, and not presume 
to dictate any thing, less or more, to the governor of the 
universe; who rules not by our proscriptions, but by eternal and 
infinite reason. To pray to God, or to make supplication to him, 
requesting certain favors for ourselves, or from any, or all the 
species, is inconsistent with the relation which subsists between 
God and man. Whoever has a just sense of the absolute perfection of 
God, and of their own imperfection, and natural subjection to his 
providence, cannot but from thence infer the impropriety of praying 
or supplicating to God, for this, that, or the other thing; or of 
remonstrating against his providence: inasmuch, as “known to God 
are all our wants;” and as we know, that we ourselves are 
inadequate judges of what would be best for us, all things 
considered. God looks through the immensity of things, and 
understands the harmony, moral beauty and decorum of the whole, and 
will by no means change his purposes, or alter the nature of the 
things themselves for any of our entreaties or threats. To pray, 
entreat, or make supplication to God, is neither more nor less than 
dictating to eternal reason, and entering into the province and 
prerogative of the Almighty if this is not the meaning and import 
of prayer, it has none at all, that extends to the final events and 
consequences of things. To pray to God with a sense, that the 
prayer we are making will not be granted any more for our making 
it, or that our prayer will make no alteration in the state, order 
or disposal of things at all, or that the requests, which we make, 
will be no more likely to be granted, or the things themselves 
conferred upon us by God, than as though we had not prayed for 
them, would be stupidity or outright mockery, or “to be seen of 
men,” in order to procure from them some temporary advantages. But 
on the other hand for us to suppose, that our prayers or praises do 
in any one instance or more alter the eternal constitution of 
things, or of the providence of God, is the same as to suppose 
ourselves so far forth to hold a share in the divine government, 
for our prayers must be supposed to effect something or nothing, if 
they effect nothing they are good for nothing but that they should 
effect any alteration in the nature of things, or providence of God 
is inadmissible: for if they did, we should interfere with the 
providence of God in a certain degree, by arrogating it to 
ourselves. For if there are any particulars in providence, which 
God does not govern by his order of nature, they do not belong to 
the providence of God, but of man; for if in any instance, God is 
moved by the prayers, entreaties, or supplications of his 
creatures, to alter his providence, or to do that in conformity 
thereto, which otherwise, in the course of his providence, he would 
not have done; then it would necessarily follow, that as far as 
such alteration may be supposed to take place, God does not govern 
by eternal and infinite reason, but on the contrary is governed 
himself by the prayer of man. 


</p>
               <p>Our great proficients in prayer must need think themselves to 
be of great importance in the scale of being, otherwise they would 
not indulge themselves in the notion, that the God of nature would 
subvert his laws, or bend his providence in conformity to their 
prayers. But it may be objected, that they pray conditionally, to 
wit: that God would answer their prayers, provided they are 
agreeable to his providential order or disposal of things but to 
consider prayer in such a sense renders it, not only useless, but 
impertinent; for the laws of nature would produce their natural 
effects as well without it, as with it. The sum total of such 
conditional prayer could, amount to no more than this, viz: that 
God would not regard them at all, but that he would conduct the 
kingdom of his providence agreeable to the absolute perfections of 
his nature; and who in the exercise of common sense would imagine 
that God would do otherwise? 


</p>
               <p>The nature of the immense universality of things having been 
eternally adjusted, constituted and settled, by the profound 
thought, perfect wisdom, impartial justice, immense goodness, and 
omnipotent power of God, it is the greatest arrogance in us to 
attempt an alteration thereof. If we demean ourselves worthy of a 
rational happiness, the laws of the moral system, already 
established, will afford it to us; and as to physical evils, 
prudent economy may make them tolerable, or ward most of them off 
for a season, though they will unavoidably bring about the 
separation of a soul and body, and terminate with animal life, 
whether we pray for or against it. 


</p>
               <p>To pray for any thing, which we can obtain by the due 
application of our natural powers, and neglect the means of 
procuring it, is impertinence and laziness in the abstract; and to 
pray for that which God in the course of his providence, has put 
out of our power to obtain, is only murmuring against God, and 
finding fault with his providence, or acting the inconsiderate part 
of a child; for example, to pray for more wisdom, understanding, 
grace or faith; for a more robust constitution — handsomer figure, 
or more of a gigantic size, would be the same as tolling God, that 
we are dissatisfied with our inferiority in the order of being; 
that neither our souls nor bodies suit us; that he has been too 
sparing of his beneficence; that we want more wisdom, and organs 
better fitted for show, agility and superiority. But we ought to 
consider, that “we cannot add one Cubit to our stature,” or alter 
the construction of our organic frame; and that our mental talents 
are finite; and that in a vast variety of proportions and 
disproportions, as our Heavenly Father in his order of nature, and 
scale of being saw fit; who has nevertheless for the encouragement 
of intelligent nature ordained, that it shall be capable of 
improvement, and consequently of enlargement; therefore, “whosoever 
lacketh wisdom,” instead of “asking it of God,” let him improve 
what he has, that he may enlarge the original stock; this is all 
the possible way of gaining in wisdom and knowledge, a competency 
of which will regulate our faith. But it is too common for great 
faith and little knowledge to unite in the same person; such 
persons are beyond the reach of argument and their faith immovable, 
though it cannot remove mountains. The only way to procure food, 
raiment, or the necessaries or conveniences of life, is by natural 
means; we do not get them by wishing or praying for, but by actual 
exertion; and the only way to obtain virtue or morality is to 
practice and habituate ourselves to it, and not to pray to God for 
it: he has naturally furnished us with talents or faculties 
suitable for the exercise and enjoyment of religion, and it is our 
business to improve them aright, or we must suffer the consequences 
of it. We should conform ourselves to reason, the path of mortal 
rectitude, and in so doing, we cannot fail of recommending 
ourselves to God, and to our own consciences. This is all the 
religion which reason knows or can ever approve of. 


</p>
               <p>Moses, the celebrated prophet and legislator of the 
Israelites, ingratiated himself into their esteem, by the stratagem 
of prayer, and pretended intimacy with God; he acquaints us, that 
he was once admitted to a sight of his BACK-PARTS! and that “no man 
can see” his “face and live;” and at other times we are told that 
he “talked with God, face to face, as a man talketh with his 
friend;” and also that at times God waxed wrath with Israel, and 
how Moses prayed for them; and at other times, that he ordered 
Aaron to offer sweet incense to God, which appeased his wrath, and 
prevented his destroying Israel in his hot displeasure! These are 
the footsteps, by which we may trace sacerdotal dominion to its 
source, and explore its progress in the world. “And the Lord said 
unto Moses, how long will this people provoke me? I will smite them 
with the pestilence, and disinherit them, and I will make of thee 
a great nation, and mightier than they,” but Moses advertises God 
of the injury, which so rash a procedure would do to his character 
among the nations; and also reminds him of his promise to Israel, 
saying, “Now if thou shall kill all this people as one man, then 
the nations, which have heard the fame of thee will speak, saying, 
because the Lord was not able to bring this people into the land, 
which he swear unto them, therefore he hath slain them in the 
wilderness.” That Moses should thus advise the omniscient God, of 
dishonorable consequences which would attend a breach of promise, 
which he tells us, that God was unadvisedly about to make with the 
tribes of Israel, had not his remonstrance prevented it, is very 
extraordinary and repugnant to reason; yet to an eye of faith it 
would exalt the man Moses, “and make him very great;” for if we may 
credit his history of the matter he not only averted God's judgment 
against Israel, and prevented them from being cut off as a nation, 
but by the same prayer procured for them a pardon of their sin. 
“Pardon, I beseech thee, the iniquity of that people,” and in the 
next verse follows the answer, “and the Lord said I have pardoned 
according to thy word.” It seems that God had the power, but Moses 
had the dictation of it, and saved Israel from the wrath and 
pestilential fury of a jealous God; and that he procured them a 
pardon of their sin, “for the Lord thy God is a jealous God.” 
Jealousy can have no existence in that mind, which possesses 
perfect knowledge, and consequently cannot, without the greatest 
impropriety, be ascribed to God, who knows all things, and needed 
none of the admonitions, advice or intelligence of Moses, or any of 
his dictatorial prayers. “And the Lord hearkened unto the at that 
time also;” intimating that it was a common thing for him to do the 
like. When teachers can once make the people believe that God 
answers their prayers, and that their eternal interest is dependent 
on them, they soon raise themselves to opulence, rule and high 
sounding titles; as that of His Holiness — the Reverend Father in 
God — The Holy Poker — Bishop of Souls — and a variety of other 
such like appellations, derogatory to the honor or just prerogative 
of God; as is Joshua's history concerning the Lord's hearkening 
unto him at the battle of the Amorites, wherein he informs us, that 
he ordered the sun to stand still, saying, “Sun stand thou still 
upon Giboen, and thou Moon in the valley of Ajalon, so the Sun 
stood still and the Moon stayed until the people had avenged 
themselves upon their enemies;” so the Sun stood still in the midst 
of Heaven, and hasted not to go down about a whole day and then 
adds, by way of supremacy to himself above all others, and in 
direct contradiction to the before recited passages of Moses 
concerning the Lord's hearkening unto him, or to any other man but 
himself, saying, “And there was no day like that before it, or 
after it, that the Lord hearkened unto the voice of a man.” There 
is not any thing more evident than that if the representation given 
by Joshua, as matter of fact, is true, those exhibited by Moses 
concerning the Lord's hearkening unto him are not: though the 
representations of fact by Moses and by Joshua, are allowed to be 
both canonical, yet it is impossible that both can be true. 
However, astronomy being but little understood in the age in which 
Joshua lived, and the earth being in his days thought to be at 
rest, and the sun to revolve round it, makes it in no way strange, 
that he caught himself by ordering the sun to stand still, which 
having since been discovered to have been the original fixed 
position of that luminous body, eclipses the miraculous 
interposition of Joshua. Furthermore, if we but reflect that on 
that very day Israel vanquished the Amorites with a great 
slaughter, “and chased them along the way that goeth to Bethoron, 
and smote them to Azekah, and unto Makkedah,” in so great a hurry 
of war, clashing of arms, exasperation and elevation of mind, in 
consequence of such triumphant victory, they could make but a 
partial observation on the length of the day; and being greatly 
elated with such an extraordinary day's work, Joshua took the 
advantage of it, and told them that it was an uncommon day for 
duration; that he had interposed in the system and prescribed to 
the sun to stand still about a whole day; and that they had two 
days' time to accomplish those great feats. The belief of such a 
miraculous event to have taken place in the solar system, in 
consequence of the influence which Joshua insinuated that he had 
with God, would most effectually establish his authority among the 
people for if God would hearken to his voice well might man. This 
is the cause why the bulk of mankind in all ages and countries of 
the world, have been so much infatuated by their ghostly teachers, 
whom they have ever imagined to have had a special influence with 
God Almighty. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c7" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER VII</head>
            <div xml:id="s7.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - THE VAGUENESS AND UNINTELLIGIBLENESS OF THE PROPHECIES, RENDER THEM INCAPABLE OF PROVING REVELATION</head>
               <p>PROPHECY is by some thought to be miraculous, and by others to be 
supernatural, and there are others, who indulge themselves in an 
opinion, that they amount to no more than mere political 
conjectures. Some nations have feigned an intercourse with good 
spirits by the art of divination; and others with evil ones by the 
art of magic; and most nations have pretended to an intercourse 
with the world of spirits both ways. 


</p>
               <p>The Romans trusted much to their sibylline oracles and 
soothsayers; the Babylonians to their magicians and astrologers; 
the Egyptians and Persians to their magicians; and the Jews to 
their seers or prophets; and all nations and individuals, discover 
an anxiety for an intercourse with the world of spirits; which lays 
a foundation for artful and designing men, to impose upon them. But 
if the foregoing arguments in chapter sixth, respecting the natural 
impossibility of an intercourse of any unbodied or imperceptible 
mental beings with mankind, are true, then the foretelling of 
future events can amount to nothing more than political illusion. 
For prophecy as well as all other sorts of prognostication must be 
supernaturally inspired, or it could be no more than judging of 
future events from mere probability or guess-work, as the 
astronomers ingenuously confess in their calculations, by saying 
Judgment of the weather,” &amp;c. So also respecting astrology, 
provided there is any such thing as futurity to be learned from it, 
it would be altogether a natural discovery; for neither astronomy 
nor astrology claim anything of a miraculous or supernatural kind, 
but their calculations are meant to be predicated on the order and 
course of nature, with which our senses are conversant, and with 
which inspiration or the mere cooperation of spirits is not 
intended to act as part. So also concerning prophecy, if it be 
considered to be merely natural, (we will not at present dispute 
whether it is true or false) upon this position it stands on the 
footing of probability or mere conjecture and uncertainty. But as 
to the doctrine of any supernatural agency of the divine mind on 
ours, which is commonly called inspiration, it has been 
sufficiently confuted in chapter sixth; which arguments need not be 
repeated, nor does it concern my system to settle the question, 
whether prophecy should be denominated miraculous or supernatural, 
inasmuch as both these doctrines have been confuted; though it is 
my opinion, that were we to trace the notion of supernatural to its 
source, it would finally terminate in that which is denominated 
miraculous; for that which is above or beyond nature, if it has any 
positive existence, must be miraculous. 


</p>
               <p>The writings of the prophets are most generally so loose, 
vague and indeterminate in their meaning, or in the grammar of 
their present translation, that the prophecies will as well answer 
to events in one period of time, as in another; and are equally 
applicable to a variety of events, which have and are still taking 
place in the world, and are liable to so many different 
interpretations, that they are incapable of being understood or 
explained, except upon arbitrary principles, and therefore cannot 
be admitted as a proof of revelation ; as for instance, “it shall 
come to pass in the last days, saith God.” Who can understand the 
accomplishment of the prophecies, that are expressed after this 
sort? for every day in its turn has been, and will in its 
succession be the last day; and if we advert to the express words 
of the prophecy, to wit, “the last days,” there will be an 
uncertain plurality “of last days,” which must be understood to be 
short of a month, or a year; or it should have been expressed thus, 
and it shall come to pass in the last months or years, instead of 
days: and if it had mentioned last years, it would be a just 
construction to suppose, that it included a less number of years 
than a century; but as the prophecy mentions “last days,” we are at 
a loss, which among the plurality of them to assign for the 
fulfilling of the prophecy. 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, we cannot learn from the prophecy, in what month, 
year, or any other part of duration those last days belong; so that 
we can never tell when such vague prophecies are to take place, 
they therefore remain the arbitrary prerogative of fanatics to 
prescribe their events in any age or period of time, when their 
distempered fancies may think most eligible: there are other 
prophecies still more abstruse; to wit, “And one said unto the man 
clothed in linen, which was upon the waters of the river, how long 
shall it be to the end of these wonders? and I heard the man 
clothed in linen, which was upon the waters of the river, when he 
held up his right hand and his left hand unto Heaven, and swore by 
him that liveth forever, that it should be for an time, times and 
an half.” The question in the prophecy is asked how long shall it 
be to the end of these wonders? “and the answer is given with the 
solemnity of an oath, “it shall be for a time, times and a half:” 
A time is an indefinite part of duration, and so are times, and the 
third description of time is as indefinite as either of the former 
descriptions of it; to wit, “and an half;” that is to say, half a 
time. There is no certain term given in any or either of the three 
descriptions of the end of the wonders alluded to, whereby any or 
all of them together are capable of computation, as there is no 
certain period marked out to begin or end a calculation. To compute 
an indefinite time in the single number or quantity of duration is 
impossible, and to compute an uncertain plurality of such 
indefinite times is equally perplexing and impracticable; and 
lastly, to define half a time by any possible succession of its 
parts, is a contradiction, for half a time includes no time at all; 
inasmuch as the smallest conception or possible moment or criterion 
of duration, is a time, or otherwise, by the addition of ever so 
many of those parts together, they would not prolong a period; so 
that there is not, and cannot be such a part of time, as half a 
time, for be it supposed to be ever so momentous, yet if includes 
any part of duration, it is a time, and not half a time. Had the 
prophet said half a year, half a day, or half a minute, he would 
have spoken intelligibly; but half a time has no existence at all, 
and consequently no period could ever possibly arrive in the 
succession or order of time, when there could be an end to the 
wonders alluded to; and in this sense only, the prophecy is 
intelligible; to wit, that it will never come to pass. 


</p>
               <p>the revelation of St. John the divine, involves the subject of 
time, if possible, in still greater inconsistencies, viz: “And to 
the woman was given two wings of a great eagle, that she might fly 
into the wilderness, into her place: Where she is nourished for a 
time, and times and half a time.” “And the angel which I saw stand 
upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hands to heaven, and 
swore by him that liveth forever and ever, who created heaven and 
the things that therein are, and the earth and the things that 
therein are, and the sea and the things which are therein, that 
there should be time no longer.” Had this tremendous oath been 
verified there could have been no farther disputations on the 
calculation of “time and times and half a time,” (or about any 
thing else) for its succession would have reached its last and 
final period at that important crisis when time should have been 
“no longer.” The solar system must have ceased its motions, from 
which we conclude the succession of time, and the race of man would 
have been extinct; for as long as they may be supposed to exist, 
time must of necessary consequence have existed also; and since the 
course of nature, including the generations of mankind, has been 
continued from the time of the positive denunciation of the angel 
to this day, we may safely conclude, that his interference in the 
system of nature, was perfectly romantic. 


</p>
               <p>The apostle Peter, at the first Christian pentecost, objecting 
to the accusation of their being drunk with new wine, explains the 
prophecy of the prophet Joel, who prophesied of the events which 
were to take place in the last days, as coming to pass at that 
early period; his words are handed down to us as follows: “But this 
is that which is spoken by the Prophet Joel, and it shall come to 
pass in the last days, saith God, that I will pour out my spirit 
upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophecy, 
and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream 
dreams.” 


</p>
               <p>The history of the out-pouring of the spirit at the Pentecost, 
admitting it to have been a fact, would have been very inadequate 
to the prophetical prediction, viz: I will pour out my spirit upon 
all flesh; the most favorable construction is that the prophet 
meant human flesh, i.e., all human flesh; but instead of a 
universal effusion of the spirit, it appears to have been 
restricted to a select number, who were collected together at 
Jerusalem, and the concourse of spectators thought them to be 
delirious. It may however be supposed, that St. Peter was a better 
judge of the accomplishment of the prophecy than I am: well then, 
admitting his application of the prophecy of the last days to take 
place at the first pentecost; it being now more than seventeen 
hundred years ago, they consequently could not have been the last 
days. 


</p>
               <p>Still a query arises, whether every of the prophecies, which 
were predicted to be fulfilled in the last days, must not have been 
accomplished at that time; or whether any of the prophecies thus 
expressed are still to be completed by any events which may in 
 future take place; or by any which have taken place since those 
last days called pentecost; or whether any prophecy whatever can be 
fulfilled more than once; and if so, how many times; or how is it 
possible for us, out of the vast variety of events (in which there 
is so great a similarity) which one in particular to ascribe to its 
right prediction among the numerous prophecies? 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, provided some of the prophecies should point out 
some particular events, which have since taken place, there might 
have been previous grounds of probability, that such or such events 
would in the ordinary course of things come to pass; for instance, 
it is no ways extraordinary, that the prophet Jeremiah should be 
able to predict that Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, should take 
Jerusalem, when we consider the power of the Babylonish empire at 
that time, and the feebleness of the Jews. “The word, which came to 
Jeremiah from the Lord, when Nebuchaditezzar king of Babylon and 
all his army, and all the kingdoms of the earth of his dominion, 
and all the people fought against Jerusalem, and against all the 
cities thereof, saying, thus saith the Lord the God of Israel, go 
and speak unto Zedekiah king of Judah, and tell him thus saith the 
Lord, behold, I will give this city of Jerusalem into the hand of 
the king of Babylon.” No politicians could at the time of the 
prediction be much at a loss respecting the fate of Jerusalem. Nor 
would it be at all evidential to any candid and ingenious enquirer, 
that God had any manner of agency in fabricating the prophecies, 
though some of them should seem to decipher future events, as they 
might, to human appearance, turn out right, merely from accident or 
continuance. It is very improbable, or rather incompatible with 
human nature, that the prophecy of Micah will ever come to pass, 
who predicts that “they,” speaking of mankind, “shall beat their 
swords into plough-shares, and their spears into pruning-hooks; 
nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they 
learn war any more.” Some of the prophecies are so apparently 
contradictory, that they contain their own confutation; as for 
instance, the prophecy of Micaiah contained in the book of 
Chronicles, which probably is as absurd as any thing that is to be 
met with in story: “And when he was come unto the king, the king 
said unto him Micaiah, shall we go to Ramoth Gilead to battle, or 
shall I forbear? and he said go ye up and prosper, and they shall 
be delivered into your hand, and the king said unto him, how many 
times shall I adjure thee, that thou shalt tell me nothing, but 
that which is true in the name of the Lord? then he said I did see 
all Israel scattered upon the mountains, as sheep that have no 
shepherd, and the Lord said, these have no master, let them return, 
therefore, every man to his house in peace: and the king said unto 
Jehoshaphat, did not I tell thee, that he would prophecy no good 
concerning me, but evil? “Again he said, therefore, hear the word 
of the Lord — I saw the Lord sitting upon his throne, and all the 
host of Heaven standing on his right hand and on his left, and the 
Lord said who shall entice Abab, King of Israel, that he may go up 
and fall at Ramoth Gilead, and one spake saying after this manner; 
and another saying after that manner; then there came out a spirit 
and stood before the Lord, and said I will entice him, and the Lord 
said unto him wherewith? And he said I will go forth and be a lying 
spirit in the mouth of all his prophets, and the Lord said thou 
shalt entice him and thou shalt prevail; go out and do even so. Now 
therefore, behold the Lord hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of 
these thy prophets and the Lord hath spoken evil against thee.” It 
is observable that the prophet at first predicted the prosperity of 
Ahab, saying, “go ye up and prosper, and they shall be delivered 
into your hand,” but after a little adjurement by the king, he 
alters his prediction and prophecies diametrically the reverse. 
What is more certain than that the event of the expedition against 
Ramoth Gilead must have comported with the one or the other of his 
prophecies? Certain it was, that Ahab would take it or not take it, 
he must either prosper or not prosper, as there would be no third 
way or means between these two; and it appears that the prophet was 
determined to be in the right of it by his prophecy both ways. It 
further appears from his prophecy, that there was a great 
consultation in Heaven to entice Ahib King of Israel to his 
destruction, and that a certain lying spirit came and stood before 
the Lord, and proposed to him to go out and be a lying spirit in 
the mouth of the king's prophets. But what is the most incredible 
is, that God should countenance it, and give him positive orders to 
falsify the truth to the other prophets. It appears that Micaiah in 
his first prophecy, viz: “Go up to Ramoth Gilead and prosper, and 
they shall be delivered into your hand,” acted in concert with the 
lying spirit which stood before the Lord, but afterwards acted the 
treacherous part by prophesying the truth, which, if we may credit 
his account, was in direct opposition to the scheme of Heaven. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s7.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - THE CONTENTIONS WHICH SUBSISTED BETWEEN THE PROPHETS RESPECTING THEIR VERACITY, AND THEIR INCONSISTENCIES WITH ONE ANOTHER, AND WITH THE NATURE OF THINGS, AND THEIR OMISSION IN TEACHING THE DOCTRINE OF IMMORTALITY, PRECLUDES THE DIVINITY OF THEIR PROPHECIES</head>
               <p>WHOEVER examines the writings of the prophets will discover 
a spirit of strife and contention among them; they would charge 
each other with fallacy and deception; disputations of this kind 
are plentifully interspersed through the writings of the 
prophets; we will transcribe a few of those passages out of many: 
“Thus saith the Lord to the foolish prophets that follow their 
own spirit, and have found nothing, they have seen vanity and 
lying divination, saying the Lord saith, and the Lord hath not 
sent them, and they have made others to hope that they would 
confirm the word.” And in another place, “I have not sent these 
prophets, yet they ran; I have not spoken unto them, yet they 
prophecy.” Again, “I have heard what the prophets said, that 
prophecy lies in my name, saying, I have dreamed, I have dreamed, 
yet they are the prophets of the deceit of their own hearts.” And 
again, “Yea, they are greedy dogs, which can never have enough, 
and they are shepherds that cannot understand; they all look to 
their own way, every one for his gain from his quarter.” 


</p>
               <p>It being the case that there was such a strife among the 
prophets to recommend themselves to the people, and every art and 
dissimulation having been practiced by them to gain power and 
superiority, all which artifice was to be judged of by the great 
vulgar, or in some instances by the political views of the Jewish 
Sanhedrin, how could those who were contemporaries with the 
several prophets, distinguish the premised true prophets from the 
false? Much less, how can we, who live more than seventeen 
hundred years since the last of them, be able to distinguish them 
apart? And yet, without the knowledge of this distinction, we 
cannot with propriety give credit to any of them, even admitting 
there were some true prophets among them. Nor is it possible for 
us to know but that their very institution was merely a reach of 
policy of the Israelitish and Judaic governments, the more 
easily, implicitly and effectually to keep their people in 
subordination, by inculcating a belief that they were ruled with 
special directions from heaven, which in fact originated from the 
Sanhedrin. Many other nations have made use of much the same kind 
of policy. 


</p>
               <p>In the 22d chapter of Genesis, we have a history of a very 
extraordinary command from God to Abraham, and of a very 
unnatural attempt of his to obey it. And it came to pass after 
these thins that God did tempt Abraham, and he said unto him, 
Abraham, and he said behold here I am, and he said take now thy 
son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee to the land of Moriah, 
and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the 
mountains which I will tell thee of;” “And they came to the place 
which God had told him of, and Abraham built an altar there, and 
laid the wood in order, and bound Isaac his son, and laid him on 
the altar upon the wood; and Abraham stretched forth his hand and 
took the knife to slay his son.” Shocking attempt! Murder is 
allowed by mankind in general to be the most capital crime that 
is possible to be acted among men; it would therefore be 
incompatible with the divine nature to have enjoined it by a 
positive command to Abraham to have killed his son; a murder of 
all others the most unnatural and cruel and attended with the 
most aggravating circumstances, not merely from a proscribed 
breach of the ties of parental affection, but from the 
consideration that the child was to be (if we may credit the 
command,) offered to God as a religious sacrifice. What could 
have been a more complicated wickedness than the obedience of 
this command would have been? and what can be more absurd than to 
suppose that it came from God? It is argued, in vindication of 
the injunction to Abraham to kill his son, that it was merely for 
a trial of his obedience, and that God never designed to have him 
do it; to prevent which an angel from heaven called to him and 
gave him counter orders, not to slay his son but to suppose that 
God heeded such an experiment, or any other, in order to know 
whether Abraham would be obedient to his commands, is utterly 
incompatible with his omniscience, who without public exhibitions 
understands all things; so that had the injunction been in 
itself, fit and reasonable, and also from God, the compliance or 
non-compliance of Abraham thereto, could not have communicated 
any new idea to the divine mind. Every part of the conduct of 
mankind is a trial of their obedience and is known to God, as 
well as the particular conduct of Abraham; besides in the 
canonical writings, we read that “God cannot be with evil, 
neither tempteth he any man.” How then can it be, “that God did 
tempt Abraham?” a sort of employment which, in scripture, is 
commonly ascribed to the devil. It is a very common thing to hear 
Abraham extolled for attempting to comply with the supposed 
command of sacrificing his son; but it appears to me, that it had 
been wiser and more becoming the character of a virtuous man, for 
Abraham to have replied in answer to the injunction as follows, 
to wit, that it could not possibly have come from God; who was 
the fountain of goodness and perfection, and unchangeable in his 
nature, who had endowed him with reason and understanding, 
whereby he knew his duty to God, his son, ind to himself, better 
than to kill his only son, and offer him as a religious sacrifice 
to God, for God would never have implanted in his mind such a 
strong affection towards him, nor such a conscious sense of duty 
to provide for, protect and succor him in all duties, and to 
promote his happiness and well being, provided he had designed 
that he should have laid violent hands on his life. And inasmuch 
as the command was, in itself, morally speaking, unfit, and 
altogether unworthy of God, he presumed that it never originated 
from him, but from some inhuman, cruel and destructive being, who 
delighted in woo, and pungent grief; for God could not have been 
the author of so base an injunction, nor could he be pleased with 
so inhuman and sinful a sacrifice. 


</p>
               <p>Moses in his last chapter of Deuteronomy crowns his history 
with the particular account of his own death and burial. “So 
Moses, the servant of the Lord, died there, in the land of Moab, 
according to the word of the Lord, and he buried him in the 
valley, in the land of Moab, over against Bethpeor, but no man 
knew of his sepulchre unto this day; and Moses was an hundred and 
twenty-years old when he died, his eyes were not dim, nor his 
natural force abated, and the children of Israel wept for Moses 
in the plains of Moab thirty days.” This is the only historian in 
the circle of my reading, who has ever given the public a 
particular account of his own death, and how old he was at that 
decisive period, where he died, who buried him, and where he was 
buried, and withal of the number of days his friends and 
acquaintances mourned and wept for him. I must confess I do not 
expect to be able to advise the public of the term of my life, 
nor the circumstances of my death and burial, nor of the days of 
the weeping or laughing of my survivors. 


</p>
               <p>Part of the laws of Moses were arbitrary impositions upon 
the tribes of Israel, and have no foundation in the reason and 
fitness of things, particularly that in which he inculcates 
punishing the children for the iniquities of the father; 
“visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children, and 
upon the children's children unto the third and fourth 
generation.” There is no reason to be given, why the iniquity of 
the father might not as well have involved the fifth, sixth and 
seventh generations, and so on to the latest posterity in guilt 
and punishment, as the first four generations; for if it was 
possible, that the iniquity of the father could be justly visited 
upon any of his posterity, who were not accomplices with him in 
the iniquity, or were not some way or other aiding or accessary 
in it, then the iniquity might as justly be visited upon any one 
of the succeeding generations as upon another, or upon the 
generation of any indifferent person: for arbitrary imputations 
of iniquity are equally absurd in all supposable cases; so that 
if we once admit the possibility of visiting iniquity upon any 
others than the perpetrators, be they who they will, we overturn 
our natural and scientifical notions of a personal retribution of 
justice among mankind. It is, in plain English, punishing the 
innocent for the sin of the guilty. But virtue or vice cannot be 
thus visited or imputed from the fathers to the unoffending 
children, or to children's children; or which is the same thing, 
from the guilty to the innocent; for moral good or evil is mental 
and personal, which cannot be transferred, changed or altered 
from one person to another, but is inherently connected with its 
respective personal actors, and constitutes a quality, or habit, 
and is the merit or demerit of the respective agents or 
proficient in moral good or evil, and is by nature inalienable, 
“The righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the 
wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him.” But as we shall have 
occasion to argue this matter at large in the twelfth chapter of 
this treatise, where we shall treat of the imputed sin of Adam to 
his posterity, and of imputative righteousness, we will discuss 
the subject of imputation no farther in this place. However, the 
unjust practice of punishing the children for the iniquity of the 
father having been an ordinance of Moses, was more or less 
continued by the Israelites, as in the case of Achan and his 
children. “And Joshua and all Israel with him took Achan the son 
of Zorah, and the silver and the garment, and the wedge of gold, 
and his sons, and his daughters, and his oxen, and his asses, and 
his sheep, and his tent, and all that he had, and brought them to 
the valley of Achor, and all Israel stoned him with stones, and 
burned them with fire, after they had stoned them with stones, 
and they raised over him a great heap of stones unto this day; so 
the Lord turned from the fierceness of his anger.” “Fierce anger” 
is incompatible with the divine perfection, nor is the cruel 
extirpation of the innocent family, and live stock of Achan, to 
be accounted for on principles of reason. This flagrant injustice 
of punishing the children for the iniquity of the father had 
introduced a proverb in Israel, viz: “The fathers have eaten sour 
grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge.” But the prophet 
Ezekiel in the 18th chapter of his prophecies, has confuted 
Moses's statutes of visiting the iniquities of the father upon 
the children, and repealed them with the authority of thus saith 
the Lord, which was the manner of expression by which they were 
promulgated. But the prophet Ezekiel did not repeal those 
statutes of Moses merely by the authority of thus saith the Lord, 
but over and above gives the reason for it, otherwise he could 
not have repealed them; for Moses enacted them as he relates, 
from as high authority as Ezekiel could pretend to in nullifying 
them; so that had he not produced reason and argument, it would 
have been “thus saith the Lord,” against “thus saith the Lord.” 
But Ezekiel reasons conclusively, viz “The word of the Lord came 
unto me again, saying, what meat ye that ye use this proverb 
concerning the land of Israel, saying, the fathers have eaten 
sour grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge; as I live, 
saith the Lord God, ye shall not have occasion any more to use 
this proverb in Israel. Behold all souls are mine, as the soul of 
the father so also the soul of the son is mine the soul that 
sinneth it shall die, the son shall not bear the iniquity of the 
father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son, 
the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the 
wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him, therefore, I will 
judge you, O house of Israel, every one according to their ways 
saith the Lord God.” it is observable, that the prophet 
ingeniously says, “Ye shall not have occasion any more to use 
this proverb in Israel,” implicitly acknowledging that the law of 
Moses had given occasion to that proverb, nor was it possible to 
remove that proverb or grievance to which the Israelites were 
liable on account of visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon 
the children, but by the repeal of the statute of Moses in that 
case made and provided; which was effectually done by Ezekiel: in 
consequence whereof the administration of justice became 
disencumbered of the embarrassments under which it had labored 
for many centuries. Thus it appears, that those laws, denominated 
the laws of God, are not infallible, but have their exceptions 
and may be dispensed with. 


</p>
               <p>Under the dispensation of the law a breach of the Sabbath 
was a capital offence, “And while the children of Israel were in 
the wilderness, they found a man that gathered sticks on the 
Sabbath day, and the Lord said unto Moses, the man shall surely 
be put to death, and all the congregation shall stone him with 
stones without the camp; and all the congregation brought him 
without the camp and stoned him with stones, and he died, as the 
Lord commanded Moses.” The very institution of the Sabbath was in 
itself arbitrary, otherwise it would not have been changed from 
the last to the first day of the week. For those ordinances which 
are predicated on the reason and fitness of things can never 
change as that which is once morally fit, always remains so, and 
is immutable, nor could the same crime, in justice, deserve death 
in Moses's time (as in the instance of the Israelite's gathering 
sticks), and but a pecuniary fine in ours; as in the instance of 
the breach of Sabbath in these times. 


</p>
               <p>Furthermore, the order of nature respecting day and night, 
or the succession of time, is such, as renders it impossible that 
any identical part of time, which constitutes one day, can do it 
to all the inhabitants of the globe at the same time, or in the 
same period. Day is perpetually dawning, and night commencing to 
some or other of the inhabitants of the terraqueous ball without 
intermission. At the distance of fifteen degrees of longitude to 
the east of us, the day begins an hour sooner than it does with 
us here in Vermont, and with us an hour sooner than it does 
fifteen degrees to the westward, and thus it continues in 
succession round the globe, and night as regularly revolving 
after it, succeeding each other in their alternate rounds; so 
that when it is mid-day with us, it is mid-night with our 
species, denominated the Periaeci, who live under the same 
parallel of latitude with us, but under a directly opposite 
meridian; so likewise, when it is mid-day with them, it is mid-night 
with us. Thus it appears that the same identical part of 
time, which composes our days, compose their nights, and while we 
are keeping Sunday, they are in their midnight dreams; nor is it 
possible in nature, that the same identical part of time, which 
makes the first day of the week with us, should make the first 
day of the week with the inhabitants on the opposite side of the 
globe. The apostle James speaks candidly on this subject, saying, 
“Some esteem one day above another, others esteem every day 
alike, let every one be fully persuaded in his own mind,” and 
keep the laws of the land. It was unfortunate for the Israelite 
who was accused of gathering sticks on the Israelitish Sabbath, 
that he was convicted of it; for though by the law of his people 
he must have died, yet the act for which he suffered was no 
breach of the law of nature. Supposing that very delinquent 
should come to this world again, and gather sticks on Saturday in 
this country, he might as an hireling receive his wages for it, 
without being exposed to a similar prosecution of that of Moses; 
and provided he should gather sticks on our Sunday, his wages 
would atone for his crime instead of his life, since modern 
legislators have abated the rigor of the law for which he died. 


</p>
               <p>The barbarous zeal of the prophet Samuel in hewing Agag to 
pieces after he was made prisoner by Saul, king of Israel, could 
not proceed from a good spirit, nor would such cruelty be 
permitted towards a prisoner in any civilized nation at this day. 
“And Samuel hewed Agag to pieces before the Lord in Gilgal.” The 
unmanly deed seems to be mentioned with a phiz of religion, viz: 
that it was done before the Lord; but that cannot alter the 
nature of the act itself, for every act of mankind, whether good 
or evil, is done before the Lord, as much as Samuel's hewing Agag 
to pieces. The orders which Samuel gave unto Saul, (as he says by 
the word of the Lord) to cut off the posterity of the Amalekites, 
and to destroy them utterly, together with the cause of God's 
displeasure with them, are unworthy of God as may be seen at 
large in the 15th chapter of the Book of Samuel. “Spare them not, 
but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, 
camel and ass.” The ostensible reason for all this, was, because 
the ancestors of the Amalekites, as long before the days of 
Samuel as when the children of Israel came out of Egypt, which 
was near five hundred years, had ambushed and fought against 
Israel, in their passage from thence to the land which they 
afterwards inhabited. Although it appears from the history of 
Moses and Joshua, that Israel was going to disposes them of their 
country, which is thought to be a sufficient cause of war in 
these days. It is true they insinuate that the Lord had given the 
land to the children of Israel, yet it appears that they had to 
fight for it and get it by the hardest, notwithstanding, as is 
the case with nations in these days, and ever has been since the 
knowledge of history. 


</p>
               <p>But be the old quarrel between Israel and Amalck as it will, 
it cannot on any principle be supposed, the successors of those 
Amalekites, in the days of Samuel, could be guilty of any 
premised transgressions of their predecessors. The sanguinary 
laws of Moses did not admit of visiting the iniquities of the 
fathers upon the children in the line of succession, farther than 
to the fourth generation, but the Amalekites against whom Samuel 
had denounced the wrath of God, by the hand of Saul, were at a 
much greater remove from those their progenitors, who were 
charged with the crime for which they were cut off as a nation. 
Nor is it compatible with reason to suppose, that God ever 
directed either Moses or Joshua to extirpate the Canaanitish 
nations. “And we took all his cities at that time, and utterly 
destroyed the men and the women, and the little ones of every 
city, we left none to remain.” There is not more propriety in 
ascribing these cruelties to God, than those that were 
perpetrated by the Spaniards against the Mexican and Peruvian 
Indians of natives of America. Every one who dares to exercise 
his reason, free from bias, will readily, discern, that the 
inhumanities exercised towards the Canaanites and Amorites, 
Mexicans and Peruvians, were detestably wicked, and could not be 
approbated by God, or by rational and good men. Undoubtedly 
avarice and domination were the causes of those abounding 
cruelties, in which religion had as little to do as in the 
crusades of the holy land (so called.) 


</p>
               <p>The writings of the prophets abound with prodigies, strange 
and unnatural events. The walls of Jericho are represented to 
have fallen to the ground in consequence of a blast of ram's 
horns; Balaam's ass to speak to his master, and the prophet 
Elijah is said to have been carried off bodily into heaven by a 
chariot, in a whirlwind, Strange stories! But other scriptures 
tell us, “Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God.” The 
history of the affront, which the little children of Bethel gave 
the prophet Elisha, his cursing them, and their destruction by 
the bears, has the appearance of a fable. That Elisha should be 
so exasperated at the children for calling him bald head, and 
telling him to go up, was rather a sample of ill breeding; most 
gentlemen would have laughed at the joke, instead of cursing 
them, or being instrumental in their destruction, by merciless, 
wild and voracious beasts. Though the children were saucy, yet a 
man of any considerable candor, would have made allowance for 
their non-age, “for childhood and youth are vanity.” “And he went 
up from thence unto Bethel, and as he was going up by the way, 
there came forth little children out of the city and mocked him, 
and said unto him, go up thou bald-head, go up thou bald-head, 
and he turned back and looked on them, and he cursed them in the 
name of the Lord, and there came forth two she bears out of the 
wood, and tare forty and two, children of them.” It seems by the 
children's address, to Elisha, that he was an old bald-headed 
man, and that, they had heard, that his mate, Elijah, had gone up 
a little before; and as it was an uncommon thing for men to kite 
away into the air, and leave the world after that sort, it is 
likely that it excited a curiosity in the children to see Elisha 
go off with himself in the same manner, which occasioned their 
particular mode of speech to him, saying, “go up bald head.” The 
writings of Solomon, King of Israel, must needs have been foisted 
into the canonical volume by some means or other, for no one 
passage therein gives the least intimation of inspiration, or 
that he had any immediate dictation from God in his compositions, 
but on the contrary, he informs us, that he acquired his 
knowledge by applying himself to wisdom, “to seek and to search 
out concerning all things that are done under the sun. This sore 
travail,” says he, “has God given to the sons of men to be 
exercised there with.” And since Solomon never pretended to 
inspiration, others cannot justly claim his writings to have been 
anything more than natural reasonings, for who can, with 
propriety stamp his writings with divine authority, when he 
pretended no such thing, but the contrary? His song of songs 
appears to be rather of the amorous hind, and is supposed to have 
been written at the time he was making love to the daughter of 
Pharaoh, King of Egypt, who is said to have been a princess of 
exquisite beauty and exceeding coy, and so captivated his 
affections that it made him light headed and sing about the 
“joints of her thighs,” and her “belly.” 


</p>
               <p>The divine legation of Moses and the prophets is rendered 
questionable from the consideration that they never taught the 
doctrine of immortality, their rewards and punishments are 
altogether temporary, terminating at death; they have not so much 
as exhibited any speculation of surviving the grave; to this is 
ascribed the unbelief of the Sadducees of the resurrection of the 
dead, or of an angel or spirit, as they strenuously adhered to 
the law of Moses, for they could not imagine, but that their 
great prophet and law giver would have apprised them of a state 
of immortality had it been true; and in this the Sadducees seem 
to argue with force on their position of the divine legation of 
Moses. For admitting the reality of man's immortality, it appears 
incredible to suppose, that God should have specially 
commissioned Moses, as his prophet and instructor to the tribes 
of Israel, and not withal to have instructed them in the 
important doctrine of a future existence. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s7.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - DREAMS OR VISIONS UNCERTAIN AND CHIMERICAL CHANNEL FOR THE CONVEYANCE OF REVELATION; WITH REMARKS ON THE COMMUNICATION OF THE HOLY GHOST TO THE DISCIPLES, BY THE PRAYERS AND LAYING ON OF THE APOSTLES HANDS, WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE DIVINE DICTATIONS OF THE FIRST PROMULGATORS OF THE GOSPEL, AND AN ACCOUNT OF THE ELECT LADY, AND HER NEW SECTARY OF SHAKERS</head>
               <p>It appears from the writings of the prophets and apostles, 
that part of their revelations were communicated to them by 
dreams and visions, which have no other existence but in the 
imagination, and are defined to be the images which appear to the 
mind during sleep, figuratively, a chimera, a groundless fancy or 
conceit, without reason.” Our experience agrees with this. 
definition, and evinces that there is no trust to be reposed in 
them. They are fictitious images of the mind, not under the 
control of the understanding, and therefore not regarded at this 
day except by the credulous and superstitious, who still retain a 
veneration for them. But that a revelation from God to man, to be 
continued to the latest posterity as a divine and perfect rule of 
duty or law, should be communicated through such a fictitious and 
chimerical channel, carries with it the evident marks of 
deception itself, or of unintelligibleness, as appears from the 
vision of St. Paul. “It is not expedient for me doubtless to 
glory, I will come to visions and revelations of the Lord; I knew 
a man in Christ above fourteen years ago, whether in the body I 
cannot tell, or whether out of the body I cannot tell, God 
knoweth such an one caught up to the third heavens. And I knew 
such a man, whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell, 
God knoweth how that he was caught up into Paradise and heard 
unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter.” 
That God knoweth the whole affair, will not be disputed, but that 
we should understand it is impossible, for the apostle's account 
of his vision is unintelligible; it appears that he was rather in 
a delirium or a stupor, so that he knew not that whether he was 
in or out of the body: he says he heard “unspeakable words,” but 
this communicates no intelligence of the subject-matter of them 
to us; and that they “were not lawful for a man to utter,” but 
what they were, or wherein their unlawfulness to be uttered by 
man consisted, he does not inform us. His revelation from his own 
story was unspeakable and unlawful, and so he told us nothing 
what it was, nor does it compose any part of revelation which is 
to make known. He is explicit as to his being caught up to the 
third heaven, but how he could understand that is incredible, 
when at the same time he knew not whether he was in the body or 
out of the body; and if he was in such a delirium that he did not 
know so domestic a matter as that, it is not to be supposed that 
he could be a competent judge whether he was at the first, 
second, third, or fourth heaven, or whether he was advanced above 
the surface of the earth, or not. 


</p>
               <p>That the apostles in their ministry were dictated by the 
Holy Ghost, in the settlement of disputable doctrines, is highly 
questionable. “Forasmuch as we have heard that certain, which 
went out from us have troubled you with words, subverting your 
souls, saying ye must be circumcised and keep the law, to whom we 
gave no such commandment, for it seemed good to the Holy Ghost, 
and to us, to lay upon you no other burden than these necessary 
things.” Acts 15. And after having given a history of the 
disputations concerning circumcision, and of keeping the law of 
Moses, and of the result of the council, the same chapter informs 
us, that a contention happened so sharp between Paul and 
Barnabas, “that they parted asunder the one from the other.” Had 
the Holy Ghost been the dictator of the first teachers of 
Christianity, as individuals, there could have been no disputable 
doctrines or controversies, respecting the religion which they 
were promulgating in the world or in the manner of doing it, to 
be referred to a general council of the apostles and elders held 
at Jerusalem,” for had they been directed by the Holy Ghost, 
there could have been no controversies among them to have 
referred to the council. And inasmuch as the Holy Ghost neglected 
them as individuals, why is it not as likely that it neglected to 
dictate the council held at Jerusalem or elsewhere? It seems that 
the Holy Ghost no otherwise directed them in their plan of 
religion, than by the general council of the apostles and elders, 
the same as all other communities are governed. Paul having 
passed through the upper coasts came to Ephesus, and finding 
certain disciples, he said unto them have ye received the Holy 
Ghost since ye believed? and they said unto him we have not so 
much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost; and when Paul had 
laid his hands upon them, the Holy Ghost came on them, and they 
spoke with tongues and prophesied.” 


</p>
               <p>The spirit of God is that which constitutes the divine 
essence, and makes him to be what he is, but that he should be 
dictated, or his spirit be communicated by any acts or ceremonies 
of the apostles, is by no means admissible; for such exertions of 
the apostles, so far as they may be supposed to communicate the 
holy spirit to their disciples, would have made God passive in 
the premised act of the gift of the spirit; for it must have been 
either the immediate act of God or of the apostles, and if it was 
the immediate act of the one, it could not have been the 
immediate act of the other. 


</p>
               <p>To suppose that the act of the gift of the spirit was the 
mere act of God, and at the same time the mere act of the 
apostles, are propositions diametrically opposed to each other, 
and cannot both be true. But it may be supposed that the gift of 
the spirit was partly the act of God and partly the act of the 
apostles; admitting this to have been the case the consequences 
would follow, that the act of the gift of the spirit was partly 
divine and partly human, and therefore the beneficence and glory 
of the grant of the gift of the spirit unto the disciples, would 
belong partly to God and partly to the apostles, and in an exact 
proportion to that which God and they may be supposed to have 
respectively contributed towards the marvelous act of the gift of 
the spirit. But that God should act in partnership with man, or 
share his providence and glory with him, is too absurd to demand 
argumentative confutation, especially in an act which immediately 
respects the display or exertion of the divine spirit on the 
spirits of men. 


</p>
               <p>Such delusions have taken place in every age of the world 
since history has attained to any considerable degree of 
intelligence; nor is there at present a nation on earth, but what 
is more or less infatuated with delusory notions of the immediate 
influence of good or evil spirits on their minds. A recent 
instance of it appears in the Elect Lady (as she has seen fit to 
style herself) and her followers, called Shakers; this pretended 
holy woman began her religious scheme at Connestaguna; in the 
northwestwardly part of the State of New York, about the year 
1769, and has added a new sectary to the religious catalogue. 
After having instilled her tenets among the Connestagunites, and 
the adjacent inhabitants, she rambled into several parts of the 
country, promulgating her religion, and has gained a considerable 
number of scattering proselytes, not only in the State of New 
York, but some in the New England States. She has so wrought on 
the minds of her female devotees, respecting the fading nature, 
vanity and tempting allurements of their ornaments (which by the 
by are not plenty among her followers,) and the deceitfulness of 
riches, that she has procured from them a considerable number of 
strings of gold beads and jewels, and amassed a small treasure; 
and like most sectaries engrosses the kingdom of heaven to 
herself and her followers, to the seclusion of all others. She 
gives out that her mission is immediately from heaven, that she 
travails in pain for her elect, and pretends to talk in seventy-two 
unknown languages, in which she converses with those who have 
departed this life, and says, that there has not been a true 
church on earth since the apostles days until she had erected 
hers. That both the living and the dead must be saved in, by, and 
through her, and that they must confess their sins unto her and 
procure her pardon, or cannot be saved. That every of the human 
race who have died since the apostle's time, until her church was 
set up has been damned, and that they are continually making 
intercession to her for salvation, which is the occasion of her 
talking to them in those unknown tongues; and that she gathers 
her elect from earth and hell. She wholly refuses to give a 
reason for what she does or says: but says that it is the duty of 
mankind to believe in her, and receive her instructions, for they 
are infallible. 


</p>
               <p>For a time she prohibited her disciples from propagating 
their species, but soon after gave them ample license, 
restricting them, indiscriminately, to the pale of her sanctified 
church, for that she needed more souls to complete the number of 
her elect. Among other things she instructs those who are young 
and sprightly among her pupils, to practice the most wild, 
freakish, wanton and romantic gestures, as to that of indecently 
stripping them-selves, twirling round, extorting their features, 
shaking and twitching their bodies and limbs into a variety of 
odd and unusual ways, and many other extravagances of external 
behavior, in the practice of which they are said to be very alert 
even to the astonishment of spectators, having by use acquired an 
uncommon agility in such twirling, freakish and romantic 
practices. The old Lady having such an ascendancy over them as to 
make them believe that those extravagant actions were occasioned 
by the immediate power of God, it serves among them as a proof of 
the divinity of her doctrines. 


</p>
               <p>A more particular account of this new sectary has been 
lately published in a pamphlet by a Mr. Rathburn, who, as he 
relates, was for a time, one of her deluded disciples, but after 
a while apostatized from the faith, and has since announced to 
the world the particulars of their doctrine and conduct. 


</p>
               <p>Probably there never was any people or country, since the 
era of historical knowledge, who were more confident than they 
that they are acted upon by the immediate agency of the divine 
spirit; and as there are facts now existing in a considerable 
tract of country, and are notoriously known in this part of 
America, I take the liberty to mention them, as a knowledge of 
these facts, together with the concurrent testimony of the 
history of such deceptions in all ages and nations, might induce 
any countrymen to examine strictly into the claim and reality of 
ghostly intelligence in general. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c8" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER VIII</head>
            <div xml:id="s8.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - OF THE NATURE OF FAITH AND WHEREIN IT CONSISTS</head>
               <p>Faith in Jesus Christ and in his Gospel throughout the New 
Testament, is represented to be an essential condition of the 
eternal salvation of mankind. “Knowing that a man is not 
justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus 
Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be 
justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the 
law, for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified.” 
Again, If thou shalt confess the Lord Jesus Christ, and believe 
in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou mayst 
be saved.” And again, “He that believeth and is baptized shall be 
saved, but he that believeth not shall be damned.” Faith is the 
last result of the understanding, or the same which we call the 
conclusion, it is the consequence of a greater or less deduction 
of reasoning from certain premises previously laid down; it is 
the same as believing or judging of any matter of fact, or 
assenting to or dissenting from the truth of any doctrine, system 
or position; so that to form a judgment, or to come to a 
determination in one's own mind, or to believe, or to have faith, 
is in reality the same thing, and is synonymously applied both in 
writing and speaking, for example, “Abraham believed in God.” 
Again, “for he,” speaking of Abraham, “judged him faithful who 
had promised,” and again “his faith was counted unto him for 
righteousness” It is not only in scripture that we meet with 
examples of the these words, to wit, belief, judgment, and faith, 
to stand for the marks of our ideas for the same thing, but also 
all intelligible writers and speakers apply these phrases 
synonymously, and it would be good grammar and sense, for us to 
say that we have faith in a universal providence, or that we 
judge that there is a universal providence. These three different 
phrases, in communicating our ideas of providence, do every one 
of them exhibit the same idea, to all persons of common 
understanding, who are acquainted with the English language. In 
fine, every one's experience may convince them that they cannot 
assent to, or dissent from the truth of any matter of fact, 
doctrine or proposition whatever, contrary to their judgment; for 
the act of the mind in assenting to or dissenting from any 
position, or in having faith or belief in favor of, or against 
any doctrine, system, or proposition, could not amount to 
anything more or less, than the act of the judgment, or last 
dictate of the understanding, whether the understanding be 
supposed to be rightly informed or not: so that our faith in all 
cases is as liable to err, as our reason is to misjudge of the 
truth; and our minds act faith in disbelieving any doctrine or 
system of religion to be true, as much as in believing it to be 
so. From hence it appears, that the mind cannot act faith in 
opposition to its judgment, but that it is the resolution of the 
understanding itself committed to memory or writing, and can 
never be considered distinct from it. And inasmuch as faith 
necessarily results from reasoning, forcing itself upon our minds 
by the evidence of truth, or the mistaken apprehension of it, 
without any act of choice of ours, there cannot be any thing, 
which pertains to, or partakes of the nature of moral good or 
evil in it. For us to believe such doctrines, or systems of 
religion, as appears to be credibly recommended to our reason, 
can no more partake of the nature of goodness or morality, than 
our natural eyes may be supposed to partake of it in their 
perception of colors; for the faith of the mind, and the sight of 
the eye are both of them necessary consequences, the one results 
from the reasonings of the mind, and the other from the 
perception of the eye. To suppose a rational mind without the 
exercise of faith would be as absurd as to suppose a proper and 
complete eye without sight, or the perception of the common 
objects of that sense. The short of the matter is this that 
without reason we could not have faith, and without the eye or 
eyes we could not see, but once admitting that we are rational, 
faith follows of course, naturally resulting from the dictates of 
reason. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s8.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - OF THE TRADITIONS OF OUR FOREFATHERS</head>
               <p>It may be objected, that the far greater part of mankind 
believe according to the tradition of their forefathers, without 
examining into the grounds of it, and that argumentative 
deductions from the reason and nature of things, have, with the 
bulk of them, but little or no influence on their faith. 
Admitting this to have been too much the case, and that many of 
them have been blameable for the omission of cultivating or 
improving their reason, and for not forming a better judgment 
concerning their respective traditions, or a juster and more 
exalted faith yet this does not at all invalidate the foregoing 
arguments respecting the nature of faith: for though it be 
admitted that most of the human race do not, or will not reason, 
with any considerable degree of propriety, on the traditions of 
their forefathers, but receive them implicitly, they nevertheless 
establish this one proposition in their minds, right or wrong, 
that their respective traditions are right, for none could 
believe in them were they possessed of the knowledge that they 
were wrong. And as we have a natural bias in favor of our 
progenitors, to whose memory a tribute of regard is justly due, 
and whose care in handing down from father to son such notions of 
religion and manners, as they supposed would be for the well 
being and happiness of their posterity in this and the coming 
world, naturally endears tradition to us, and prompts us to 
receive and venerate it. Add to this, that the priests of every 
denomination are “instant in season and out of season,” in 
inculcating and instilling the same tenets, which, with the 
foregoing considerations, induces mankind in general to give at 
least a tacit consent to their respective traditions, and without 
a thorough investigation thereof, believe them to be right and 
very commonly infallible, although their examinations are not 
attended with a mediative reasoning, from the nature of things; 
and in the same proportion as they may be supposed to fall short 
of conclusive arguing on their respective traditions they cannot 
fail to be deceived in the rationality of their faith. 


</p>
               <p>But after all it may be that some of the human race may have 
been traditionally or accidentally right, in many or most 
respects. Admitting it to be so, yet they cannot have any 
rational enjoyment of it, or understand wherein the truth of the 
premised right tradition consists, or deduce any more 
satisfaction from it, than others whose traditions may be 
supposed to be wrong; for it is the knowledge of the discovery of 
truth alone, which is gratifying to that mind who contemplates 
its superlative beauty. 


</p>
               <p>That tradition has had a powerful influence on the human 
mind is universally admitted, even by those who are governed by 
it in the articles or discipline of their faith; for though they 
are blind with respect to their own superstition, yet they can 
perceive and despise it in others. Protestants very readily 
discern and expose the weak side of Popery, and Papists are as 
ready and acute in discovering the errors of heretics. With equal 
facility do Christians and Mahometans spy out each others 
inconsistencies and both have an admirable sagacity to descry the 
superstition of the heathen nations. Nor are the Jews wholly 
silent in this matter; “O God the heathen are come into thine 
inheritance, thy holy temple have they defiled.” What abomination 
must this have been in the opinion of a nation who had 
monopolized all religion to themselves! Monstrous vile heathen, 
that they should presume to approach the sanctum sanctorum! The 
Christians call the Mahometans by the odious name of infidels, 
but the Musslemen, in their opinion, cannot call the Christians 
by a worse name than that which they have given themselves, they 
therefore call them Christians. 


</p>
               <p>What has been already observed upon tradition, is sufficient 
to admonish us of its errors and superstitions, and the 
prejudices to which a bigoted attachment thereto exposes us, 
which is abundantly sufficient to excite us to a careful 
examination of our respective traditions, and not to rest 
satisfied until we have regulated our faith by reason. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s8.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - OUR FAITH IS GOVERNED BY OUR REASONING, WHETHER THEY ARE SUPPOSED TO BE CONCLUSIVE OR INCONCLUSIVE, AND NOT MERELY BY OUR OWN CHOICE</head>
               <p>It is written that “Faith is the gift of God.” Be it so, but 
is faith any more the gift of God than reflection, memory or 
reason are his gifts? Was it not for memory, we could not retain 
in our minds the judgment which we have passed upon things; and 
was it not for reasoning, in either a regular or irregular 
manner, or partly both, there could be no such thing as judging 
or believing so that God could not bestow the gift of faith 
separate from the gift of reason, faith being the mere 
consequence of reasoning, either right or wrong, or in a greater 
or less degree, as has been previously argued. 


</p>
               <p>Still there is a knotty text of scripture to surmount, viz: 
“He that believeth shall be saved, but he that believeth not 
shall be damned.” This text is considered as crowding hard upon 
unbelievers in christianity; but when it is critically examined, 
it will be found not to militate at all against them, but is 
merely a Jesuitical fetch to overawe some and make others wonder. 
We will premise, that an unbeliever is destitute of faith, which 
is the cause of his being thus denominated. The Christian 
believes the gospel to be true and of divine authority, the Deist 
believes that it is not true and not of divine authority; so that 
the Christian and Deist are both of them believers, and according 
to the express words of the text, “shall be saved,” and a Deist 
may as well retort upon a Christian and call him an infidel, 
because he differs in faith from him, as a Christian may upon the 
Deist; for there is the same impropriety in applying the cant of 
infidelity to either, as both are believers; and it is impossible 
for us to believe contrary to our judgments or the dictates of 
understanding, whether it be rightly informed or not. Why then 
may there not in both denominations be honest men, who are 
seeking after the truth, and who may have an equal right to 
expect the favor and salvation of God. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c9" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER IX</head>
            <div xml:id="s9.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - A TRINITY OF PERSONS CANNOT EXIST IN THE DIVINE ESSENCE WHETHER THE PERSONS BE SUPPOSED TO BE FINITE OR INFINITE: WITH REMARKS ON ST. ATHENASIUS'S CREED</head>
               <p>OF all errors which have taken place in religion, none have 
been so fatal to it as those that immediately respect the divine 
nature. Wrong notions of a God, or of his providence, sap its 
very foundation in theory and practice, as is evident from the 
superstition discoverable among the major part of mankind; who, 
instead of worshipping the true God, have been by some means or 
other infatuated to pay divine homage to mere creatures or to 
idols made with hands, or to such as have no existence but in 
their own fertile imaginations. 


</p>
               <p>God being incomprehensible to us, we cannot understand all 
that perfection in which the divine essence consists we can 
nevertheless (negatively) comprehend many things, in which 
(positively) the divine essence does not and cannot consist. 


</p>
               <p>That it does not consist of three persons, or of any other 
number of persons, is as easily demonstrated, as that the whole 
is bigger than a part, or any other proposition in mathematics. 


</p>
               <p>We will premise, that the three persons in the supposed 
Trinity are either finite or infinite; for there cannot in the 
scale of being be a third sort of beings between these two; for 
ever so many and exalted degrees in finiteness is still finite, 
and that being who is infinite admits of no degrees of 
enlargement; and as all beings whatever must be limited or 
unlimited, perfect or imperfect, they must therefore be 
denominated to be finite or infinite: we will therefore premise 
the three persons in the Trinity to be merely finite, considered 
personally and individually from each other, and the question 
would arise whether the supposed Trinity of finites though united 
in one essence, could be more than finite still. Inasmuch as 
three imperfect and circumscribed beings united together could 
not constitute a being perfect or infinite, any more than 
absolute perfection could consist of three imperfections; which 
would be the same as to suppose that infinity could be made up or 
compounded of finiteness; or that absolute, uncreated and 
infinite perfection, could consist of three personal and 
imperfect natures. But on the other hand, to consider every of 
the three persons in the supposed Trinity, as being absolutely 
infinite, it would be a downright contradiction to one infinite 
and all comprehending essence. Admitting that God the Father is 
infinite, it would necessarily preclude the supposed God the Son, 
and God the Holy Ghost from the god-head, or essence of God; one 
infinite essence comprehending every power, excellency and 
perfection, which can possibly exist in the divine nature. Was it 
possible that three absolute infinites, which is the same as 
three Gods, could be contained in one and the self-same essence, 
why not as well any other number of infinites? But as certain as 
infinity cannot admit of addition, so certain a plurality of 
infinites cannot exist in the same essence; for real infinity is 
strict and absolute infinity, and only that, and cannot be 
compounded of infinities or of parts, but forecloses all 
addition. A personal or circumscribed God, implies as great and 
manifest a contradiction as the mind of man can conceive of; it 
is the same is a limited omnipresence, a weak Almighty, or a 
finite God. 


</p>
               <p>From the foregoing arguments on the Trinity, we infer, that 
the divine essence cannot consist of a Trinity of persons, 
whether they are supposed to be either finite or infinite. 


</p>
               <p>The creed-mangers have exhibited the doctrine of the Trinity 
in an alarming point of light, viz.: “Whoever would be saved 
before all thins it is necessary that he hold the Catholic faith, 
which faith, except every one doth keep whole and undefiled, 
without doubt he shall perish everlastingly.” We next proceed to 
the doctrine, “The Father is eternal, the Son is eternal, and the 
Holy Ghost is eternal, and yet there are not three eternals but 
one eternal.” The plain English is, that the three persons in the 
Trinity are three eternals, individually considered, and yet they 
are not three eternals but one eternal. 


</p>
               <p>To say that there are three eternals in the Trinity, and yet 
that there are not three eternals therein, is a contradiction in 
terms, as much as to say, that there are three persons in the 
Trinity and yet there are not three persons in the Trinity. 


</p>
               <p>The first proposition in the creed affirms, that “the Father 
is eternal,” the second affirms that “the Son is eternal,” the 
third affirms that the Holy Ghost is eternal,” the fourth affirms 
that there are not three eternals,” and the fifth that there is 
but one eternal.” 


</p>
               <p>The reader will observe, that the three first propositions 
are denied by the fourth, which denies that there are three 
eternals, though the three first propositions affirmed, that 
there were three eternals by name, viz. the Father, Son and Holy 
Ghost. The fifth proposition is unconnected with either of the 
former, and is undoubtedly true, viz. “but there is one eternal.” 
“The Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Ghost is God and 
yet there are not three Gods but one God.” Here again we have 
three Gods by name, affirmed to have an existence by the three 
first propositions, by the fourth they are negatived, and the 
fifth affirms the truth again, viz. that there is “but one God.” 


</p>
               <p>Admitting the three first propositions to be true, to wit, 
that there are three Gods, the three could not be one and the 
same God, any more than Diana, Dagan and Moloch may be supposed 
to be the same; and if three Gods, their essences and providences 
would interfere and make universal confusion and disorder. 


</p>
               <p>“The Father is Almighty, the Son is Almighty, and the Holy 
Ghost is Almighty, and yet there are not three Almighties but one 
Almighty.” Here we have three Almighties and at the same time but 
one Almighty. So that the point at issue is brought to this 
simple question, viz. whether three units can be one, or one unit 
three or not? Which is submitted to the curious to determine. Our 
creed further informs us, that the three persons in the Trinity 
are co-eternal together and co-equal, but in its sequel we are 
told that one was begotten of the other; and when we advert to 
the history of that transaction, we find it to be not quite 
eighteen hundred years ago, and took place in the reign of Herod, 
the King of Judea, which faith except “we keep whole and 
undefiled,” we have a threat, that “without doubt we shall perish 
everlastingly.” 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s9.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - ESSENCE BEING THE CAUSE OF IDENTITY, IS INCONSISTENT WITH PERSONALITY IN THE DIVINE NATURE</head>
               <p>ONE God can have but one essence, which must have been 
eternal and infinite, and for that reason precludes all others 
from a participation of his nature, glory, and universal and 
absolute perfection. 


</p>
               <p>When we speak of any being who by nature is capable of being 
rightfully denominated an individual, we conceive of it to exist 
but in one essence; so that essence as applied to God, 
denominates the divine nature; and as applied to man, it denotes 
an individual: for although the human race is with propriety 
denominated the race of man, and though every male of the 
species, is with equal propriety called man, for that they 
partake of one common sort of nature and likeness, yet the 
respective individuals are not one and the same. The person of A 
is not the person of B, nor are they conscious of each other's 
consciousness, and therefore the joy or grief of A, is not and 
cannot be the joy or grief of B; this is what we know to be a 
fact from our own experience, The reason of this personal 
distinction is founded in nature, for though we partake of one 
common nature and likeness, yet we do not partake of one and the 
same essence. Essence is therefore, in the order of nature, the 
primary cause of identity or sameness and cannot be divided. 


</p>
               <p>From hence we infer, that the doctrine of the Trinity is 
destitute of foundation, and tends manifestly to superstition and 
idolatry. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s9.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - THE IMPERFECTION OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE PERSON OF JESUS CHRIST, INCOMPATIBLE WITH HIS DIVINITY</head>
               <p>THAT Jesus Christ was not God is evident from his own words, 
where, speaking of the day of judgment, he says, “Of that day and 
hour knoweth no man, no not the angels which are in Heaven, 
neither the Son, but the Father.” This is giving up all 
pretention to divinity, acknowledging in the most explicit 
manner, that he did not know all things, but compares his 
understanding to that of man and angels; “of that day and hour 
knoweth no man, no not the angels which are in heaven, neither 
the Son.” Thus he ranks himself with finite beings, and with them 
acknowledges, that he did not know the day and hour of judgment, 
and at the same time ascribes a superiority of knowledge to the 
father, for that he knew the day and hour of judgment. 


</p>
               <p>That he was a mere creature is further evident from his 
prayer to the father, saying, “father if it be possible, let this 
cup pass from me, nevertheless, not my will but thine be done.” 
These expressions speak forth the most humble submission to his 
father's will, authority and government, and however becoming so 
submissive a disposition to the divine government would be, in a 
creature, it is utterly inconsistent and unworthy of a God, or of 
the person of Jesus Christ, admitting him to have been a divine 
person, or of the essence of God. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c10" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER X</head>
            <div xml:id="s10.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - OBSERVATIONS ON THE STATE OF MAN, IN MOSES'S PARADISE, ON THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE OF GOOD AND EVIL, AND ON THE TREE OF LIFE: WITH SPECULATIONS ON THE DIVINE PROHIBITION TO MAN, NOT TO EAT OF THE FRUIT OF THE FORMER OF THOSE TREES, INTERSPERSED WITH REMARKS ON THE MORTALITY OF INNOCENT MAN</head>
               <p>THE mortality of animal life, and the dissolution of that of 
the vegetable, has been particularly considered in chapter three, 
section four, treating on physical evils. We now proceed to make 
an application of those arguments, in the case of our reputed 
first parents, whose mortality is represented by Moses to have 
taken place in consequence of their eating of the forbidden 
fruit. 


</p>
               <p>Moses in his description of the garden of Eden acquaints us 
with two chimerical kinds of fruit trees, which, among others, he 
tells us were planted by God in the place appointed for the 
residence of the new made couple; the one he calls by the name of 
“the tree of knowledge of good and evil,” and the other by the 
name of “the tree of life.” And previous to his account of the 
apostasy, he informs us, that God expressly commanded the man and 
woman, saying, “be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth 
and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and 
over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth 
upon the earth; and God said, behold I have given you every herb 
bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and tree, 
in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed, to you it shall be 
for meat.” Again, “and the Lord commanded the man saying, of 
every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat, but of the tree 
of knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it, for in 
the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. And the 
Lord said, it is not good for man to be alone, I will make him an 
help meet for him; and the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall 
upon Adam, and he slept, and he took out of his one of his ribs, 
and closed up the flesh instead thereof, and the rib which the 
Lord God had taken from man made he a woman. 


</p>
               <p>Thus it appears from Moses's representation of the state of 
man's innocency, that he was commanded by God to labor, and to 
replenish the earth; and that to him was given the dominion over 
the creatures, and that at several times he was licensed by God 
himself to eat of every one of the fruit of the trees, and of the 
herbage except of the tree of knowledge of good and evil; and 
because it was not good that the man should be alone, but that he 
might multiply and replenish the earth, our amorous mother Eve, 
it seems, was formed, who I dare say well compensated father Adam 
for the loss of his rib. 


</p>
               <p>This short description of man's state and condition in 
innocency, agrees with the state and circumstances of an nature 
at present. Innocent man was required to labor and subdue the 
earth, out of which he was to be subsisted; had a license to eat 
of the fruit of the trees, or herbage of the garden, which pre-supposeth 
that his nature needed refreshment the same as ours 
does; for otherwise it would have been impertinent to have 
granted him a privilege incompatible with his nature, as it would 
have been no privilege at all, but an outright mockery, except we 
admit, that innocent human nature was liable to decay, needed 
nutrition by food, and had the quality of digestion and 
perspiration; or in fine, had the same sort of nature as we have; 
for otherwise he could eat but one belly-full, which without 
digestion would remain the same, and is too romantic to have been 
the original end and design of eating. And though there is 
nothing mentioned by Moses concerning his drinking, yet it is 
altogether probable, that he had wit enough to drink when he was 
thirsty. That he consisted of animal nature is manifest, not only 
from his being subjected to subdue the earth, out of which he was 
to be subsisted, and from his eating and drinking, or his 
susceptibility of nutrition by food, but also from his propensity 
to propagate his kind; for which purpose a helpmate was made for 
him. 


</p>
               <p>Nothing could more fully evince, that Moses's innocent 
progenitors of mankind, in that state, were of a similar nature 
to ours, than their susceptibility of propagating the species; 
and as they required nutrition, their nature must have had the 
quality or aptitude of digestion and perspiration, and every 
property that at present we ascribe to an animal nature; from 
hence we infer, that death, or mortality, must have been the 
necessary consequence. What would have prevented them from having 
been crushed to death by a fall from a precipice, or from 
suffering death by any other casualty, to which human nature is 
at present liable? will any suppose that the bodies of those 
premised innocent progenitors of the human race were 
invulnerable; were they not flesh and blood? surely they were, 
for otherwise they could not have been male and female; as it was 
written, “male and female created he them:” and inasmuch as 
animal life has, from its original, consisted of the same sort of 
nature, and been propagated and supported in the same manner, and 
obnoxious to the same fate, it would undoubtedly in the premised 
day of Adam, required the same order in the external system of 
nature, which it does at present, to answer the purposes of 
animal life. 


</p>
               <p>Was it possible that the laws of nature, which merely 
respect gravitation, could be and were suspended, so as not to be 
influential on matter, our world would be immediately disjointed 
and out of order, and confusion would succeed its present 
regularity; in the convulsions whereof animal life could not 
subsist. So that not only the laws which immediately respect 
animal nature in particular, but the laws which respect our solar 
system, must have been the same in man's innocency, as in his 
whimsically supposed state of apostasy; and consequently, his 
mortality the same. From hence we infer, that the curses, which 
Moses informs us of in chapter three: as being by God pronounced 
upon man, saying, “dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt 
return,” could not have been any punishment, inflicted as a 
penalty for eating the forbidden fruit; for turn to dust he must 
have done, whether he eat of it or not; for that death and 
dissolution was the inevitable and irreversible condition of the 
law of nature, which wholly precludes the curse, of which Moses 
informs us, from having any effect on mankind. 


</p>
               <p>The story of the “tree of life,” is unnatural, And there 
being but one of the kind, it may be called an only tree, the 
world not having produced another of the sort; the fruit of 
which, according to Moses, had such an efficacious quality, that 
had Adam and Eve but eaten thereof, they would have lived 
forever.” And now lest he put forth his hand and take also of the 
tree of life, and eat, and live forever.” To prevent which, they 
are said to be driven out of the garden, that the eating thereof 
might not have reversed the sentence of God, which he had 
previously pronounced against them, denouncing their mortality. 
“So he drove out the man, and he placed at the east of the garden 
of Eden, cherubims, and a flaming sword, which turneth every way 
to keep the way of the tree of life.” A bite of this fruit it 
seems would have reinstated mankind, and spoiled priestcraft. Yet 
it is observable, that there are no travellers or historians who 
have given any accounts of such a tree, or of the cherubims or 
flaming sword, which renders its existence disputable, and the 
reality of it doubtful and improbable; the more so, as that part 
of the country, in which it is said to have been planted, has for 
a long succession of ages been populously inhabited. 


</p>
               <p>Yet it may be objected, that the tree may have rotted down 
and consumed by time. But such conjectures derogate from the 
character of the quality of the tree. It seems, that so marvelous 
a tree, the fruit of which would have preserved animal life 
eternally, would have laughed at time, and bid defiance to decay 
and dissolution, and eternally have remained in its pristine 
state under the protection of the flaming sword, as a perpetual 
evidence of the divine legation of Moses, and the reality of 
man's apostasy for ever. But alas! it is no where to be found, it 
is perished from off the face of the earth, and such a marvelous 
fruit is no more, and consequently no remedy against mortality 
remains. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s10.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - POINTING OUT THE NATURAL IMPOSSIBILITY OF ALL AND EVERY OF THE DIVERSE SPECIES OF BIPED ANIMALS, COMMONLY TERMED MAN, TO HAVE LINEALLY DESCENDED FROM ADAM AND EVE, OR FROM THE SAME ORIGINAL PROGENITORS</head>
               <p>IT is altogether improbable and manifestly contradictory to 
suppose, that the various and diverse nations and tribes of the 
earth, who walk upon two legs, and are included under the term 
man, have or possibly could have descended by ordinary 
generation, from the same parents, be they supposed to be who 
they will. 


</p>
               <p>Those adventurers, who have sailed or travelled to the 
several parts of the globe, inform us, in their respective 
histories, that they find the habitable part of it more or less 
populated by one kind or other of rational animals, and that 
considered as tribes or nations, there is evidently a gradation 
of intellectual capacity among them, some more exalted and others 
lower in the scale of being; and that they are specially diverse 
from each other with respect to their several animal natures, 
though in most respects they appear to have one sort of nature 
with us, viz: more like us that like the brute creation; as they 
walk erect, speak with man's voice, and make use of language of 
one sort or other, though many of them are more or less 
inarticulate in their manner of speaking: and in many other 
particulars bear a general likeness to us. They are nevertheless 
considered as distinct tribes or nations, are of different sizes, 
and as to complexion, they vary from the two extremes of white 
and black, in a variety of tawny mediums. 


</p>
               <p>The learned nations can trace their genealogies, (though 
somewhat incorrect) for a considerable time, but are certain to 
be sooner or later lost in the retrospect thereon, and those that 
are of an inferior kind, or destitute of learning or science have 
no other knowledge of their genealogies, than they retain by 
their respective traditions, which are very inconsiderable. They 
are likewise diverse from each other in their features and in the 
shape of their bodies and limbs, and some are distinguished from 
others by their rank smell and the difference in their hair, eyes 
and visage, but to point out the distinctions would exceed my 
design. 


</p>
               <p>The Ethiopians, though of a shining black complexion, have 
regular and beautiful features, and long black hair (one of those 
female beauties captivated the affections of Moses) they differ 
very materially from the negro blacks, so that it appears 
impossible that they should have descended in a lineal succession 
from the same ancestors. They are uniformly in their respective 
generations essentially diverse from each other, so that an issue 
from a male and female of the two nations would be a mongrel, 
partaking partly of the kind of both nations. So also concerning 
the difference which subsists between us and the negroes; their 
black skin is but one of the particulars in which they are 
different from us; their many and very essential differences 
fully evince, that the white nations, and they, could not 
according to the law of their respective generations, have had 
one and the same lineal original, but that they have had their 
diverse kind of original progenitors. 


</p>
               <p>It is true that the several nations and tribes of the earth, 
comprehended under the general term man, notwithstanding their 
diversity to each other in bodily shape and mental powers, bear a 
nearer resemblance to one, another than the brute kind, for which 
reason they are known by one common appellation: though it is 
manifest that they could never have linearly descended from the 
same first parents, whether their names were Adam and Eve, or 
what not. 


</p>
               <p>But inasmuch as our genealogies are wholly insufficient for 
the purpose of explaining our respective originals or any or 
either of them, or to give us or any of us, considered as 
individuals or nations, who fall under the denomination of the 
term man, any manner of insight or knowledge from whom we are 
linearly descended, or who were our respective original 
ancestors, or what their names were: we must therefore reason on 
this subject from the facts and causes now existing, which 
abundantly evince, that we are of different kinds, and 
consequently are not of the same lineage. 


</p>
               <p>The acquaintance, which we have had with the negro nation in 
particular, fully evinces the absurdity of supposing them to be 
of the same blood and kindred with ourselves. But that there are 
some original intrinsic and hereditary diversity or essential 
difference between us and them, which cannot be ascribed to time, 
climate, or to mere contingence. 


</p>
               <p>For that we and they are in nature inherently and uniformly 
diverse from each other in our respective constitutions and 
generations, and have been so time immemorial. So that the 
negroes are of a different species of rational beings from us, 
and consequently must have had their distinct lineal original; 
was it not so, there could be no such thing as a mongrel or a 
mulatto, who is occasioned by a copulation between the males and 
the females of the respective diverse species, the issue 
partaking of both natures. 


</p>
               <p>Had all the nations and tribes of the world, who are 
denominated rational, been linearly descended from the same 
progenitors, mongrelism could never have taken place among them, 
as in this, case they would have been all of the same kind: from 
hence we infer, that they have had their respective original 
progenitors. The Dutch colony at the Cape of Good Hope have 
enacted laws to punish with death such of their Dutch subjects as 
may be convicted of copulating with the Hottentots: for that 
their nature is adjusted to be of an inferior species to theirs, 
so that mixing their nature with them would essentially 
degenerate and debase their own. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s10.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - OF THE ORIGIN OF THE DEVIL OR OF MORAL EVIL, AND OF THE DEVIL'S TALKING WITH EVE; WITH A REMARK THAT THE DOCTRINE OF APOSTASY IS THE FOUNDATION OF CHRISTIANITY</head>
               <p>INASMUCH as the devil is represented to have had so great 
and undue an influence in bringing about the apostasy of Adam, 
and still to continue his temptations to mankind, it may be worth 
our while to examine into the nature and manner of his being and 
the mode of his exhibiting his temptations. 


</p>
               <p>John's gospel, verse 1 and 3, the Christian's God is the 
creator of the devil and consequently the original cause of evil 
in heaven — and among men he planted the tree of knowledge of 
good and evil, and knew at the time he planted it of the awful 
consequences that would follow. 


</p>
               <p>But if it be admitted, that the creature called the devil 
(who must be supposed to be under the divine government, as much 
as any other creature) could become inflexible, and perpetually 
rebellious and wicked, incapable of a restoration, and 
consequently subjected to eternal punishment (which, to me 
appears to be inconsistent with the wisdom and goodness of the 
divine government, and the nature, end and design of a 
probationary agent) yet it would by no means follow from hence, 
that so stubbornly wicked and incorrigible a creature would have 
been permitted, by the providence of God, to tempt, ensnare or 
seduce mankind, by plying his temptations to their weak side. One 
thing we are certain of, viz. that the devil does not visit our 
world in a bodily or organized shape, and there is not in nature 
a second way, in which it is possible for him to make known 
himself to us, or that he could have done it to our progenitors, 
nor could he ever have communicated to them or to us, any 
temptations or ideas whatever, any otherwise than by making a 
proper application to our external senses, so that we could 
understand him, or receive the ideas of his temptations in a 
natural way. For supernatural intercourse with the world of 
spirits or invisible beings has been shown to be contradictory 
and impossible in the arguments contained in the sixth chapter, 
to which the reader is referred. Those arguments will hold 
equally good as applied to either good or evil spirits, and are 
demonstrative of the utter impossibility of mankind's holding any 
manner of intercourse or intelligence with them. 


</p>
               <p>But should we premise, that, according to the history of 
Moses, it was in the power of the devil to assume a bodily shape, 
and, that he did in very deed transform himself into the figure, 
likeness and organization of a snake, yet by and with that organ 
he could not have spoken or uttered the following articulate 
words, which Moses charged him with, to wit, “And the serpent 
said unto the woman, ye shall not surely die, for God doth know, 
that in the day ye eat thereof, that your eyes shall be opened, 
and ye shall be as Gods knowing good and evil.” 


</p>
               <p>Who speaks the truth in the above passages, the devil, for 
neither the man nor the woman died for many years after they are 
said to have eaten of the forbidden fruit, for death is the 
annihilation of life, and they did not die on the day they eat. 


</p>
               <p>As the serpent is by nature incapable of speech, it must 
have put the devil into the same predicament, admitting that he 
transformed himself into the same figure or likeness, and 
consequently for want of the proper and adequate organs of 
speech, he must necessarily have been incapable of any other 
language than that of rattling his tail, and therefore could 
never have spoken those recited words unto Eve, or communicated 
any of his temptations unto her by language, while in that 
similitude. However, admitting that the first parents of mankind 
were beguiled by the wiles of the devil to transgress the divine 
law, yet of all transgressions it would have been the most 
trivial (considered under all the particular circumstances of it) 
that the mind of man can conceive of. 


</p>
               <p>Who in the exercise of reason can believe, that Adam and Eve 
by eating of such a spontaneous fruit could have incurred the 
eternal displeasure of God, as individuals? Or that the divine 
vindictive justice should extend to their unoffending offspring 
then unborn? And sentence the human progeny to the latest 
posterity to everlasting destruction? As chimerical as Moses's 
representation of the apostasy of man manifestly appears to be, 
yet it is the very basis, on which Christianity is founded, and 
is announced in the New Testament to be the very cause why Jesus 
Christ came into this world, “that he might destroy the works of 
the devil,” and redeem fallen man, alias, the elect, from the 
condemnation of the apostasy; which leads me to the consideration 
of the doctrine of imputation. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c11" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER XI</head>
            <div xml:id="s11.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - IMPUTATION CANNOT CHANGE, ALIENATE OR TRANSFER THE PERSONAL DEMERIT OF SIN; AND PERSONAL MERIT OF VIRTUE TO OTHERS, WHO WERE NOT ACTIVE, THEREIN, ALTHOUGH THIS DOCTRINE SUPPOSES AN ALIENATION THEREOF</head>
               <p>THE doctrine of imputation according to the Christian 
scheme, consists of two parts; first, of imputation of the 
apostasy of Adam and Eve to their posterity, commonly called 
original sin; and secondly, of the imputation of the merits or 
righteousness of Christ, who in scripture is called the second 
Adam, to mankind, or to the elect. This is a concise definition 
of the doctrine, and which will undoubtedly be admitted to be a 
just one by every denomination of men, who are acquainted with 
Christianity, whether they adhere to it or not. I therefore 
proceed to illustrate and explain the doctrine by transcribing a 
short, but very pertinent conversation, which in the early years 
of my manhood, I had with a Calvinistical divine: but previously 
remark, that I was educated in what is commonly called the 
Armenian principles, and among other tenets to reject the 
doctrine of original sin, this was the point at issue between the 
clergyman and me. In my turn I opposed the doctrine of original 
sin with philosophical reasoning, and as I thought had confuted 
the doctrine. The reverend gentleman heard me through patiently, 
and with candor replied, “your metaphysical reasoning are not to 
the purpose; inasmuch as you are a Christian, and hope and expect 
to be saved by the imputed righteousness of Christ to you; for 
you may as well be imputedly sinful as imputedly righteous. Nay, 
said he, if you hold to the doctrine of satisfaction and 
atonement by Christ, by so doing you pre-suppose the doctrine of 
apostasy or original sin to be in fact true; for said he, if 
mankind were not in a ruined and condemned state by nature, there 
could have been no need of a redeemer, but each individual would 
have been accountable to his creator and judge, upon the basis of 
his own moral agency. Further observing, that upon philosophical 
principles it was difficult to account for the doctrine of 
original sin, or original righteousness, yet as they were plain 
fundamental doctrines of the Christian faith, we ought to assent 
to the truth of them, and that from the divine authority of 
revelation. Notwithstanding, said he, if you will give me a 
philosophical explanation of original imputed righteousness, 
which you profess to believe, and expect salvation by, then I 
will return you a philosophical explanation of the doctrine of 
original sin; for it is plain, said he, that your objections lie 
with equal weight against original imputed righteousness, as 
against original imputed sin.” Upon which I had the candor to 
acknowledge to the worthy ecclesiastic, that upon the Christian 
plan, I perceived that the argument had fairly terminated against 
me. For at that time I dared not distrust the infallibility of 
revelation, much more to dispute it. However, this conversation 
was uppermost in my mind for several months after, and after many 
painful searches and researches after the truth respecting the 
doctrine of imputation, resolved at all events to abide the 
decision of rational argument in the premises, and on a full 
examination of both parts of the doctrine, rejected the whole; 
for on a fair scrutiny I found, that I must concede to it 
entirely or not at all, or else believe inconsistently as the 
clergyman had argued. 


</p>
               <p>Having opened and explained the doctrine, we proceed 
argumentatively to consider it. Imputation of sin or 
righteousness includes an alteration or transferring of the 
personal merits or demerits of sin or righteousness, from those 
who may be supposed to have been active in the one or the other, 
to others, who are premised not to have been active therein, 
otherwise it would not answer the Bible notion of imputation. For 
if sin or righteousness, vice or virtue, are imputable only to 
their respective personal proficient or actors, in this case 
original sin must have been imputed to Adam and Eve, to the 
exclusion of their posterity, and the righteousness of Christ as 
exclusively imputed to himself, precluding all others therefrom; 
so that both the sin of the first Adam and the righteousness of 
the second, would, on this stating of imputation, have been 
matters which respect merely the agency, of the demerits or 
merits of the two respective Adams themselves, and in which we 
could have had no blame, reward or concern, any more than in the 
building of Babel. 


</p>
               <p>This then is the question that determines the sequel of the 
dispute for or against the doctrine of imputation, viz. whether 
the personal merit or demerit of mankind, that is to say, their 
virtue or vice, righteousness or wickedness can be alienated, 
imputed to, or transferred from one person to another, or not? If 
any should object against this stating of the question now in 
dispute, it would be the same in reality as disputing against the 
doctrine of imputation itself, for imputation must transfer or 
change the personal merit or demerit of the sin or righteousness 
of mankind or not do it; if it does not do it, the whole notion 
of original sin or of righteousness, as being imputed from the 
first and second Adams to mankind, is without foundation, 
consequently, if there is any reality in the doctrine of 
imputation, it must needs transfer or change the guilt of 
original sin, or of the apostasy of Adam and Eve, to their 
posterity, or otherwise they could need no atonement or 
imputative righteousness as a remedy therefrom, but every 
individual of mankind would have stood accountable to their 
creator and judged on the basis of their own moral agency,” which 
is undoubted the true state of the case, respecting all rational 
and accountable beings; so that if the transferring of the 
individual merits or demerits of one person to another, is not 
contained in the act or doctrine of imputation, it contains 
nothing at all, but is a sound without a meaning, and after all 
the talk which has been in the world about it, we must finally 
adopt to old proverb, viz. every tub stands upon its own bottom.” 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s11.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - THE MORAL RECTITUDE OF THINGS FORECLOSES THE ACT OF IMPUTATION</head>
               <p>Imputation confounds virtue and vice, and saps the very 
foundation of moral government, both divine and human. Abstract 
the idea of personal merit and demerit, from the individuals of 
mankind, justice would be totally blind, and truth would be 
nullified, or at least excluded from any share in the 
administration of government. Admitting that moral good and evil 
has taken place in the system of rational agents, yet, on the 
position of imputation, it would be impossible, that a 
retribution of justice should be made to them by God or by man, 
except it be according to their respective personal merits and 
demerits; which would fix upon the basis of our own moral agency 
and accountability, and preclude the imputation of righteousness. 


</p>
               <p>Truth respects the reality of things, as they are in their 
various complicated and distinct natures, and necessarily 
conforms to all facts and realities. It exists in, by and with 
every thing that does exist, and that which does not and cannot 
exist, is fictitious and void of truth, as is the doctrine of 
imputation. It is a truth that some of the individuals of mankind 
are virtuous, and that others are vicious, and it is a truth, 
that the former merit peace of conscience and praise, and the 
latter horror of conscience and blame; for God has so constituted 
the nature of things, that moral goodness, naturally and 
necessarily tends to happiness in a moral sense, and moral evil 
as necessarily tends to the contrary; and as truth respects every 
thing, as being what it is, it respects nature, as God has 
constituted it, with its tendencies, dispositions, aptitudes and 
laws; and as the tendency of virtue is to mental happiness, and 
vice the contrary, they fall under the cognizance of truth, as 
all other facts necessarily do; which tendencies will for ever 
preclude imputation, by making us morally happy or miserable 
according to our works. 


</p>
               <p>Truth respects the eternal rules of unalterable rectitude 
and fitness, which comprehends all virtue, goodness and true 
happiness; and as sin and wickedness is no other but a deviation 
from the rules of eternal unerring order and reason, so truth 
respects it as unreasonable, unfit, unrighteous and unhappy 
deviation from moral rectitude, naturally tending to misery. This 
order of nature, comprehended under the terms of truth, must have 
been of all others the wisest and best; in fine it must have been 
absolutely perfect; for this order and harmony of things, could 
not have resulted from anything short of infinite wisdom, 
goodness and power, by which it is also upheld; and all just 
ideas of equity, or of natural and moral fitness must be learned 
from nature, and predicated on it; and nature predicated on the 
immutable perfection of a God; and to suppose that imputation, in 
any one instance has taken place, is the same as to suppose, that 
the eternal order, truth, justice, equity and fitness of things 
has been changed, and if so, the God of nature must needs have 
been a changeable being, and liable to alter his justice or order 
of nature, which is the same thing; for without the alteration of 
nature, and the tendency of it, there could be no such thing as 
imputation, but every one of the individuals of mankind would be 
ultimately happy or miserable, according as their respective 
proficiencies may be supposed to be either good or evil, 
agreeable to the order and tendency of nature before alluded to. 
For all rational and accountable agents must stand or fall upon 
the principles of the law of nature, except imputation alters the 
nature and tendency of things; of which the immutability of a God 
cannot admit. 


</p>
               <p>From what has been already argued on this subject, we infer, 
that as certain as the individuals of mankind are the proprietors 
of their own virtues or vices, so certain, the doctrine of 
imputation cannot be true. Furthermore, the supposed act or 
agency of imputing or transferring the personal merit or demerit 
of moral good or evil, alias, the sin of the first Adam, or the 
righteousness of the second Adam; to others of mankind, cannot be 
the act or exertion of either the first or second Adam, from whom 
original sin and righteousness is said to have been imputed. Nor 
can it be the act or doings of those individuals, to whom the 
supposed merit or demerit of original sin or righteous is 
premised to be imputed; so that both Adam and each individual of 
mankind are wholly excluded from acting any part in the premised 
act of imputation and are supposed to be altogether passive in 
the matter, and consequently it necessarily follows, that if 
there ever was such an act as that of imputation, it must have 
been the immediate and sovereign act of God, to the preclusion of 
the praise or blame of man. But to suppose, that God can impute 
the virtue or vice of the person of A, to be the virtue or vice 
of the person of B, is the same as to suppose that God can impute 
or change truth into falsehood or falsehood into truth, or that 
he can reverse the nature of moral rectitude itself, which is 
inadmissable. But admitting, that imputation was in the power and 
at the option of man, it is altogether probable that they would 
have been very sparing in imputing merit And happiness, but might 
nevertheless have been vastly liberal in imputing demerit and 
misery, from one to another, which is too farcical. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s11.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - CONTAINING REMARKS ON, THE ATONEMENT AND SATISFACTION FOR ORIGINAL SIN</head>
               <p>The doctrine of imputation is in every point of view 
incompatible with the moral perfections of God. We will premise, 
that the race of Adam in their respective generations was guilty 
of the apostasy, and obnoxious to the vindictive justice and 
punishment of God, and accordingly doomed to either an eternal or 
temporary punishment therefore, which is the Bible representation 
of the matter. What possibility could there have been of 
reversing the divine decree? It must be supposed to have been 
just, or it could not have had the divine sanction, and if so, a 
reversal of it would be unjust. But it would be still a greater 
injustice to lay the blame and vindictive punishment of a guilty 
race of condemned sinners upon an innocent and inoffensive being, 
for in this case the guilty would be exempted from their just 
punishment, and the innocent unjustly suffer for it, which holds 
up to view two manifest injustices; the first consists in not 
doing justice to the guilty, and the second in actually punishing 
the innocent, which instead of atoning for sin, would add sin to 
sin, of injustice to injustice; and after all, if it was ever 
just, that the race of Adam should have been punished for the 
imputed sin of their premised original ancestor, be that 
punishment what it will it is so still, notwithstanding the 
atonement, for the eternal justice and reason of things can never 
be altered. This justice always defeats the possibility of 
satisfaction for sin by way of a mediator. 


</p>
               <p>That physical evils may and have been propagated by natural 
generation, none can dispute, for that the facts themselves are 
obvious. But that moral evil can be thus propagated, is 
altogether chimerical, for we are not born criminals. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s11.4" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION IV - REMARKS ON REDEMPTION, WROUGHT OUT BY INFLICTING THE DEMERITS OF SIN UPON THE INNOCENT, WOULD BE UNJUST, AND THAT IT COULD CONTAIN NO MERCY OR GOODNESS TO THE UNIVERSALITY OF BEING</head>
               <p>THE practice of imputing one person's crime to another, in 
capital offenses among men, so that the innocent should suffer 
for the guilty, has never yet been introduced into any court of 
judicature in the world, or so much as practiced in any civilized 
country; and the manifest reason in this, as in all other cases 
of imputation, is the same, viz. it confounds personal merit and 
demerit. 


</p>
               <p>The murderer ought to suffer for the demerit of his crime, 
but if the court exclude the idea of personal demerit (guilt 
being always the inherent property of the guilty and of them 
only) they might as well sentence one person to death for the 
murder as another: for justice would be wholly blind was it not 
predicated on the idea of the fact of a personal demerit, on the 
identical person who was guilty of the murder: nor is it possible 
to reward merit abstractly considered from its personal agents. 
These are facts that universally hold good in human government. 
The same reasons cannot fail to hold good in the divine mind as 
in that of the human, for the rules of justice are essentially 
the same whether applied to the one or to the other, having their 
uniformity in the eternal truth and reason of things. 


</p>
               <p>But it is frequently objected, that inasmuch as one person 
can pay, satisfy and discharge a cash debt for another redeem him 
from prison and set him at liberty, therefore Jesus Christ might 
become responsible for the sins of mankind, or of the elect, and 
by suffering their punishments atone for them and free them from 
their condemnation. But it should be considered, that comparisons 
darken or reflect light upon an argument according as they are 
either pertinent or impertinent thereto; we will therefore 
examine the comparison, and see if it will with propriety apply 
to the atonement. 


</p>
               <p>Upon the Christian scheme, Christ the Son was God, and equal 
with God the Father, or with God the Holy Ghost, and therefore 
original sin must be considered to be an offence equally against 
each of the persons of the premised Trinity, and being of a 
criminal nature could not be discharged or satisfied by cash or 
produce, as debts of a civil contract are, but by suffering; and 
it has already been proved to be inconsistent with the divine or 
human government, to inflict the punishment of the guilty upon 
the innocent, though one man may discharge another's debt in 
cases where lands, chattels or cash are adequate to it; but what 
capital offender was ever discharged by such commodities? 


</p>
               <p>Still there remains a difficulty on the part of 
Christianity, in accounting for one of the persons in the 
premised Trinity ratifying a debt due to the impartial justice of 
the unity of the three persons. For God the Son to suffer the 
condemnation of guilt in behalf of man, would not only be unjust 
in itself, but incompatible with his divinity, and the 
retribution of the justice of the premised Trinity of persons in 
the god-head (of whom God the Son must be admitted to be one) 
toward mankind; for this would be the same as to suppose God to 
be judge, criminal and executioner, which is inadmissible. 


</p>
               <p>But should we admit for argument's sake, that God suffered 
for original sin, yet taking into one complex idea the whole 
mental system of beings, universally, both finite and infinite, 
there could have been no display of grace, mercy, or goodness to 
being in general, in such a supposed redemption of mankind; 
inasmuch as the same quantity or degree of evil is supposed to 
have taken place upon being, universally considered, as would 
have taken place, had finite individuals, or the race of Adam, 
suffered according to their respective demerits. 


</p>
               <p>Should we admit that there is a Trinity of persons in the 
divine essence, yet the one could not suffer without the other, 
for essence cannot be divided in suffering, any more than in 
enjoyment. The essence of God is that which includes the divine 
nature, and the same identical nature must necessarily partake of 
the same glory, honor, power, wisdom, goodness and absolute 
uncreated and unlimited perfection, and is equally exempted from 
weakness and suffering. Therefore, as certain as Christ suffered 
he was not God, but whether he is supposed to be God or man, or 
both, he could not in justice have suffered for original sin, 
which must have been the demerit of its perpetrators as before 
argued. 


</p>
               <p>supposing Christ to have been both God and man, he must have 
existed in two distinct essences, viz. the essence of God and the 
essence of man. And if he existed in two distinct and separate 
essences, there could be no union between the divine and human 
natures. But if there is any such thing as an hypostatical union 
between the divine and human natures, it must unite both in one 
essence, which is impossible: for the divine nature being 
infinite, could admit of no addition or enlargement and 
consequently cannot allow of a union with any nature whatever. 
Was such an union possible in itself, yet, for a superior nature 
to unite with an inferior one in the same essence, would be 
degrading to the former, as it would put both natures on a level 
by constituting an identity of nature: the consequences whereof 
would either deify man, or divest God of his divinity, and reduce 
him to the rank and condition of a creature; inasmuch as the 
united essence must be denominated either divine or human. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c12" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER XII</head>
            <div xml:id="s12.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I -  OF THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF TRANSLATING AN INFALLIBLE REVELATION FROM ITS ORIGINAL COPIES, AND PRESERVING IT ENTIRE THROUGH ALL THE REVOLUTIONS OF THE WORLD, AND VICISSITUDES OF HUMAN LEARNING TO OUR TIME</head>
               <p>ADMITTING for argument sake that the Scriptures of the Old 
and New Testament were originally of divine supernatural 
inspiration, and that their first manuscript copies were the 
infallible institutions of God, yet to trace them from their 
respective ancient dead languages, and different and diverse 
translations, from the obscure hieroglyphical pictures of 
characters, in which they were first written, through all the 
vicissitudes and alterations of human learning, prejudices, 
superstitions, enthusiasms and diversities of interests and 
manners, to our time, so as to present us with a perfect edition 
from its premised infallible original manuscript copies would be 
impossible. The various and progressive methods of learning, with 
the insurmountable difficulties of translating any supposed 
antiquated written revelation would not admit of it, as the 
succeeding observations on language and grammar will fully 
evince. 


</p>
               <p>In those early ages of learning, hieroglyphics were 
expressive of ideas; for instance, a snake quirted (a position 
common to that venomous reptile) was an emblem of eternity, and 
the picture of a lion, a representation of power, and so every 
beast, bird, reptile, insect and fish, had in their respective 
pictures, particular ideas annexed to them, which varied with the 
arbitrary custom and common consent of the several separate 
nations, among whom this way of communicating ideas was 
practiced, in some sense analogous to what is practiced at this 
day by different nations, in connecting particular ideas to 
certain sounds or words written in characters, which according to 
certain rules of grammar constitute the several languages. But 
the hieroglyphical manner of writing by living emblems, and 
perhaps in some instances by other pictures, was very abstruse, 
and inadequate to communicate that multiplicity and diversity of 
ideas which are requisite for the purpose of history, 
argumentation or general knowledge in any of the sciences or 
concerns of life; which mystical way of communicating ideas 
underwent a variety of alterations and improvements, though not 
so much as that of characters and grammar has done; for in the 
hieroglyphical way of communicating their ideas, there was no 
such thing as spelling, or what is now called orthography, which 
has been perpetually refining and altering, ever since 
characters, syllables, words or grammar have been brought into 
use, and which will admit of correction and improvement as long 
as mankind continue in the world. For which reason the original 
of all languages is absorbed and lost in the multiplicity of 
alterations and refinements, which have in all ages taken place, 
so that it is out of the power of all Etymologists and 
Lexiconists now living, to explain the ideas, which were 
anciently connected with those hieroglyphical figures or words, 
and which may have composed the original of any language, written 
in characters, in those obsolete and antiquated ages, when 
learning and science were in their infancy: since the beneficial 
art of printing has arrived to any considerable degree of 
perfection, the etymology of words, in the scientifical and 
learned languages, has been considerably well understood: though 
imperfectly, as the various opinions of the learned concerning it 
may witness. But since the era of printing, the knowledge of the 
ancient learning has been in a great measure, or in most 
respects, wholly lost; and inasmuch as the modern substitute is 
much better, it is no loss at all. Some of the old English 
authors are, at this day quite unintelligible, and others in 
their respective latter publications, more or less so. The last 
century and a half has done more towards the perfecting of 
grammar, and purifying the languages than the world had ever done 
before. 


</p>
               <p>I do not understand Latin, Greek or Hebrew, in which 
languages, it is said, that the several original manuscripts of 
the Scriptures were written; but I am informed by the learned 
therein, that, like other languages, they have gone through their 
respective alterations and refinements, which must have been the 
case, except they reached their greatest perfection in their 
first composition; of which the progressive condition of man 
could not admit. So that the learned in those languages, at this 
day, know but little or nothing how they were spoken or written 
when the first manuscript copies of the Scriptures were composed; 
and consequently, are not able to inform us, whether their 
present translations do, any of them, perfectly agree with their 
respective original premised infallible manuscript copies or not. 
And inasmuch as the several English translations of the Bible do 
materially differ from each other, it evinces the confused and 
blundering condition in which it has been handed down to us. 


</p>
               <p>The clergy often informs us from the desk, that the 
translation of the Bible, which is now in use in this country, is 
erroneous, after having read such and such a passage of it, in 
either Latin, Greek or Hebrew, they frequently give us to 
understand, that instead of the present translation, it should 
have been rendered thus and thus in English, but never represent 
to us how it was read and understood in the antiquated and 
mystical figures or characters of those languages, when the 
manuscripts of Scripture were first written, or how it has been 
preserved and handed down entire, through every refinement of 
those languages, to the present condition of Latin, Greek and 
Hebrew. Probably this is too abstruse a series of retrospective 
learning for their scholarship, and near or quite as foreign from 
their knowledge as from that of their hearers. 


</p>
               <p>It is not to be supposed that all the alterations which have 
taken place in language, have been merely by improving it. In 
many instances, ignorance, accident or custom has varied it to 
its disadvantage, but it has nevertheless been subject to 
correction, and generally speaking has been altered for the 
better, yet, by one means or other has been so fluctuating and 
unstable, as that an infallible revelation could not have been 
genuinely preserved, through all the vicissitudes and revolutions 
of learning, for more than seventeen hundred years last past to 
this day. 


</p>
               <p>The diversity of the English language is represented with 
great accuracy by Mr, Samuel Johnson, the celebrated 
lexicographer, in the samples of different ages, in his history 
of the English language, subjoined to the preface of the 
dictionary, to which the curious are referred for the observance 
of the various specimens. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s12.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - THE VARIETY OF ANNOTATIONS AND EXPOSITIONS OF THE SCRIPTURES, TOGETHER WITH THE DIVERSITY OF SECTARIES EVINCES THEIR FALLIBILITY</head>
               <p>EVERY commentary and annotation on the Bible, implicitly 
declares its fallibility; for if the Scriptures remained genuine 
and entire, they would not stand in need of commentaries and 
expositions, but would shine in their infallible lustre and 
purity without them. What an idle phantom it is for mortals to 
assay to illustrate and explain to mankind, that which God may be 
supposed to have undertaken to do, by the immediate inspiration 
of his spirit? Do they understand how to define or explain it 
better than God may be supposed to have done? This is not 
supposable; upon what ground then do these multiplicity of 
comments arise, except it be pre-supposed that the present 
translations of the Bible have, by some means or other, became 
fallible and imperfect, and therefore needs to be rectified and 
explained? and if so, it has lost the stamp of divine authority; 
provided in its original composition it may be supposed to have 
been possessed of it. 


</p>
               <p>The diversity of the English language is represented with 
great accuracy by Mr, Samuel Johnson, the celebrated 
lexicographer, in the samples of different ages, in his history 
of the English language, subjoined to the preface of the 
dictionary to which the curious are referred for the observance 
of the various specimens. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s12.3" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION III - THE VARIETY OF ANNOTATIONS AND EXPOSITIONS OF THE SCRIPTURES, TOGETHER WITH THE DIVERSITY OF SECTARIES EVINCE THEIR FALLIBILITY</head>
               <p>EVERY commentary and annotation on the Bible, implicitly 
declares its fallibility; for if the Scriptures remained genuine 
and entire, they would not stand in need of commentaries and 
expositions, but would shine in their infallible lustre and purity 
without them. What an idle phantom it is for mortals to assay to 
illustrate and explain to mankind, that which God may be supposed 
to have undertaken to do, by the immediate inspiration of his 
spirit? Do they understand how to define or explain it better than 
God may be supposed to have done? This is not supposable; upon what 
ground then do these multiplicity of comments arise, except it be 
presupposed that the present translations of the Bible have, by 
some means or other, become fallible and imperfect, and therefore 
need to be rectified and explained? and if so, it has lost the 
stamp of divine authority; provided in its original composition it 
may be supposed to have been possessed of it. 


</p>
               <p>To construe or spiritualize the Bible is the same as to 
inspire it over again, by the judgment, fancy or enthusiasm of men; 
and thus the common people, by receiving God's supposed revelation 
at secondary hands whether at the thousandth or ten thousandth 
remove from its first premised inspiration they know not) cannot in 
fact he taught by the revelation of God. Add to this diverse and 
clashing expositions of the Bible, among which are so many flagrant 
proofs of the fallibility and uncertainty of such teachings, as 
must convince even bigots, that every one of these expositions are 
erroneous, except their own! 


</p>
               <p>It has been owing to different comments on the Scriptures, 
that Christians have been divided into sectaries. Every 
commentator, who could influence a party to embrace his comment, 
put himself, at the head of a division of Christians; as Luther, 
Calvin, and Arminius, laid the foundation of the sectaries who bear 
their names; and the Socinians were called after the Scismatical 
Socinius; the same may be said of each of the sectaries. Thus it is 
that different commentaries or acceptations of the original meaning 
of the Scriptures, have divided the Christian world into divisions 
and subdivisions of which it consists at present. Nor was there 
ever a division or subdivision among Jews, Christians or 
Mahometans, respecting their notions or opinions of religion, but 
what was occasioned by commenting on the Scriptures, or else by 
latter pretended inspired revelations from God in addition thereto. 
The law of Moses was the first pretended immediate revelation from 
God, which respects the Bible, and after that in succession the 
several revelations of the prophets, and last of all (in the 
Christian system) the revelations of Jesus Christ and apostles, who 
challenged a right of abolishing the priesthood of Moses; Christ 
claiming to be the antitype of which the institution of sacrifices 
and ceremonial part of the law of Moses was emblematical; but this 
infringement of the prerogative of the Levitical priests gave such 
offence, not only to them, but to the Jews as a nation, that they 
rejected Christianity, and have not subscribed to the divine 
authority of it to this day, holding to the law of Moses and the 
prophets. However Christianity made a great progress in the world, 
and has been very much divided into sectaries, by the causes 
previously assigned. 


</p>
               <p>“Mahomet taking notice of the numerous sects and divisions 
among Christians, in his journeys to Palestine, &amp;c., thought it 
would not be difficult to introduce a new religion, and make 
himself high priest and sovereign of the people.” This he finally 
effected, prosecuting' his scheme so far, that he new modelled the 
Scriptures, presenting them, (as he said,) in their original 
purity, and called his disciples after his own name. He gained 
great numbers of proselytes and became their sovereign in civil, 
military and spiritual matters, instituted the order of mystical 
priesthood, and gave the world a new Bible by the name of the 
Alcoran; which he gives us to understand was communicated to him 
from God, by the intermediate agency of the angel Gabriel, chapter 
by chapter. “His disciples at this day inhabit a great part of the 
richest countries in the world, and are supposed to be more 
numerous than the Christians,” and are as much, if not more, 
divided into sectaries, from causes similar to those which produced 
the division of Christians, viz.: the different commentators on, 
and expositions of the Alcoran. The Mufti, or priests, represented 
the doctrines and precepts of the Alcoran in a variety of lights 
different from each other, each of them claiming the purity of the 
original and infallible truths prescribed to the world by Mahomet, 
their great reformer of Christianity. For though the several 
sectaries of Mahometans differ, respecting the meaning of their 
Alcoran, yet they all hold to the truth and divine authority 
thereof, the same as the Christian sectaries do concerning their 
Bible: so that all the different opinions which ever did, or at 
present do subsist, between Jews, Christians and Mahometans, may be 
resolved into one consideration, viz.: the want of a right 
understanding of the original of the Scriptures. All sat out at 
first, as they imagined, from the truth of God's word, (except the 
impostors,) concluded that they had an infallible guide, and have, 
by one means or other, been guided into as many opposite faiths as 
human invention has been capable of fabricating; each sect among 
the whole, exulting in their happy ignorance, believing that they 
are favored with an infallible revelation for their direction. 


</p>
               <p>It alters not the present argument, whether the Scriptures 
were originally true or not; for though they be supposed to have 
been either true or false, or a mixture of both, yet they could 
never have been handed down entire and uncorrupted to the present 
time, through the various changes and perpetual refinements of 
learning and language; this is not merely a matter of speculative 
and argumentative demonstration, the palpable certainty of it 
stands confessed in every Jewish, Christian and Mahometan sectary. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s12.4" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION IV - ON THE COMPILING OF THE MANUSCRIPTS OF THE SCRIPTURES INTO ONE  VOLUME, AND OF ITS SEVERAL TRANSLATIONS. THE INFALLIBILITY OF THE POPES, AND OF THEIR CHARTERED RIGHTS TO REMIT OR RETAIN SINS, AND OF THE IMPROPRIETY OF THEIR BEING TRUSTED WITH A REVELATION FROM GOD</head>
               <p>THE manuscripts of Scripture, which are said to have been 
originally written on scrolls of bark, long before the invention of 
paper or printing, and are said to compose our present Bible, were 
in a loose and confused condition, scattered about in the world, 
deposited nobody knows how or where, and at different times were 
compiled into one volume. The four gospels are by the learned 
generally admitted to have been wrote many years after Christ, 
particularly that of St. John: and sundry other gospels in the 
primitive ages of Christianity were received as divine by some of 
its then sectaries, which have unfortunately not met with 
approbation in subsequent eras of the despotism of the church. 


</p>
               <p>The translation of the Scriptures by Ptolemy Philadelphus, 
king of Egypt, was before Christ, and therefore could not include 
the writings of the New Testament in his translation, and “whether 
by seventy-two interpreters, and in the manner as is commonly 
related, is justly questioned.” But where, at what time, and by 
whom, the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament were first 
compiled into one volume, is what I do not understand: but was it 
a longer or shorter period after Christ, it alters not the present 
argument materially, since the scattered manuscripts were in a 
loose and confused condition for a long time; and the grand query 
is, when the compilers of those manuscripts collected them together 
in order to form them into one volute, how they could have 
understood the supposed divine writings, or symbolical figures, 
with the ideas originally connected with them, and distinguish them 
from those which were merely human, and in comparison of the others 
are called profane. To understand this distinction would require a 
new revelation, as much as may be supposed necessary for composing 
the original manuscripts themselves; but it is not pretended that 
the compilers or translators of the Bible were inspired by the 
divine spirit in the doing and completing their respective 
business; so that human reason, fancy, or some latent design, must 
needs have been substituted, in distinguishing the supposed divine 
and human writings apart, and in giving a perfect transcript of the 
original manuscripts. Now admitting that the compilers were really 
honest principled men, (which is more than we are certain of) it 
would follow, that they would be obliged to cull out of the mixed 
mass of premised divine and human writings, such as to them 
appeared to be divine, which would make them to be the sole 
arbitrators of the divinity that they were compiling to be handed 
down to posterity as the infallible word of God, which is a great 
stretch of prerogative for mortal, and fallible man to undertake, 
and as great a weakness in others to subscribe to it, as of divine 
authority. 


</p>
               <p>Mr. Fanning, in his dictionary definition of the word Bible, 
subjoins the following history of its translations: “The 
translation of this sacred volume was begun very early in this 
kingdom,” [England,] “and some part of it was done by King Alfred. 
Adelmus translated the Psalms into Saxon in 709, other parts were 
done by Edfrid or Ecbert in 730, the whole by Bede in 731, Trevisa 
published the whole in English in 1357. Tindals was brought higher 
in 1534, revised and altered in 1538, published with a preface of 
Crammers in 1549. In 1551, another translation was published, which 
was revised by several bishops, was printed with their alterations 
in 1560. In 1607, a new translation was published by authority, 
which is that in present use,” From this account it appears, that 
from the first translation of the Bible by Trevisa, into English, 
in 1357, it has been revised, altered, and passed through six 
different publications, the last of which is said to have been done 
by authority, which I conclude means that of the king, whose 
prerogative in giving us a divine revelation, can no more be 
esteemed valid than that of other men, though he may be possessed 
of an arbitrary power within the limits of his realm to prevent any 
further correction and publication of it. As to the changes it 
underwent previous to Trevisa's translation, in which time it was 
most exposed to corruptions of every kind, we will not at present 
particularly consider, but only observe that those translations 
could not, every one of them, be perfect, since they were diverse 
from each other, in consequence of their respective revisions and 
corrections; nor is it possible that the Bible, in any of its 
various editions could be perfect, any more than all and every one 
of those persons who have acted a part in transmitting them down to 
our time may be supposed to be so: for perfection does not pertain 
to man, but is the essential prerogative of God. 


</p>
               <p>The Roman Catholics, to avoid the evils of imperfection, 
fallibility and imposture of man, have set up the Pope to be 
infallible; this is their security against being misguided in their 
faith, and by ascribing holiness to him, secure themselves from 
imposture; a deception which is incompatible with holiness. So that 
in matters of faith, they have nothing more to do, but to believe 
as their church believes. Their authority for absolving or 
retaining sins is very extraordinary; however, their charter is 
from Christ, (admitting them to be his vicars, and the successors 
of St. Peter,) and the present English translation of the Bible 
warrants it. The commission is in these words: And I will give unto 
thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whoever thou shalt bind 
on earth, shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou shall loose 
on earth, shall be loosed in heaven. Whosesoever sins ye remit, 
they are remitted unto them, and whosesoever sins ye retain, they 
are retained.” That St. Peter or his successors should have a power 
of binding and determining the state and condition of mankind in 
the world to come by remitting or retaining sins, is too great a 
power to be intrusted to men, as it interferes with the providence 
and prerogative of God, who on this position would be exempted from 
judging the world, (as it would interfere with the chartered 
prerogative of the Popes in their remitting or retaining of sins, 
admitting it to have been genuine,) precluding the divine 
retribution of justice; we may, therefore, from the authority of 
reason, conclude it to be spurious. It was a long secession of ages 
that all christendom were dupes to the See of Rome, in which time 
it is too evident to be denied, that the holy fathers obtruded a 
great deal of pious fraud on their devotees; all public worship was 
read to the people in unknown languages, as it is to this day in 
Roman Catholic countries. Nor has the Bible, in those countries, to 
this time, been permitted to be published in any but the learned 
languages, which affords great opportunity to the Romish church to 
fix it to answer their lucrative purposes. Nor is it to be supposed 
that they want the inclination to do it. The before recited grant 
of the power of the absolution of sin, to St Peter in particular, 
was undoubtedly of their contrivance. 


</p>
               <p>In short, reason would prompt us to conclude, that had God, in 
very deed, made a revelation of his mind and will to mankind, as a 
rule of duty and practice to them, and to be continued as such to 
the latest posterity, he would in the course of his providence have 
ordered matters so that it should have been deposited, translated, 
and kept, in the hands of men of a more unexceptionable character 
than those holy cheats can pretend to. 


</p>
               <p>Witchcraft and priestcraft, were introduced into this world 
together, in its non-age; and has gone on, hand in hand together, 
until about half a century past, when witchcraft began to be 
discredited, and is at present almost exploded, both in Europe and 
America. This discovery has depreciated priestcraft, on the scale 
of at least fifty per cent. per annum, and rendered it highly 
probable that the improvement of succeeding generations, in the 
knowledge of nature and science, will exalt the reason of mankind, 
above the tricks and impostures of priests, and bring them back to 
the religion of nature and truth; ennoble their minds, and be the 
means of cultivating concord, and mutual love in society, and of 
extending charity, and good will to all intelligent beings 
throughout the universe; exalt the divine character, and lay a 
permanent foundation for truth and reliance on providence; 
establish our hopes and prospects of immortality, and be conducive 
to every desirable consequence, in this world, and that which is to 
come; which will crown the scene of human felicity in this 
sublunary state of being and probation; which can never be 
completed while we are under the power and tyranny of priests, 
since as it ever has, it ever will be their interest, to invalidate 
the law of nature and reason, in order to establish systems 
incompatible therewith. 

</p>
            </div>
         </div>
         <div xml:id="c13" type="chapter">
            <head>CHAPTER XIII</head>
            <div xml:id="s13.1" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION I - MORALITY DERIVED FROM NATURAL FITNESS, AND NOT FROM TRADITION</head>
               <p>SUCH parts or passages of the Scriptures as inculcate 
morality, have a tendency to subserve mankind, the same as all 
other public investigations or teachings of it, may be supposed 
to have; but are neither better or worse for having a place in 
the volume of those writings denominated canonical; for morality 
does not derive its nature from books, but from the fitness of 
things; and though it may be more or less, interspersed through 
the pages of the Alcoran, its purity and rectitude would remain 
the same; for it is founded in eternal right; and whatever 
writings, books or oral speculations, best illustrate or teach 
this moral science, should have the preference. The knowledge of 
this as well as all other sciences, is acquired from reason and 
experience, and (as it is progressively obtained) may with 
propriety be called, the revelation of God, which he has revealed 
to us in the constitution of our rational natures; and as it is 
congenial with reason and truth, cannot (like other revelations) 
partake of imposture. This is natural religion, and could be 
derived from none other but God. I have endeavored, in this 
treatise, to prune this religion from those excrescences, with 
which craft on the one hand, and ignorance on the other, have 
loaded it; and to hold it up to view in its native simplicity, 
free from alloy; and have throughout the contents of the volume, 
addressed the reason of mankind, and not their passions, 
traditions or prejudices; for which cause, it is no ways probable 
that it will meet with any considerable approbation. 


</p>
               <p>Most of the human race, by one means or other are 
prepossessed with principles opposed to the religion of reason. 
In these parts of America, they are most generally taught, that 
they are born into the world in a state of enmity to God and 
moral good, and are under his wrath and curse, that the way to 
heaven and future blessedness is, out of their power to pursue, 
and that it is incumbered with mysteries which none but the 
priests can unfold, that we must “be born again,” have a special 
kind of faith, and be regenerated; or in fine, that human nature, 
which they call “the old man,” must be destroyed, perverted, or 
changed by them, and by them new modelled, before it can be 
admitted into the heavenly kingdom. Such a plan of superstition, 
as far as it obtains credit in the world, subjects mankind to 
sacerdotal empire; which is erected on the imbecility of human 
nature. Such of mankind, as break the fetters of their education, 
remove such other obstacles as are in their way, and have the 
confidence publicly to talk rational, exalt reason to its just 
supremacy, and vindicate truth and the ways of God's providence 
to men, are sure to be stamped with the epithet of irreligious, 
infidel, profane, and the like. But it is often observed of such 
a man, that he is morally honest, and as often replied, “what of 
that? Morality will carry no man to heaven.” So that all the 
satisfaction the honest man can have while the superstitious are 
squabbling hell fire at him, is to retort back upon them that 
they are priest ridden. 


</p>
               <p>The manner of the existence, and intercourse of human souls, 
after the dissolution of their bodies by death, being 
inconceivable to us in this life, and all manner of intelligence 
between us and departed souls impracticable, the priests have it 
in their power to amuse us with a great variety of visionary 
apprehensions of things in the world to come, which, while in 
this life, we cannot contradict from experience, the test of 
great part of our certainty (especially to those of ordinary 
understandings) and having introduced mysteries into their 
religion, make it as incomprehensible to us, (in this natural 
state) as the manner of our future existence; and from Scripture 
authority, having invalidated reason as being carnal and 
depraved, they proceed further to teach us from the same 
authority, that, “the natural man knoweth not the things of the 
spirit, for they are foolishness unto him, neither can he know 
them for they are spiritually discerned.” A spiritualizing 
teacher is nearly as well acquainted with the kingdom of heaven, 
as a man can be with his home lot. He knows the road to heaven 
and eternal blessedness, to which happy regions, with the 
greatest assurance, he presumes to pilot his dear disciples and 
unfold to them the mysteries of the canonical writings, and of 
the world to come; they catch the enthusiasm and see with the 
same sort of spiritual eyes, with which they can pierce religion 
through and through, and understand the spiritual meaning of the 
Scriptures, which before had been “a dead letter” to them, 
particularly the revelations of St. John the divine, and the 
allusion of the horns therein mentioned. The most obscure and 
unintelligible passages of the Bible, come within the compass of 
their spiritual discerning as apparently as figures do to a 
mathematician: then they can sing songs out of the Canticles, 
saying, “I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine;” and being at 
a loose from the government of reason, please themselves with any 
fanaticism they like best, as that of their being “snatched as 
brands out of the burning, to enjoy the special and eternal favor 
of God, not from any worthiness or merit in them, but merely from 
the sovereign will and pleasure of God, while millions of 
millions, as good by nature and practice as they, were left to 
welter eternally, under the scalding drops of divine vengeance;” 
not considering that if it was consistent with the perfections of 
God to save them, his salvation could not fail to have been 
uniformly extended to all others, whose circumstances may be 
supposed to be similar to, or more deserving than theirs, for 
equal justice cannot fail to apply in all cases in which equal 
justice demands it. But these deluded people resolve the divine 
government altogether into sovereignty: “even so Father, for so 
it seemed good in thy sight,” And as they exclude reason and 
justice from their imaginary notions of religion, they also 
exclude it from the providence or moral government of God. 
Nothing is more common, in the part of the country where I was 
educated, than to hear those infatuated people, in their public 
and private addresses, acknowledge to their creator, from the 
desk and elsewhere, “hadst thou, O Lord, laid judgment to the 
line and righteousness to the plummet, we had been in the grave 
with the dead and in hell with the damned, long before this 
time.” Such expressions from the creature to the creator are 
profane, and utterly incompatible with the divine character. 
Undoubtedly, (all things completely considered) the providence of 
God to man is just, inasmuch as it has the divine approbation. 


</p>
               <p>The superstitious thus set up a spiritual discerning, 
independent of, and in opposition to reason, and their mere 
imaginations pass with each other, and with themselves, for 
infallible truth. Hence it is, that they despise the progressive 
and wearisome reasonings of philosophers (which must be admitted 
to be a painful method of arriving at truth) but as it is the 
only way in which we can acquire it, I have pursued the old 
natural road of ratiocination, concluding, that as this spiritual 
discerning is altogether inadequate to the management of any of 
the concerns of life, or of contributing any assistance or 
knowledge towards the perfecting of the arts and sciences, it is 
equally unintelligible and insignificant in matters of religion: 
and therefore conclude, that if the human race in general, could 
be prevailed upon to exercise common sense in religions concerns, 
those spiritual fictions would cease, and be succeeded by reason 
and truth. 

</p>
            </div>
            <div xml:id="s13.2" type="Section">
               <head>SECTION II - OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THE EXERCISE OF REASON, AND PRACTICE OF MORALITY, IN ORDER TO THE HAPPINESS OF MANKIND</head>
               <p>THE period of life is very uncertain, and at the longest is 
but short; a few years bring us from infancy to manhood, a few 
more, to a dissolution; pain, sickness and death are the 
necessary consequences of animal life. Through life we struggle 
with physical evils, which eventually are certain to destroy our 
earthily composition; and well would it be for us did evils end 
here; but alas moral evil has been more or less predominant in 
our agency, and though natural evil is unavoidable, yet moral 
evil may be prevented or remedied by the exercise of virtue. 
Morality is therefore of more importance to us than any or all 
other attainments; as it is a habit of mind, which, from a 
retrospective consciousness of our agency in this life, we should 
carry with us into our succeeding state of existence, as an 
acquired appendage of our rational nature, and as the necessary 
means of our mental happiness. Virtue and vice are the only 
things in this world, which, with our souls, are capable of 
surviving death; the former is the rational and only procuring 
cause of all intellectual happiness, and the latter of conscious 
guilt and misery; and therefore, our indispensable duty and 
ultimate interest is, to love, cultivate and improve the one, as 
the means of our greatest good, and to hate and abstain from the 
other, as productive of our greatest evil. And in order thereto, 
we should so far divest ourselves of the encumbrances of this 
world, (which are too apt to engross our attention) as to inquire 
a consistent system of the knowledge of religious duty, and make 
it our constant endeavor in life to act conformably to it. The 
knowledge of the being, perfections, creation and providence of 
God, and of the immortality of our souls, is the foundation of 
religion; which has been particularly illustrated in the four 
first chapters of this discourse. And as the Pagan, Jewish, 
Christian and Mahometan countries of the world have been 
overwhelmed with a multiplicity of revelations diverse from each 
other, and which, by their respective promulgators, are said to 
have been immediately inspired into their souls by the spirit of 
God, or immediately communicated to them by the intervening 
agency of angels (as in the instance of the invisible Gabriel to 
Mahomet) and as those revelations have been received and 
credited, by afar the greater part of the inhabitants of the 
several countries of the world (on whom they have been obtruded) 
as supernaturally revealed by God or angels, and which, in 
doctrine and discipline, are in most respects repugnant to each 
other, it fully evinces their imposture, and authorizes us, 
without a lengthy course of arguing, to determine with certainty, 
that not one of them had their original from God; as they clash 
with each other, which is ground of high probability against the 
authenticity of each of them. 


</p>
               <p>A revelation, that may be supposed to be really of the 
institution of God, must also be supposed to be perfectly 
consistent or uniform, and to be able to stand the test of truth; 
therefore such pretended revelations, As are tendered to us as 
the contrivance of heaven, which do not bear that test, we may be 
morally certain, was either originally a deception, or has since, 
by adulteration become spurious. 


</p>
               <p>Reason therefore must be the standard by which we determine 
the respective claims of revelation; for otherwise we may as well 
subscribe to the divinity of the one as of the other, or to the 
whole of them, or to none at all. So likewise on this thesis, if 
reason rejects the whole of those revelations, we ought to return 
to the religion of nature and reason. 


</p>
               <p>Undoubtedly it is our duty, and for our best good, that we 
occupy and improve the faculties, with which our creator has 
endowed us, but so far as prejudice, or prepossession of opinion 
prevails over our minds, in the same proportion, reason is 
excluded from our theory or practice. Therefore if we would 
acquire useful knowledge, we must first divest ourselves of those 
impediments and sincerely endeavor to search out the truth: and 
draw our conclusions from reason and just argument, which will 
never conform to our inclination, interest or fancy but we must 
conform to that if we would judge rightly. As certain as we 
determine contrary to reason, we make a wrong conclusion; 
therefore, our wisdom is, to conform to the nature and reason of 
things, as well in religious matters, as in other sciences. 
Preposterously absurd would it be, to negative the exercise of 
reason in religious concerns, and yet, be actuated by it in all 
other and less occurrences of life. All our knowledge of things 
is derived from God, in and by the order of nature, out of which 
we cannot perceive, reflect or understand any thing whatsoever; 
our external senses are natural; and those objects are also 
natural; so that ourselves, and all things about us, and our 
knowledge collected therefrom, is natural, and not supernatural; 
as argued in the fifth chapter. 


</p>
               <p>An unjust composition never fails to contain error and 
falsehood. Therefore an unjust connection of ideas is not derived 
from nature, but from the imperfect composition of man. 
Misconnection of ideas is the same as misjudging, and has no 
positive existence, being merely a creature of the imagination; 
but nature and truth are real and uniform; and the rational mind 
by reasoning, discerns the uniformity, and is thereby enabled to 
make a just composition of ideas, which will stand the test of 
truth. But the fantastical illuminations of the credulous and 
superstitious part of mankind, proceed from weakness, and as far 
as they take place in the world subvert the religion of REASON, 
NATURE and TRUTH. 


</p>
               <p>ETHAN ALLEN 

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