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any real effect; and by the evasion of them even illiterate persons and children, who were never intended to take orders, might enjoy benefices.'

It is to be lamented that these abuses were not corrected at the reformation of the Church of England. On the contrary, it is apprehended that many The Council of Trent pretended to of them are increased since that period, remedy the evil of pluralities, but they so as to exceed what is generally to be made it worse by admitting of pensions, found of that nature in some Roman as an equivalent for the change of Catholic countries. In consequence of benefices and other purposes. For this, though the funds for the mainthese came to be granted by the court tenance of the clergy are sufficiently of Rome without any consideration, ample, the inequality in the distribuand even to children. They were also tion of them is shameful, and they more convenient, and made church pre- bear no proportion to the services or ferment a more easy traffic in many merit of those who receive them. This Tespccts. For instance, resignations is an evil that calls loudly for redress, were not deemed valid, unless the per- and strikes many persons who give no son who resigned lived twenty days attention to articles of faith, or of disafterwards; whereas a pension might cipline in other respects. Probably, be transferred at the point of death. however, this evil will be tolerated, till Besides it might be turned into ready the whole system be reformed, or demoney, whereas a benefice could not stroyed. But without the serious rewithout simony."

1 Pennington on Pluralities, p. 58. (P.) 3 F. Paul on Ecclesiastical Benefices, 1736, Ed. 3, pp. 223, 224. (P.)

formation of this and other crying abuses, the utter destruction of the present hierarchy must, in the natural course ot things, be expected.

THE GENEKAL CONCLUSION.

PART I.

OOHTAIN1KO

CONSIDERATIONS ADDRESSED TO UNBELIEVERS, AND ESPECIALLY

TO MR. GIBBON.

To consider the system (if it may be on the wicked. In proof of this called a system) of Christianity a he wrought many miracles, and after a priori, one would think it very little public execution he rose again from the liable to corruption, or abuse. The great dead. He also directed that proselytes outline of it is, that the Universal to his religion should be admitted by Parent of mankind commissioned Jesus baptism, and that his disciples should Christ to invite men to the prac- eat bread and drink wine in comtice of virtue, by the assurance of his memoration of his death. mercy to the penitent, and of his pose to raise to immortal life and happiness all the virtuous and the good, but to inflict an adequate punishment

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Here is nothing that any person could imagine would lead to much subtle speculation, at least such as could excite much animosity. The doctrine

itself is so plain, that one would think before his incarnation. On this printhe learned and the unlearned were ciple went the Gnostics, deriving their upon a level with respect to it. And doctrine from the received oriental phia person unacquainted with the state lophy. Afterwards the philosophizing of things at the time of its promulga- Christians went upon another principle, tion would look in vain for any pro- porsonifying the wisdom or λoyos of God bable source of the monstrous corrup- the Father. But this was mere Plations and abuses which crept into the tonism, and therefore cannot be said to system afterwards. Our Lord, how- have been unnatural in their circumever, and his apostles, foretold, that stances, though at length they came, there would be a great departure from in the nabuses progrese to their f ll the truth, and what something would believe that Christ was, in power and arise in the church altogether unlike glory, equal to God the Father himself. the doctrine which they taught, and even subversive of it.

From the same opinion of the soul distinct from the body came the practice of praying, first for the dead, and then to them, with a long train of other absurd opinions and superstitious practices.

In reality, however, the causes of the succeeding corruptions did then exist; and accordingly, without anything more than their natural operation, all the The abuses of the positive instituabuses rose to their full height; and tions of Christianity, monstrous as what is more wonderful still, by the they were, naturally arose from the operation of natural causes also, with- opinion of the purifying and sanctifyout any miraculous interposition of ing virtue of rites and ceremonies, which Providence, we see the abuses gradually was the very basis of all the worship of corrected, and Christianity recovering the Heathens: and they were also similar its primitive beauty and glory. to the abused in the hewish religions

The causes of the carruptions were We likewise wee the rudiments of all almost wholly contained in the esta- the monkish austerities in the opinions blished opinions of the heathen world, and practices of the Heathens, who and especially the philosophical part of thought to purify and exalt the soul it; so that when those Heathens em- by macerating and mortifying the braced Christianity, they mixed their body. former tenets and prejudices with it. As to the abuses in the government Also, both Jews and Heathens were so of the church, they are as easily acmuch scandalized at the idea of being counted for as abuses in civil gothe disciples of a man who had been vernment; worldly-minded men being crucified as a common malefactor, that always ready to lay hold of every Christians in general were sufficiently opportunity of increasing their power; disposed to adopt any opinion that and in the dark ages too many circumwould most effectually wipe away this stances concurred to give the Christian reproach. clergy peculiar advantages over the The opinion of the mental faculties laity in this respect. of man belonging to a substance dis- Upon the whole, I flatter myself that, tinct from his body, or brain, and of to an attentive reader of this work, it this invisible spiritual part, or soul, will appear, that the corruption of being capable of subsisting before and Christianity, in every article of faith or after its union to the body, which had practice, was the natural consequence taken the deepest root in all the schools of the circumstances in which it was of philosophy, was wonderfully calcu- promulgated; and also that its recovery lated to alswer this purpose. For by from these corruptions is the natural this means Christians were enabled to consequence of different circumstances. give to the soul of Christ what rank Let unbelievers, if they can, account as they pleased in the heavenly regions well for the first rise and establishment

of Christianity itself. This is a pro- Moses; that the whole nation should blem which historians and philosophers then have adopted without objection, (bound to believe that no effect is pro- what they were afterwards so prone to duced without an adequate cause) will abandon for the rites of any of their find to be of more difficult solution the neighbours; or, that when, by severe more closely it is attended to. discipline, they had acquired the atThe circumstances that Mr. Gibbon tachment to it which they are afterenumerates as the immediate causes of wards known to have done, and which the spread of Christianity were them- continues to this day, it be probable selves effects, and necessarily required they would have invented or have such causes as, I imagine, he would adopted another, which they conceived be unwilling to allow. The revolution to be so different from, and subversive produced by Christianity in the opinions of their own. If they had been so and conduct of men, as he himself de- fertile of invention, it might have been scribes it, was truly astonishing; and expected that they would have struck this, he cannot deny, was produced out some other since the time of Christ, without the concurrence, nay, notwith- a period of near two thousand years. standing the opposition, of all the civil On this subject Mr. Gibbon says, powers of the world; and what is per- that "in contradiction to every known haps more, it was opposed by all the principle of the human mind, that learning, genius, and wit of the age too. singular people seems to have yielded For Christianity was assailed as much a stronger and more ready assent to by ridicule and reproach as it was by the traditions of their remote ancesopen persecution; and, be the spread tors, than to the evidence of their own of it what Mr. Gibbon pleases, he can senses." A singular people, indeed, not deny that it kept uniformly gain- if this was the case; for then they ing ground, taking in all descriptions must not have been men, but beings in of men without distinction, before it the shape of men only, though interhad any foreign aid; and what then nally constituted in some very difremained of the old religions was not ferent manner. But what facts in sufficient to occasion any sensible ob- history may not be represented as struction to the full establishment of probable or improbable, on such loose it. The Jewish religion alone was an exception; and this circumstance, together with the rise of Christianity among the Jews, are facts that deserve Mr. Gibbon's particular attention.

Of all mankind, the Jews were the most unlikely to set up any religion, so different from their own; and as unlikely was it that other nations, and especially the polite and learned among them, should receive a religion from Jews, and those some of the most ignorant of that despised nation.

Let Mr. Gibbon recollect his own idea of the Jews, which seems to be much the same with that of Voltaire, and think whether it be at all probable, that they should have originally in vented a religion so essentially different from any other in the world, as that which is described in the books of

suppositions as these ? Such liberties as these I shall neither take nor grant. Jews are men, and men are beings, whose affections and actions are subject to as strict rules as those of the animate or inanimate parts of nature. Their conduct, therefore, must be accounted for on such principles as always have influenced the conduct of men, and such as we observe still to influence men.

I wish Mr. Gibbon would consider whether he does not, in the passage above quoted, use the word tradition in an improper manner. By tradition we generally mean something for which we have not the evidence of histories written at the time of the events. We never talk of the tra

1 History, Ch. xv. I. p. 588. (P.)

dition of the wars of Julius Cæsar, or of his death in the senate house, nor even of the tradition of the conquests of Alexander the Great; because there were histories of those events written at the time, or so near to the time. as to be fully within the memory of those who were witnesses of them.

Now Moses, and the other writers of the Old Testament, were as much present at the time of the transactions they relate, as the historians of Julius Cæsar or Alexander. An incautious reader (and there are too many such) would be apt to imagine from Mr. Gibbon's manner of expressing himself, that the Jews did not even pretend to have written histories of the same age with the origin of their religion, but that it was in the same predicament with what he calls "the elegant mythology of Greece and Rome;" whereas the fact is, that every tittle of it was committed to writing at the time. It is generally in such an indirect manner as this, and not by a fair and candid representation of facts, that unbelievers endeavour to discredit the system of revelation.

as Mr. Gibbon says,1 is the very reverse of the truth. He could not himself imagine circumstances in which the principal facts on which Christianity is founded should be subject to a more rigid scrutiny. These things, as Paul said to king Agrippa, were not done in a corner. Acts xxvi. 26.

It appears to me that, admitting all the miraculous events which the evangelical history asserts, it was not probable that Christianity should have been received with less difficulty than it was; but without that assistance, absolutely impossible for it to have been received at all.

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Mr. Gibbon represents the discredit into which the old religions were fallen, as having made way for the new one. "So urgent," says he, on the vulgar is the necessity of believing, that the fall of any system of mythology will most probably be succeeded by the introduction of some other mode of superstition." 2

But are not the vulgar, men, as well as the learned, their understandings being naturally as good and as various, and certainly subject to the same laws; Let Mr. Gibbon, as an historian, and necessity of believing or proneness compare the rise and progress of Ma- to belief, is not greater in the one than hometanism with that of Judaism or in the other; but the expression is of Christianity, and attend to the dif- loose and inaccurate, and calculated to ference. Besides the influence of the impose on superficial readers. Besides, sword, which Christianity certainly if any set of men had this property of had not, Mahometanism stood on the proneness to believe, they must, to be basis of the Jewish and Christian all of a piece, have a proportionable revelations. If these had not been unwillingness to quit their belief, at firmly believed in the time of Ma- least without very sufficient evidence; homet, what credit would his religion and yet those vulgar of all nations are have gained? In these circumstances, supposed by Mr. Gibbon to have abanhe must have invented some other doned the belief of their own mythosystem, which would have required logy, some time before Christianity visible miracles of its own, which he came, to supply the vacancy. Such might have found some difficulty in vulgar as those I should think entitled passing upon his followers; though to the more respectable appellation of they were in circumstances far more free-thinkers, which with many is easy to be imposed upon than the Jews synonymous to philosophers. And, in or the Heathens, in the time of our fact, it was not with the vulgar, but Saviour. This was an age of light with the philosophers, that the reliand of suspicion; the other, if any, of gions of Greece and Rome were fallen darkness and credulity. That Christianity grew up in silence and obscurity,

History, Ch. xv. I. p. 535. (P 2 Ibid. p. «02. (P.)

into discredit. We ought, therefore, sideration that makes more definite to judge of their case by that of the philosophical part of the world at present.

With many of them Christianity is now rejected; but do they, on that account, seem disposed to adopt any other mode of religion, or any other system of mythology in its place? And would not such men as Mr. Hume or Helvetins among the dead, and Mr. Gibbon himself among the living, examine with scrupulous exactness the pretensions of any system of divine revelation, especially before he would regulate his life by it, and go to the stake for it? And yet philosophers of antiquity, men of as good understand ing as Mr. Gibbon, and who, no doubt, loved life, and the pleasures and advantages of it, as much as he does, embraced Christianity, and died for it. But besides the urgency of this necessity of believing, another cause of the rapid spread of Christianity was, that it held out to mankind something worth believing. "When the promise of eternal happiness," he says, proposed to mankind, on condition of adopting the faith, and observing the precepts of the gospel, it is no wonder that so advantageous an offer should have been accepted by great numbers of every religion, of every rank, and of every province in the Roman empire."

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evidence necessary for a miracle, than for an ordinary fact; though it is acknowledged that the desirableness of any particular event, by interesting our wishes, will tend to make us admit it on somewhat less evidence. great advantages, therefore, proposed to men from any scheme, especially one in which they were to run some risk, and in which they were to make great sacrifices, would not dispose them to receive it without evidence. It is too good news to be true, is a remark perpetually made by the very vulgar of whom Mr. Gibbon is speaking. When the disciples of our Lord saw him for the first time after his resurrection, it is said (Luke xxiv. 41), that they believed not through joy; and when, before this, they were told by three or four women of character, and for whom they had the highest respect, that they had themselves seen him alive, and had a message from him to them, Their words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed them not. Ibid. ver. 11. This was perfectly natural; and such circumstances as: these are strong internal evidence of the historian's describing real facts, and real feelings of the human heart corresponding to those facts.

Besides, how can any man, to use Mr. Gibbon's own language, adopt the faith of the gospel, whatever promises Now it is certainly no discredit to might be made to him for so doing, Christianity, that the views it exhibits unless its tenets appeared to him to be of a future state appeared more rational reasonable? What would Mr. Gibbon and more inviting, than the accounts take to believe the doctrine of the Triof Tartarus and the Elysian shades. nity, or what would he sacrifice in this But besides appearing more inviting, life for the most magnificent promise they must also have appeared more in a future one, made by a person credible, from the general external evi- whose ability to make good that prodence of the truth of Christianity. mise he at all suspected? Plato's And here also Mr. Gibbon seems to have been inattentive to the principles

of human nature.

In general, the more extraordinary any event appears to be, the more evidence we require of it. It is this con

1 History, Ch. xv. I. p. 561. (P)

doctrine of the immortality of the soul was sufficiently flattering; but whom was it ever known to influence, like the Christian doctrine of a resurrection? The plain reason was, that the latter was proposed with sufficient evidence, whereas the former was altogether destitute of it.

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