Imatges de pàgina
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Your exceptions, or pleas, I shall examine one by one; and then leave you to judge of what weight they ought to be charitably believing that you will not industriously deceive your own soul.

1. To my critical reasons, your general answer is, that you are illiterate, and pretend not to criticism.

But this plea will be of no service in the case. You correct the English translation, and indeed all the versions that ever were, appealing to the original itself. I show you from the idiom of the language, from the Apostle's manner of expressing himself elsewhere, and from his principal drift and design through the chapter, that you misconstrue the original, and that the words cannot bear your sense. Now either you are obliged to answer these reasons, or else to own frankly, that you have taken upon you to judge in a point you understand not, have been confident without grounds, and pronounced in the dark. Consider well what St. Peter has observed, namely, that the unlearned and unstable wrest the Scriptures to their own destruction, 2 Pet. iii. 16. How know you but this may be your own case, while against the idiom of the tongue, the author's manner of expression, as well as against the wisest and ablest judges ancient or modern, you wrest a passage of such importance to a new and strange meaning?

I do not doubt but an illiterate man may be capable of understanding the Gospel: and I hope you are capable of understanding the passage of St. John in the vulgar sense, as well as in any new invented one of your own.

2. To my argument drawn from the sentiments of antiquity, you except, that if the sense of a text can be fixed, any different sense of Fathers against it is of no weight.

But what is this to the purpose? Have you fixed the sense of the text, that is, ascertained it? So far from it, that you have hardly the shadow of a reason, from text or context, to support it. On the contrary, it is rather fixed to another sense, as I have shown you, and given you reasons which you are not able to answer.

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3. You plead that the five first verses are a train of progressive propositions, and that generally the predicate of the former is the subject of the succeeding.

I answer, that your rule fails in the very two first propositions, for i Aóyos is the subject in both. It fails again in verse the 2d, where, by your rule, it should have been ὁ Λόγος, instead of οὗτος. Your rule is again broke in verse the 3d, where di' autoũ should, by that rule, refer to ev going before. But enough of fancies.

4. To my argument drawn from St. John's making the Logos his principal theme, and his intending to tell us, not what God the Father was, but what the Logos was: to this you except, that the Apostle's declaring the Logos to be an attribute of God, is declaring what the Logos is, and is therefore consonant to the Apostle's design. I

answer,

You do not here carefully distinguish between subject and predicate. When we say, God is reason, God is the subject, and reason is predicated of him. But when we say, the Logos is God, the Logos is the subject, and that he is God, is predicated of the Logos. Now St. John's scope and design, which runs through the first fourteen verses, is to predicate of the Logos, not to predicate of God the Father: wherefore I must still insist upon it, that the Apostle's drift all along is against your construction.

5. You conceive that you have some strength and countenance from the 5th verse, which you desire me to account for. Please to compare John iii. 36. v. 40. x. 10. v. 25, 26. vi. 33, &c. xiv. 11. and especially John viii. 12. xi. 25. Col. iii. 3, 4. You will find Christ to have been the life and light of the world, as being the Author and Fountain of the resurrection, and the Giver of life eternal. Not a word do you meet with about the ideal world, which, whether it be a truth or no, has no foundation in Scripture, but is borrowed from the Platonic philosophy.

6. You pass some high commendations on Mr. Norris, reflecting not very kindly (I am sure, without Mr. Norris's good leave) on the clergy in general.

I readily allow all you can say in commendation of that good man. But will you abide by his authority in every thing? If you will, our dispute will be at an end. But it is in vain to contend by authorities instead of reasons. How many authorities might I produce against your sen+ timents, particularly against your construction of St. John! The whole Christian world, in a manner, from the begin→ ning downwards to this day, not to mention that Mr. Norris, in the main, is of my side of the question, and interprets the Aóyos of a distinct Person, not of God the Father, or any attribute of him.

7. You except to my notion of an attribute, and (without understanding what you say) call it Sabellian. My notion of an attribute is the same that all Divines, whether Sabellian or others, have ever had of it. Power, wisdom, goodness, are attributes of God, not his substance precisely considered: in like manner, as reason is a property of something rational, not the very thing itself precisely considered. They are abstract partial ideas, and are not the very same with the notion of the substance itself. For if you say that power is the substance, and wisdom the substance, and goodness the substance, precisely considered; then power is goodness, and both together are wisdom; and wisdom is omnipresence, &c. and there is no difference between one attribute and another, nor any sense in saying that the substance of God is wise, good, powerful, &c. because it will be only saying, that the

substance is substance.

8. You take hold of Bishop Pearson's saying, that God is an attribute of the Aóyos. But it is plain that the Bishop there used the word attribute in an improper sense, for predicate; meaning only that Oeds was predicated of the Aóyos, or, in plain English, that it is there said of the Aoyos, that he was God.

When you speak of wisdom, power, and goodness being coessential and consubstantial, you use words either without a meaning, or with a meaning peculiar to your

self. Things are with one another coessential or consubstantial, not properties, nor abstract notions.

As to my rendering John iv. 24. I have the same right to render Veμa Spirit, (not a Spirit,) as our translators had to render TVEúμаTI, in the same verse, Spirit, not a Spirit. But that by the way only, having little relation to our present dispute.

As to the preposition &à, neither you nor Mr. Norris has given any instance of its ever being used in the exemplary sense. The rest is of no moment.

Thus, Sir, I have, I think, considered every exception in your letter that appears to have any weight. As you are pleased to apply to me under the character of a Ductor Dubitantium, so I have endeavoured to answer every the least scruple, that so you may the more readily come into those reasons which I before offered, and which return now upon you in their full force. I beg leave to assure you, that I offer you nothing but what appears to me plain good sense, and sound reason, and such as has weight with myself as much as I desire it may have with you. I sincerely wish you a right judgment in all things, and remain,

Your Friend and Servant,

Magd. Coll. Nov. 13, 1720.

DAN. WATERLAND.

SIR,

LETTER V.

I GAVE you time to consider upon what I had before offered, that you might at length give up what you could no longer maintain. It was with me a preliminary article, that we should not run from point to point, to make a rambling and fruitless dispute of it; without settling and clearing any thing. I will not undertake to go through the obscurer parts of the controversy with you, while I

find you so unwilling to apprehend plain things. It would be endless for me to explain my meaning every time you mistake it for every explanation will still want a farther explanation, and so on ad infinitum. I have neither leisure nor inclination to proceed in this way; nor do I see to what purpose it is. I have showed my willingness, upon your own earnest request, to serve you in this controversy; but despair of any success in it. The civilest way now is, to break off a correspondence which can serve to no good end. You are well pleased with your own opinions, and I as well satisfied with mine. Which of us has the most reason, we shall both know another day. I am,

SIR,

Your Friend and Servant,

Magd. Coll. Dec. 25, 1720.

DAN. WATERLAND.

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