• UNITARIAN CHRISTIANITY

    From Kurt Snelling@RICKSBBS to All on Tue Feb 10 06:14:43 2026
    UNITARIAN CHRISTIANITY
    By William Ellery Channing

    Delivered at the Ordination of Rev. Jared Sparks
    in The First Independent Church of Baltimore on
    May 5, 1819.

    1 Thes. v. 21: "Prove all things; hold fast that
    which is good."

    The peculiar circumstances of this occasion not only justify,
    but seem to demand a departure from the course generally followed
    by preachers at the introduction of a brother into the sacred
    office. It is usual to speak of the nature, design, duties, and
    advantages of the Christian ministry; and on these topics I should
    now be happy to insist, did I not remember that a minister is to be
    given this day to a religious society, whose peculiarities of
    opinion have drawn upon them much remark, and may I not add, much
    reproach. Many good minds, many sincere Christians, I am aware, are apprehensive that the solemnities of this day are to give a degree
    of influence to principles which they deem false and injurious. The
    fears and anxieties of such men I respect; and, believing that they
    are grounded in part on mistake, I have thought it my duty to lay
    before you, as clearly as I can, some of the distinguishing
    opinions of that class of Christians in our country, who are known
    to sympathize with this religious society. I must ask your
    patience, for such a subject is not to be despatched in a narrow
    compass. I must also ask you to remember, that it is impossible to
    exhibit, in a single discourse, our views of every doctrine of
    Revelation, much less the differences of opinion which are known to
    subsist among ourselves. I shall confine myself to topics, on which
    our sentiments have been misrepresented, or which distinguish us
    most widely from others. May I not hope to be heard with candor?
    God deliver us all from prejudice and unkindness, and fill us with
    the love of truth and virtue.
    There are two natural divisions under which my thoughts will
    be arranged. I shall endeavour to unfold, 1st, The principles which
    we adopt in interpreting the Scriptures. And 2dly, Some of the
    doctrines, which the Scriptures, so interpreted, seem to us clearly
    to express.

    I. We regard the Scriptures as the records of God's successive
    revelations to mankind, and particularly of the last and most
    perfect revelation of his will by Jesus Christ. Whatever doctrines
    seem to us to be clearly taught in the Scriptures; we receive
    without reserve or exception. We do not, however, attach equal
    importance to all the books in this collection. Our religion, we
    believe, lies chiefly in the New Testament. The dispensation of
    Moses, compared with that of Jesus, we consider as adapted to the
    childhood of the human race, a preparation for a nobler system, and
    chiefly useful now as serving to confirm and illustrate the
    Christian Scriptures. Jesus Christ is the only master of
    Christians, and whatever he taught, either during his personal
    ministry, or by his inspired Apostles, we regard as of divine
    authority, and profess to make the rule of our lives.
    This authority, which we give to the Scriptures, is a reason,
    we conceive, for studying them with peculiar care, and for
    inquiring anxiously into the principles of interpretation, by which
    their true meaning may be ascertained. The principles adopted by
    the class of Christians in whose name I speak, need to be
    explained, because they are often misunderstood. We are
    particularly accused of making an unwarrantable use of reason in
    the interpretation of Scripture. We are said to exalt reason above
    revelation, to prefer our own wisdom to God's. Loose and undefined
    charges of this kind are circulated so freely, that we think it due
    to ourselves, and to the cause of truth, to express our views with
    some particularity.
    Our leading principle in interpreting Scripture is this, that
    the Bible is a book written for men, in the language of men, and
    that its meaning is to be sought in the same manner as that of
    other books. We believe that God, when he speaks to the human race,
    conforms, if we may so say, to the established rules of speaking
    and writing. How else would the Scriptures avail us more, than if
    communicated in an unknown tongue?
    Now all books, and all conversation, require in the reader or
    hearer the constant exercise of reason; or their true import is
    only to be obtained by continual comparison and inference. Human
    language, you well know, admits various interpretations; and every
    word and every sentence must be modified and explained according to
    the subject which is discussed, according to the purposes,
    feelings, circumstances, and principles of the writer, and
    according to the genius and idioms of the language which he uses.
    These are acknowledged principles in the interpretation of human
    writings; and a man, whose words we should explain without
    reference to these principles, would reproach us justly with a
    criminal want of candor, and an intention of obscuring or
    distorting his meaning.
    Were the Bible written in a language and style of its own, did
    it consist of words, which admit but a single sense, and of
    sentences wholly detached from each other, there would be no place
    for the principles now laid down. We could not reason about it, as
    about other writings. But such a book would be of little worth; and
    perhaps, of all books, the Scriptures correspond least to this
    description. The Word of God hears the stamp of the same hand,
    which we see in his works. It has infinite connexions and
    dependences. Every proposition is linked with others, and is to be
    compared with others; that its full and precise import may he
    understood. Nothing stands alone. The New Testament is built on the
    Old. The Christian dispensation is a continuation of the Jewish,
    the completion of a vast scheme of providence, requiring great
    extent of view in the reader. Still more, the Bible treats of
    subjects on which we receive ideas from other sources besides
    itself; such subjects as the nature, passions, relations, and
    duties of man; and it expects us to restrain and modify its
    language by the known truths, which observation and experience
    furnish on these topics.
    We profess not to know a book, which demands a more frequent
    exercise of reason than the Bible. In addition to the remarks now
    made on its infinite connexions, we may observe, that its style
    nowhere affects the precision of science, or the accuracy of
    definition. Its language is singularly glowing, bold, and
    figurative, demanding more frequent departures from the literal
    sense, than that of our own age and country, and consequently
    demanding more continual exercise of judgment. -- We find, too,
    that the different portions of this book, instead of being confined
    to general truths, refer perpetually to the times when they were
    written, to states of society, to modes of thinking, to
    controversies in the church, to feelings and usages which have
    passed away, and without the knowledge of which we are constantly
    in danger of extending to all times, and places, what was of
    temporary and local application. -- We find, too, that some of
    these books are strongly marked by the genius and character of
    their respective writers, that the Holy Spirit did not so guide the
    Apostles as to suspend the peculiarities of their minds, and that
    a knowledge of their feelings, and of the influences under which
    they were placed, is one of the preparations for understanding
    their writings. With these views of the Bible, we feel it our
    bounden duty to exercise our reason upon it perpetually, to
    compare, to infer, to look beyond the letter to the spirit, to seek
    in the nature of the subject, and the aim of the writer, his true
    meaning; and, in general, to make use of what is known, for
    explaining what is difficult, and for discovering new truths.
    Need I descend to particulars, to prove that the Scriptures
    demand the exercise of reason? Take, for example, the style in
    which they generally speak of God, and observe how habitually they
    apply to him human passions and organs. Recollect the declarations
    of Christ, that he came not to send peace, but a sword; that unless
    we eat his flesh, and drink his blood, we have no life in us; that
    we must hate father and mother, and pluck out the right eye; and a
    vast number of passages equally bold and unlimited. Recollect the
    unqualified manner in which it is said of Christians, that they
    possess all things, know all things, and can do all things.
    Recollect the verbal contradiction between Paul and James, and the
    apparent clashing of some parts of Paul's writings with the general
    doctrines and end of Christianity. I might extend the enumeration
    indefinitely; and who does not see, that we must limit all these
    passages by the known attributes of God, of Jesus Christ, and of
    human nature, and by the circumstances under which they were
    written, so as to give the language a quite different import from
    what it would require, had it been applied to different beings, or
    used in different connexions.
    Enough has been said to show, in what sense we make use of
    reason in interpreting Scripture. From a variety of possible
    interpretations, we select that which accords with the nature of
    the subject and the state of the writer, with the connexion of the
    passage, with the general strain of Scripture, with the known
    character and will of God, and with the obvious and acknowledged
    laws of nature. In other words, we believe that God never
    contradicts, in one part of scripture, what he teaches in another;
    and never contradicts, in revelation, what he teaches in his works
    and providence. And we therefore distrust every interpretation,
    which, after deliberate attention, seems repugnant to any
    established truth. We reason about the Bible precisely as civilians
    do about the constitution under which we live; who, you know, are
    accustomed to limit one provision of that venerable instrument by
    others, and to fix the precise import of its parts, by inquiring
    into its general spirit, into the intentions of its authors, and
    into the prevalent feelings, impressions, and circumstances of the
    time when it was framed. Without these principles of
    interpretation, we frankly acknowledge, that we cannot defend the
    divine authority of the Scriptures. Deny us this latitude, and we
    must abandon this book to its enemies.
    We do not announce these principles as original, or peculiar
    to ourselves. All Christians occasionally adopt them, not excepting
    those who most vehemently decry them, when they happen to menace
    some favorite article of their creed. All Christians are compelled
    to use them in their controversies with infidels. All sects employ
    them in their warfare with one another. All willingly avail
    themselves of reason, when it can be pressed into the service of
    their own party, and only complain of it, when its weapons wound
    themselves. None reason more frequently than those from whom we
    differ. It is astonishing what a fabric they rear from a few slight
    hints about the fall of our first parents; and how ingeniously they
    extract, from detached passages, mysterious doctrines about the
    divine nature. We do not blame them for reasoning so abundantly,
    but for violating the fundamental rules of reasoning, for
    sacrificing the plain to the obscure, and the general strain of
    Scripture to a scanty number of insulated texts.
    We object strongly to the contemptuous manner in which human
    reason is often spoken of by our adversaries, because it leads, we
    believe, to universal skepticism. If reason be so dreadfully
    darkened by the fall, that its most decisive judgments on religion
    are unworthy of trust, then Christianity, and even natural
    theology, must be abandoned; for the existence and veracity of God,
    and the divine original of Christianity, are conclusions of reason,
    and must stand or fall with it. If revelation be at war with this
    faculty, it subverts itself, for the great question of its truth is
    left by God to be decided at the bar of reason. It is worthy of
    remark, how nearly the bigot and the skeptic approach. Both would
    annihilate our confidence in our faculties, and both throw doubt
    and confusion over every truth. We honor revelation too highly to
    make it the antagonist of reason, or to believe that it calls us to
    renounce our highest powers.
    We indeed grant, that the use of reason in religion is
    accompanied with danger. But we ask any honest man to look back on
    the history of the church, and say, whether the renunciation of it
    be not still more dangerous. Besides, it is a plain fact, that men
    reason as erroneously on all subjects, as on religion. Who does not
    know the wild and groundless theories, which have been framed in
    physical and political science? But who ever supposed, that we must
    cease to exercise reason on nature and society, because men have
    erred for ages in explaining them? We grant, that the passions
    continually, and sometimes fatally, disturb the rational faculty in
    its inquiries into revelation. The ambitious contrive to find
    doctrines in the Bible, which favor their love of dominion. The
    timid and dejected discover there a gloomy system, and the mystical
    and fanatical, a visionary theology. The vicious can find examples
    or assertions on which to build the hope of a late repentance, or
    of acceptance on easy terms. The falsely refined contrive to light
    on doctrines which have not been soiled by vulgar handling. But the
    passions do not distract the reason in religious, any more than in
    other inquiries, which excite strong and general interest; and this
    faculty, of consequence, is not to be renounced in religion, unless
    we are prepared to discard it universally. The true inference from
    the almost endless errors, which have darkened theology, is, not
    that we are to neglect and disparage our powers, but to exert them
    more patiently, circumspectly, uprightly. The worst errors, after
    all, having sprung up in that church, which proscribes reason, and
    demands from its members implicit faith. The most pernicious
    doctrines have been the growth of the darkest times, when the
    general credulity encouraged bad men and enthusiasts to broach
    their dreams and inventions, and to stifle the faint remonstrances
    of reasons, by the menaces of everlasting perdition. Say what we
    may, God has given us a rational nature, and will call us to
    account for it. We may let it sleep, but we do so at our peril.
    Revelation is addressed to us as rational beings. We may wish, in
    our to sloth, that God had given us a system, demand of comparing,
    limiting, and inferring. But such a system would be at variance
    with the whole character of our present existence; and it is the
    part of wisdom to take revelation as it is given to us, and to
    interpret it by the help of the faculties, which it everywhere
    supposes, and on which founded.
    To the views now given, an objection is commonly urged from
    the character of God. We are told, that God being infinitely wiser
    than men, his discoveries will surpass human reason. In a
    revelation from such a teacher, we ought to expect propositions,
    which we cannot reconcile with one another, and which may seem to
    contradict established truths ; and it becomes us not to question
    or explain them away, but to believe, and adore, and to submit our
    weak and carnal reason to the Divine Word. To this objection, we
    have two short answers. We say, first, that it is impossible that
    a teacher of infinite wisdom should expose those, whom he would
    teach, to infinite error. But if once we admit, that propositions,
    which in their literal sense appear plainly repugnant to one
    another, or to any known truth, are still to be literally
    understood and received, what possible limit can we set to the
    belief of contradictions? What shelter have we from the wildest
    fanaticism, which can always quote passages, that, in their literal
    and obvious sense, give support to its extravagances? How can the
    Protestant escape from transubstantiation, a doctrine most clearly
    taught us, if the submission of reason, now contended for, be a
    duty? How can we even hold fast the truth of revelation, for if one
    apparent contradiction may be true, so may another, and the
    proposition, that Christianity is false, though involving
    inconsistency, may still be a verity?
    We answer again, that, if God be infinitely wise, he cannot
    sport with the understandings of his creatures. A wise teacher
    discovers his wisdom in adapting himself to the capacities of his
    pupils, not in perplexing them with what is unintelligible, not in
    distressing them with apparent contradictions, not in filling them
    with a skeptical distrust of their own powers. An infinitely wise
    teacher, who knows the precise extent of our minds, and the best
    method of enlightening them, will surpass all other instructors in
    bringing down truth to our apprehension, and in showing its
    loveliness and harmony. We ought, indeed, to expect occasional
    obscurity in such a book as the Bible, which was written for past
    and future ages, as well as for the present. But God's wisdom is a
    pledge, that whatever is necessary for US, and necessary for
    salvation, is revealed too plainly to be mistaken, and too
    consistently to be questioned, by a sound and upright mind. It is
    not the mark of wisdom, to use an unintelligible phraseology, to
    communicate what is above our capacities, to confuse and unsettle
    the intellect by appearances of contradiction. We honor our
    Heavenly Teacher too much to ascribe to him such a revelation. A
    revelation is a gift of light. It cannot thicken our darkness, and
    multiply our perplexities.
    II. Having thus stated the principles according to which we
    interpret Scripture, I now proceed to the second great head of this
    discourse, which is, to state some of the views which we derive
    from that sacred book, particularly those which distinguish us from
    other Christians.
    1. In the first place, we believe in the doctrine of God's
    UNITY, or that there is one God, and one only. To this truth we
    give infinite importance, and we feel ourselves bound to take heed,
    lest any man spoil us of it by vain philosophy. The proposition,
    that there is one God, seems to us exceedingly plain. We understand
    by it, that there is one being, one mind, one person, one
    intelligent agent, and one only, to whom underived and infinite
    perfection and dominion belong. We conceive, that these words could
    have conveyed no other meaning to the simple and uncultivated
    people who were set apart to be the depositaries of this great
    truth, and who were utterly incapable of understanding those hair-
    breadth distinctions between being and person, which the sagacity
    of later ages has discovered. We find no intimation, that this
    language was to be taken in an unusual sense, or that God's unity
    was a quite different thing from the oneness of other intelligent
    beings.
    We object to the doctrine of the Trinity, that, whilst
    acknowledging in words, it subverts in effect, the unity of God.
    According to this doctrine, there are three infinite and equal
    persons, possessing supreme divinity, called the Father, Son, and
    Holy Ghost. Each of these persons, as described by theologians, has
    his own particular consciousness, will, and perceptions. They love
    each other, converse with each other, and delight in each other's
    society. They perform different parts in man's redemption, each
    having his appropriate office, and neither doing the work of the
    other. The Son is mediator and not the Father. The Father sends the
    Son, and is not himself sent; nor is he conscious, like the Son, of
    taking flesh. Here, then, we have three intelligent agents,
    possessed of different consciousness, different wills, and
    different perceptions, performing different acts, and sustaining
    different relations; and if these things do not imply and
    constitute three minds or beings, we are utterly at a loss to know
    how three minds or beings are to be formed. It is difference of
    properties, and acts, and consciousness, which leads us to the
    belief of different intelligent beings, and, if this mark fails us,
    our whole knowledge fall; we have no proof, that all the agents and
    persons in the universe are not one and the same mind. When we
    attempt to conceive of three Gods, we can do nothing more than
    represent to ourselves three agents, distinguished from each other
    by similar marks and peculiarities to those which separate the
    persons of the Trinity; and when common Christians hear these
    persons spoken of as conversing with each other, loving each other,
    and performing different acts, how can they help regarding them as
    different beings, different minds?
    We do, then, with all earnestness, though without reproaching
    our brethren, protest against the irrational and unscriptural
    doctrine of the Trinity. "To us," as to the Apostle and the
    primitive Christians, "there is one God, even the Father." With
    Jesus, we worship the Father, as the only living and true God. We
    are astonished, that any man can read the New Testament, and avoid
    the conviction, that the Father alone is God. We hear our Saviour
    continually appropriating this character to the Father. We find the
    Father continually distinguished from Jesus by this title. "God
    sent his Son." "God anointed Jesus." Now, how singular and
    inexplicable is this phraseology, which fills the New Testament, if
    this title belong equally to Jesus, and if a principal object of
    this book is to reveal him as God, as partaking equally with the
    Father in supreme divinity! We challenge our opponents to adduce
    one passage in the New Testament, where the word God means three
    persons, where it is not limited to one person, and where, unless
    turned from its usual sense by the connexion, it does not mean the
    Father. Can stronger proof be given, that the doctrine of three
    persons in the Godhead is not a fundamental doctrine of
    Christianity?
    This doctrine, were it true, must, from its difficulty,
    singularity, and importance, have been laid down with great
    clearness, guarded with great care, and stated with all possible
    precision. But where does this statement appear? From the many
    passages which treat of God, we ask for one, one only, in which we
    are told, that he is a threefold being, or that he is three
    persons, or that he is Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. On the
    contrary, in the New Testament, where, at least, we might expect
    many express assertions of this nature, God is declared to be one,
    without the least attempt to prevent the acceptation of the words
    in their common sense; and he is always spoken of and addressed in
    the singular number, that is, in language which was universally
    understood to intend a single person, and to which no other idea
    could have been attached, without an express admonition. So
    entirely do the Scriptures abstain from stating the Trinity, that
    when our opponents would insert it into their creeds and
    doxologies, they are compelled to leave the Bible, and to invent
    forms of words altogether unsanctioned by Scriptural phraseology.
    That a doctrine so strange, so liable to misapprehension, so
    fundamental as this is said to be, and requiring such careful
    exposition, should be left so undefined and unprotected, to be made
    out by inference, and to be hunted through distant and detached
    parts of Scripture, this is a difficulty, which, we think, no
    ingenuity can explain.
    We have another difficulty. Christianity, it must be
    remembered, was planted and grew up amidst sharp-sighted enemies,
    who overlooked no objectionable part of the system, and who must
    have fastened with great earnestness on a doctrine involving such
    apparent contradictions as the Trinity. We cannot conceive an
    opinion, against which the Jews, who prided themselves on an
    adherence to God's unity, would have raised an equal clamor. Now,
    how happens it, that in the apostolic writings, which relate so
    much to objections against Christianity, and to the controversies
    which grew out of this religion, not one word is said, implying
    that objections were brought against the Gospel from the doctrine
    of the Trinity, not one word is uttered in its defence and
    explanation, not a word to rescue it from reproach and mistake?
    This argument has almost the force of demonstration. We are
    persuaded, that had three divine persons been announced by the
    first preachers of Christianity, all equal, and all infinite, one
    of whom was the very Jesus who had lately died on a cross, this
    peculiarity of Christianity would have almost absorbed every other,
    and the great labor of the Apostles would have been to repel the
    continual assaults, which it would have awakened. But the fact is,
    that not a whisper of objection to Christianity, on that account,
    reaches our ears from the apostolic age. In the Epistles we see not
    a trace of controversy called forth by the Trinity.
    We have further objections to this doctrine, drawn from its
    practical influence. We regard it as unfavorable to devotion, by
    dividing and distracting the mind in its communion with God. It is
    a great excellence of the doctrine of God's unity, that it offers
    to us ONE OBJECT of supreme homage, adoration, and love, One
    Infinite Father, one Being of beings, one original and fountain, to
    whom we may refer all good, in whom all our powers and affections
    may be concentrated, and whose lovely and venerable nature may
    pervade all our thoughts. True piety, when directed to an undivided
    Deity, has a chasteness, a singleness, most favorable to religious
    awe and love. Now, the Trinity sets before us three distinct
    objects of supreme adoration; three infinite persons, having equal
    claims on our hearts; three divine agents, performing different
    offices, and to be acknowledged and worshipped in different
    relations. And is it possible, we ask, that the weak and limited
    mind of man can attach itself to these with the same power and joy,
    as to One Infinite Father, the only First Cause, in whom all the
    blessings of nature and redemption meet as their centre and source?
    Must not devotion be distracted by the equal and rival claims of
    three equal persons, and must not the worship of the conscientious,
    consistent Christian, be disturbed by an apprehension, lest he
    withhold from one or another of these, his due proportion of
    homage?
    We also think, that the doctrine of the Trinity injures
    devotion, not only by joining to the Father other objects of
    worship, but by taking from the Father the supreme affection, which
    is his due, and transferring it to the Son. This is a most
    important view. That Jesus Christ, if exalted into the infinite
    Divinity, should be more interesting than the Father, is precisely
    what might be expected from history, and from the principles of
    human nature. Men want an object of worship like themselves, and
    the great secret of idolatry lies in this propensity. A God,
    clothed in our form, and feeling our wants and sorrows, speaks to
    our weak nature more strongly, than a Father in heaven, a pure
    spirit, invisible and unapproachable, save by the reflecting and
    purified mind. -- We think, too, that the peculiar offices ascribed
    to Jesus by the popular theology, make him the most attractive
    person in the Godhead. The Father is the depositary of the justice,
    the vindicator of the rights, the avenger of the laws of the
    Divinity. On the other hand, the Son, the brightness of the divine
    mercy, stands between the incensed Deity and guilty humanity,
    exposes his meek head to the storms, and his compassionate breast
    to the sword of the divine justice, bears our whole load of
    punishment, and purchases with his blood every blessing which
    descends from heaven. Need we state the effect of these
    representations, especially on common minds, for whom Christianity
    was chiefly designed, and whom it seeks to bring to the Father as
    the loveliest being? We do believe, that the worship of a bleeding,
    suffering God, tends strongly to absorb the mind and to draw it
    from other objects, just as the human tenderness of the Virgin Mary
    has given her so conspicuous a place in the devotions of the Church
    of Rome. We believe, too, that this worship, though attractive, is
    not most fitted to spiritualize the mind, that it awakens human
    transport, rather than that deep veneration of the moral
    perfections of God, which is the essence of piety.
    2. Having thus given our views of the unity of God, I proceed
    in the second place to observe, that we believe in the unity of
    Jesus Christ. We believe that Jesus is one mind, one soul, one
    being, as truly one as we are, and equally distinct from the one
    God. We complain of the doctrine of the Trinity, that, not
    satisfied with making God three beings, it makes; Jesus Christ two
    beings, and thus introduces infinite confusion into our conceptions
    of his character. This corruption of Christianity, alike repugnant
    to common sense and to the general strain of Scripture, is a
    remarkable proof of the power of a false philosophy in disfiguring
    the simple truth of Jesus.
    According to this doctrine, Jesus Christ, instead of being one
    mind, one conscious intelligent principle, whom we can understand,
    consists of two souls, two minds; the one divine, the other human;
    the one weak, the other almighty; the one ignorant, the other
    omniscient. Now we maintain, that this is to make Christ two
    beings. To denominate him one person, one being, and yet to suppose
    him made up of two minds, infinitely different from each other, is
    to abuse and confound language, and to throw darkness over all our
    conceptions of intelligent natures. According to the common
    doctrine, each of these two minds in Christ has its own
    consciousness, its own will, its own perceptions. They have, in
    fact, no common properties. The divine mind feels none of the wants
    and sorrows of the human, and the human is infinitely removed from
    the perfection and happiness of the divine. Can you conceive of two
    beings in the universe more distinct? We have always thought that
    one person was constituted and distinguished by one consciousness.
    The doctrine, that one and the same person should have two
    consciousness, two wills, two souls, infinitely different from each
    other, this we think an enormous tax on human credulity.
    We say, that if a doctrine, so strange, so difficult, so
    remote from all the previous conceptions of men, be indeed a part
    and an essential part of revelation, it must be taught with great
    distinctness, and we ask our brethren to point to some plain,
    direct passage, where Christ is said to be composed of two minds
    infinitely different, yet constituting one person. We find none.
    Other Christians, indeed, tell us, that this doctrine is necessary
    to the harmony of the Scriptures, that some texts ascribe to Jesus
    Christ human, and others divine properties, and that to reconcile
    these, we must suppose two minds, to which these properties may be
    referred. In other words, for the purpose of reconciling certain
    difficult passages, which a just criticism can in a great degree,
    if not wholly, explain, we must invent an hypothesis vastly more
    difficult, and involving gross absurdity. We are to find our way
    out of a labyrinth, by a clue which conducts us into mazes
    infinitely more inextricable.
    Surely, if Jesus Christ felt that he consisted of two minds,
    and that this was a leading feature of his religion, his
    phraseology respecting himself would have been colored by this
    peculiarity. The universal language of men is framed upon the idea,
    that one person is one person, is one mind, and one soul; and when
    the multitude heard this language from the lips of Jesus, they must
    have taken it in its usual sense, and must have referred to a
    single soul all which he spoke, unless expressly instructed to
    interpret it differently. But where do we find this instruction?
    Where do you meet, in the New Testament, the phraseology which
    abounds in Trinitarian books, and which necessarily grows from the
    doctrine of two natures in Jesus? Where does this divine teacher
    say, "This I speak as God, and this as man; this is true only of my
    human mind, this only of my divine"? Where do we find in the
    Epistles a trace of this strange phraseology? Nowhere. It was not
    needed in that day. It was demanded by the errors of a later age.
    We believe, then, that Christ is one mind, one being, and, I
    add, a being distinct from the one God. That Christ is not the one
    God, not the same being with the Father, is a necessary inference
    from our former head, in which we saw that the doctrine of three
    persons in God is a fiction. But on so important a subject, I would
    add a few remarks. We wish, that those from whom we differ, would
    weigh one striking fact. Jesus, in his preaching, continually spoke
    of God. The word was always in his mouth. We ask, does he, by this
    word, ever mean himself? We say, never. On the contrary, he most
    plainly distinguishes between God and himself, and so do his
    disciples. How this is to be reconciled with the idea, that the
    manifestation of Christ, as God, was a primary object of
    Christianity, our adversaries must determine.
    If we examine the passages in which Jesus is distinguished
    from God, we shall see, that they not only speak of him as another
    being, but seem to labor to express his inferiority. He is
    continually spoken of as the Son of God, sent of God, receiving all
    his powers from God, working miracles because God was with him,
    judging justly because God taught him, having claims on our belief,
    because he was anointed and sealed by God, and as able of himself
    to do nothing. The New Testament is filled with this language. Now
    we ask, what impression this language was fitted and intended to
    make? Could any, who heard it, have imagined that Jesus was the
    very God to whom he was so industriously declared to be inferior;
    the very Being by whom he was sent, and from whom he professed to
    have received his message and power? Let it here be remembered,
    that the human birth, and bodily form, and humble circumstances,
    and mortal sufferings of Jesus, must all have prepared men to
    interpret, in the most unqualified manner, the language in which
    his inferiority to God was declared. Why, then, was this language
    used so continually, and without limitation, if Jesus were the
    Supreme Deity, and if this truth were an essential part of his
    religion? I repeat it, the human condition and sufferings of Christ
    tended strongly to exclude from men's minds the idea of his proper
    Godhead; and, of course, we should expect to find in the New
    Testament perpetual care and effort to counteract this tendency, to
    hold him forth as the same being with his Father, if this doctrine
    were, as is pretended, the soul and centre of his religion. We
    should expect to find the phraseology of Scripture cast into the
    mould of this doctrine, to hear familiarly of God the Son, of our
    Lord God Jesus, and to be told, that to us there is one God, even
    Jesus. But, instead of this, the inferiority of Christ pervades the
    New Testament. It is not only implied in the general phraseology,
    but repeatedly and decidedly expressed, and unaccompanied with any
    admonition to prevent its application to his whole nature. Could
    it, then, have been the great design of the sacred writers to
    exhibit Jesus as the Supreme God?
    I am aware that these remarks will be met by two or three
    texts, in which Christ is called God, and by a class of passages,
    not very numerous, in which divine properties are said to be
    ascribed to him. To these we offer one plain answer. We say, that
    it is one of the most established and obvious principles of
    criticism, that language is to be explained according to the known
    properties of the subject to which it is applied. Every man knows,
    that the same words convey very different ideas, when used in
    relation to different beings. Thus, Solomon BUILT the temple in a
    different manner from the architect whom he employed; and God
    REPENTS differently from man. Now we maintain, that the known
    properties and circumstances of Christ, his birth, sufferings, and
    death, his constant habit of speaking of God as a distinct being
    from himself, his praying to God, his ascribing to God all his
    power and offices, these acknowledged properties of Christ, we say,
    oblige us to interpret the comparatively few passages which are
    thought to make him the Supreme God, in a manner consistent with
    his distinct and inferior nature. It is our duty to explain such
    texts by the rule which we apply to other texts, in which human
    beings are called gods, and are said to be partakers of the divine
    nature, to know and possess all things, and to be filled with all
    God's fulness. These latter passages we do not hesitate to modify,
    and restrain, and turn from the most obvious sense, because this
    sense is opposed to the known properties of the beings to whom they
    relate; and we maintain, that we adhere to the same principle, and
    use no greater latitude, in explaining, as we do, the passages
    which are thought to support the Godhead of Christ.
    Trinitarians profess to derive some important advantages from
    their mode of viewing Christ. It furnishes them,they tell us, with
    an infinite atonement, for it shows them an infinite being
    suffering for their sins. The confidence with which this fallacy is
    repeated astonishes us. When pressed with the question, whether
    they really believe, that the infinite and unchangeable God
    suffered and died on the cross, they acknowledge that this is not
    true, but that Christ's human mind alone sustained the pains of
    death. How have we, then, an infinite sufferer? This language seems
    to us an imposition on common minds, and very derogatory to God's
    justice, as if this attribute could be satisfied by a sophism and
    a fiction.
    We are also told, that Christ is a more interesting object,
    that his love and mercy are more felt, when he is viewed as the
    Supreme God, who left his glory to take humanity and to suffer for
    men. That Trinitarians are strongly moved by this representation,
    we do not mean to deny; but we think their emotions altogether
    founded on a misapprehension of their own doctrines. They talk of
    the second person of the Trinity's leaving his glory and his
    Father's bosom, to visit and save the world. But this second
    person, being the unchangeable and infinite God, was evidently
    incapable of parting with the least degree of his perfection and
    felicity. At the moment of his taking flesh, he was as intimately
    present with his Father as before, and equally with his Father
    filled heaven, and earth, and immensity. This Trinitarians
    acknowledge; and still they profess to be touched and overwhelmed
    by the amazing humiliation of this immutable being! But not only
    does their doctrine, when fully explained, reduce Christ's
    humiliation to a fiction, it almost wholly destroys the impressions
    with which his cross ought to be viewed. According to their
    doctrine, Christ was comparatively no sufferer at all. It is true,
    his human mind suffered; but this, they tell us, was an infinitely
    small part of Jesus, bearing no more proportion to his whole
    nature, than a single hair of our heads to the whole body, or than
    a drop to the ocean. The divine mind of Christ, that which was most
    properly himself, was infinitely happy, at the very moment of the
    suffering of his humanity. Whilst hanging on the cross, he was the
    happiest being in the universe, as happy as the infinite Father; so
    that his pains, compared with his felicity, were nothing. This
    Trinitarians do, and must, acknowledge. It follows necessarily from
    the immutableness of the divine nature, which they ascribe to
    Christ; so that their system, justly viewed, robs his death of
    interest, weakens our sympathy with his sufferings, and is, of all
    others, most unfavorable to a love of Christ, founded on a sense of
    his sacrifices for mankind. We esteem our own views to be vastly
    more affecting. It is our belief, that Christ's humiliation was
    real and entire, that the whole Saviour, and not a part of him,
    suffered, that his crucifixion was a scene of deep and unmixed
    agony. As we stand round his cross, our minds are not distracted,
    nor our sensibility weakened, by contemplating him as composed of
    incongruous and infinitely differing minds, and as having a balance
    of infinite felicity. We recognize in the dying Jesus but one mind.
    This, we think, renders his sufferings, and his patience and love
    in bearing them, incomparably more impressive and affecting than
    the system we oppose.
    3. Having thus given our belief on two great points, namely,
    that there is one God, and that Jesus Christ is a being distinct
    from, and inferior to, God, I now proceed to another point, on
    which we lay still greater stress. We believe in the MORAL
    PERFECTION OF GOD. We consider no part of theology so important as
    that which treats of God's moral character; and we value our views
    of Christianity chiefly as they assert his amiable and venerable
    attributes.
    It may be said, that, in regard to this subject, all
    Christians agree, that all ascribe to the Supreme Being infinite
    justice, goodness, and holiness. We reply, that it is very possible
    to speak of God magnificently, and to think of him meanly; to apply
    to his person high-sounding epithets, and to his government,
    principles which make him odious. The Heathens called Jupiter the
    greatest and the best; but his history was black with cruelty and
    lust. We cannot judge of men's real ideas of God by their general
    language, for in all ages they have hoped to soothe the Deity by
    adulation. We must inquire into their particular views of his
    purposes, of the principles of his administration, and of his
    disposition towards his creatures.
    We conceive that Christians have generally leaned towards a
    very injurious view of the Supreme Being. They have too often felt,
    as if he were raised, by his greatness and sovereignty, above the
    principles of morality, above those eternal laws of equity and
    rectitude, to which all other beings are subjected. We believe,
    that in no being is the sense of right so strong, so omnipotent, as
    in God. We believe that his almighty power is entirely submitted to
    his perceptions of rectitude; and this is the ground of our piety.
    It is not because he is our Creator merely, but because he created
    us for good and holy purposes; it is not because his will is
    irresistible, but because his will is the perfection of virtue,
    that we pay him allegiance. We cannot bow before a being, however
    great and powerful, who governs tyrannically. We respect nothing
    but excellence, whether on earth or in heaven. We venerate not the
    loftiness of God's throne, but the equity and goodness in which it
    is established.
    We believe that God is infinitely good, kind, benevolent, in
    the proper sense of these words; good in disposition, as well as in
    act; good, not to a few, but to all; good to every individual, as
    well as to the general system.
    We believe, too, that God is just; but we never forget, that
    his justice is the justice of a good being, dwelling in the same
    mind, and acting in harmony, with perfect benevolence. By this
    attribute, we understand God's infinite regard to virtue or moral
    worth, expressed in a moral government; that is, in giving
    excellent and equitable laws, and in conferring such rewards, and
    inflicting such punishments, as are best fitted to secure their
    observance. God's justice has for its end the highest virtue of the
    creation, and it punishes for this end alone, and thus it coincides
    with benevolence; for virtue and happiness, though not the same,
    are inseparably conjoined.
    God's justice thus viewed, appears to us to be in perfect
    harmony with his mercy. According to the prevalent systems of
    theology, these attributes are so discordant and jarring, that to
    reconcile them is the hardest task, and the most wonderful
    achievement, of infinite wisdom. To us they seem to be intimate
    friends, always at peace, breathing the same spirit, and seeking
    the same end. By God's mercy, we understand not a blind instinctive
    compassion, which forgives without reflection, and without regard
    to the interests of virtue. This, we acknowledge, would be
    incompatible with justice, and also with enlightened benevolence.
    God's mercy, as we understand it, desires strongly the happiness of
    the guilty, but only through their penitence. It has a regard to
    character as truly as his justice. It defers punishment, and
    suffers long, that the sinner may return to his duty, but leaves
    the impenitent and unyielding, to the fearful retribution
    threatened in God's Word.
    To give our views of God in one word, we believe in his
    Parental character. We ascribe to him, not only the name, but the
    dispositions and principles of a father. We believe that he has a
    father's concern for his creatures, a father's desire for their
    improvement, a father's equity in proportioning his commands to
    their powers, a father's joy in their progress, a father's
    readiness to receive the penitent, and a father's justice for the
    incorrigible. We look upon this world as a place of education, in
    which he is training men by prosperity and adversity, by aids and
    obstructions, by conflicts of reason and passion, by motives to
    duty and temptations to sin, by a various discipline suited to free
    and moral beings, for union with himself, and for a sublime and
    ever-growing virtue in heaven.
    Now, we object to the systems of religion, which prevail among
    us, that they are adverse, in a greater or less degree, to these
    purifying, comforting, and honorable views of God; that they take
    from us our Father in heaven, and substitute for him a being, whom
    we cannot love if we would, and whom we ought not to love if we
    could. We object, particularly on this ground, to that system,
    which arrogates to itself the name of Orthodoxy, and which is now
    industriously propagated through our country. This system indeed
    takes various shapes, but in all it casts dishonor on the Creator.
    According to its old and genuine form, it teaches, that God brings
    us into life wholly depraved, so that under the innocent features
    of our childhood is hidden a nature averse to all good and propense
    to all evil, a nature which exposes us to God's displeasure and
    wrath, even before we have acquired power to understand our duties,
    or to reflect upon our actions. According to a more modern
    exposition, it teaches, that we came from the hands of our Maker
    with such a constitution, and are placed under such influences and circumstances, as to render certain and infallible the total
    depravity of every human being, from the first moment of his moral
    agency; and it also teaches, that the offence of the child, who
    brings into life this ceaseless tendency to unmingled crime,
    exposes him to the sentence of everlasting damnation. Now,
    according to the plainest principles of morality, we maintain, that
    a natural constitution of the mind, unfailingly disposing it to
    evil and to evil alone, would absolve it from guilt; that to give
    existence under this condition would argue unspeakable cruelty; and
    that to punish the sin of this unhappily constituted child with
    endless ruin, would be a wrong unparalleled by the most merciless
    despotism.
    This system also teaches, that God selects from this corrupt
    mass a number to be saved, and plucks them, by a special influence,
    from the common ruin; that the rest of mankind, though left without
    that special grace which their conversion requires, are commanded
    to repent, under penalty of aggravated woe; and that forgiveness is
    promised them, on terms which their very constitution infallibly
    disposes them to reject, and in rejecting which they awfully
    enhance the punishments of hell. These proffers of forgiveness and
    exhortations of amendment, to beings born under a blighting curse,
    fill our minds with a horror which we want words to express.
    That this religious system does not produce all the effects on
    character, which might be anticipated, we most joyfully admit. It
    is often, very often, counteracted by nature, conscience, common
    sense, by the general strain of Scripture, by the mild example and
    precepts of Christ, and by the many positive declarations of God's
    universal kindness and perfect equity. But still we think that we
    see its unhappy influence. It tends to discourage the timid, to
    give excuses to the bad, to feed the vanity of the fanatical, and
    to offer shelter to the bad feelings of the malignant. By shocking,
    as it does, the fundamental principles of morality, and by
    exhibiting a severe and partial Deity, it tends strongly to pervert
    the moral faculty, to form a gloomy, forbidding, and servile
    religion, and to lead men to substitute censoriousness, bitterness,
    and persecution, for a tender and impartial charity. We think, too,
    that this system, which begins with degrading human nature, may be
    expected to end in pride; for pride grows out of a consciousness of
    high distinctions, however obtained, and no distinction is so great
    as that which is made between the elected and abandoned of God.
    The false and dishonorable views of God, which have now been
    stated, we feel ourselves bound to resist unceasingly. Other errors
    we can pass over with comparative indifference. But we ask our
    opponents to leave to us a GOD, worthy of our love and trust, in
    whom our moral sentiments may delight, in whom our weaknesses and
    sorrows may find refuge. We cling to the Divine perfections. We
    meet them everywhere in creation, we read them in the Scriptures,
    we see a lovely image of them in Jesus Christ; and gratitude, love,
    and veneration call on us to assert them. Reproached, as we often
    are, by men, it is our consolation and happiness, that one of our
    chief offences is the zeal with which we vindicate the dishonored
    goodness and rectitude of God.
    4. Having thus spoken of the unity of God; of the unity of
    Jesus, and his inferiority to God; and of the perfections of the
    Divine character; I now proceed to give our views of the mediation
    of Christ, and of the purposes of his mission. With regard to the
    great object which Jesus came to accomplish, there seems to be no
    possibility of mistake. We believe, that he was sent by the Father
    to effect a moral, or spiritual deliverance of mankind; that is, to
    rescue men from sin and its consequences, and to bring them to a
    state of everlasting purity and happiness. We believe, too, that he accomplishes this sublime purpose by a variety of methods; by his
    instructions respecting God's unity, parental character, and moral
    government, which are admirably fitted to reclaim the world from
    idolatry and impiety, to the knowledge, love, and obedience of the
    Creator; by his promises of pardon to the penitent, and of divine
    assistance to those who labor for progress in moral excellence; by
    the light which he has thrown on the path of duty; by his own
    spotless example, in which the loveliness and sublimity of virtue
    shine forth to warm and quicken, as well as guide us to perfection;
    by his threatenings against incorrigible guilt; by his glorious
    discoveries of immortality; by his sufferings and death; by that
    signal event, the resurrection, which powerfully bore witness to
    his divine mission, and brought down to men's senses a future life;
    by his continual intercession, which obtains for us spiritual aid
    and blessings; and by the power with which he is invested of
    raising the dead, judging the world, and conferring the everlasting
    rewards promised to the faithful.
    We have no desire to conceal the fact, that a difference of
    opinion exists among us, in regard to an interesting part of
    Christ's mediation; I mean, in regard to the precise influence of
    his death on our forgiveness. Many suppose, that this event
    contributes to our pardon, as it was a principal means of
    confirming his religion, and of giving it a power over the mind; in
    other words, that it procures forgiveness by leading to that
    repentance and virtue, which is the great and only condition on
    which forgiveness is bestowed. Many of us are dissatisfied with
    this explanation, and think that the Scriptures ascribe the
    remission of sins to Christ's death, with an emphasis so peculiar,
    that we ought to consider this event as having a special influence
    in removing punishment, though the Scriptures may not reveal the
    way in which it contributes to this end.
    Whilst, however, we differ in explaining the connexion between
    Christ's death and human forgiveness, a connexion which we all
    gratefully acknowledge, we agree in rejecting many sentiments which
    prevail in regard to his mediation. The idea, which is conveyed to
    common minds by the popular system, that Christ's death has an
    influence in making God placable, or merciful, in awakening his
    kindness towards men, we reject with strong disapprobation. We are
    happy to find, that this very dishonorable notion is disowned by
    intelligent Christians of that class from which we differ. We
    recollect, however, that, not long ago, it was common to hear of
    Christ, as having died to appease God's wrath, and to pay the debt
    of sinners to his inflexible justice; and we have a strong
    persuasion, that the language of popular religious books, and the
    common mode of stating the doctrine of Christ's mediation, still
    communicate very degrading views of God's character. They give to
    multitudes the impression, that the death of Jesus produces a
    change in the mind of God towards man, and that in this its
    efficacy chiefly consists. No error seems to us more pernicious. We
    can endure no shade over the pure goodness of God. We earnestly
    maintain, that Jesus, instead of calling forth, in any way or
    degree, the mercy of the Father, was sent by that mercy, to be our
    Saviour; that he is nothing to the human race, but what he is by
    God's appointment; that he communicates nothing but what God
    empowers him to bestow; that our Father in heaven is originally,
    essentially, and eternally placable, and disposed to forgive; and
    that his unborrowed, underived, and unchangeable love is the only
    fountain of what flows to us through his Son. We conceive, that
    Jesus is dishonored, not glorified, by ascribing to him an
    influence, which clouds the splendor of Divine benevolence.
    We farther agree in rejecting, as unscriptural and absurd, the
    explanation given by the popular system, of the manner in which
    Christ's death procures forgiveness for men. This system used to
    teach as its fundamental principle, that man, having sinned against
    an infinite Being, has contracted infinite guilt, and is
    consequently exposed to an infinite penalty. We believe, however,
    that this reasoning, if reasoning it may be called, which overlooks
    the obvious maxim, that the guilt of a being must be proportioned
    to his nature and powers, has fallen into disuse. Still the system
    teaches, that sin, of whatever degree, exposes to endless
    punishment, and that the whole human race, being infallibly
    involved by their nature in sin, owe this awful penalty to the
    justice of their Creator. It teaches, that this penalty cannot be
    remitted, in consistency with the honor of the divine law, unless
    a substitute be found to endure it or to suffer an equivalent. It
    also teaches, that, from the nature of the case, no substitute is
    adequate to this work, save the infinite God himself; and
    accordingly, God, in his second person, took on him human nature,
    that he might pay to his own justice the debt of punishment
    incurred by men, and might thus reconcile forgiveness with the
    claims and threatenings of his law. Such is the prevalent system.
    Now, to us, this doctrine seems to carry on its front strong marks
    of absurdity; and we maintain that Christianity ought not to be
    encumbered with it, unless it be laid down in the New Testament
    fully and expressly. We ask our adversaries, then, to point to some
    plain passages where it is taught. We ask for one text, in which we
    are told, that God took human nature that he might make an infinite satisfaction to his own justice; for one text, which tells us, that
    human guilt requires an infinite substitute; that Christ's
    sufferings owe their efficacy to their being borne by an infinite
    being; or that his divine nature gives infinite value to the
    sufferings of the human. Not ONE WORD of this description can we
    find in the Scriptures; not a text, which even hints at these
    strange doctrines. They are altogether, we believe, the fictions of theologians. Christianity is in no degree responsible for them. We
    are astonished at their prevalence. What can be plainer, than that
    God cannot, in any sense, be a sufferer, or bear a penalty in the
    room of his creatures? How dishonorable to him is the supposition,
    that his justice is now so severe, as to exact infinite punishment
    for the sins of frail and feeble men, and now so easy and yielding,
    as to accept the limited pains of Christ's human soul, as a full
    equivalent for the endless woes due from the world? How plain is it
    also, according to this doctrine, that God, instead of being
    plenteous in forgiveness, never forgives; for it seems absurd to
    speak of men as forgiven, when their whole punishment, or an
    equivalent to it, is borne by a substitute? A scheme more fitted to
    obscure the brightness of Christianity and the mercy of God, or
    less suited to give comfort to a guilty and troubled mind, could
    not, we think, be easily framed.
    We believe, too, that this system is unfavorable to the
    character. It naturally leads men to think, that Christ came to
    change God's mind rather than their own; that the highest object of
    his mission was to avert punishment, rather than to communicate
    holiness; and that a large part of religion consists in disparaging
    good works and human virtue, for the purpose of magnifying the
    value of Christ's vicarious sufferings. In this way, a sense of the
    infinite importance and indispensable necessity of personal
    improvement is weakened, and high-sounding praises of Christ's
    cross seem often to be substituted for obedience to his precepts.
    For ourselves, we have not so learned Jesus. Whilst we gratefully
    acknowledge, that he came to rescue us from punishment, we believe,
    that he was sent on a still nobler errand, namely, to deliver us
    from sin itself, and to form us to a sublime and heavenly virtue.
    We regard him as a Saviour, chiefly as he is the light, physician,
    and guide of the dark, diseased, and wandering mind. No influence
    in the universe seems to us so glorious, as that over the
    character; and no redemption so worthy of thankfulness, as the
    restoration of the soul to purity. Without this, pardon, were it
    possible, would be of little value. Why pluck the sinner from hell,
    if a hell be left to burn in his own breast? Why raise him to
    heaven, if he remain a stranger to its sanctity and love? With
    these impressions, we are accustomed to value the Gospel chiefly as
    it abounds in effectual aids, motives, excitements to a generous
    and divine virtue. In this virtue, as in a common centre, we see
    all its doctrines, precepts, promises meet; and we believe, that
    faith in this religion is of no worth, and contributes nothing to
    salvation, any farther than as it uses these doctrines, precepts,
    promises, and the whole life, character, sufferings, and triumphs
    of Jesus, as the means of purifying the mind, of changing it into
    the likeness of his celestial excellence.
    5. Having thus stated our views of the highest object of
    Christ's mission, that it is the recovery of men to virtue, or
    holiness, I shall now, in the last place, give our views of the
    nature of Christian virtue, or true holiness. We believe that all
    virtue has its foundation in the moral nature of man, that is, in
    conscience, or his sense of duty, and in the power of forming his
    temper and life according to conscience. We believe that these
    moral faculties are the grounds of responsibility, and the highest
    distinctions of human nature, and that no act is praiseworthy, any
    farther than it springs from their exertion. We believe, that no
    dispositions infused into us without our own moral activity, are of
    the nature of virtue, and therefore, we reject the doctrine of
    irresistible divine influence on the human mind, moulding it into
    goodness, as marble is hewn into a statue. Such goodness, if this
    word may be used, would not be the object of moral approbation, any
    more than the instinctive affections of inferior animals, or the
    constitutional amiableness of human beings.
    By these remarks, we do not mean to deny the importance of
    God's aid or Spirit; but by his Spirit, we mean a moral,
    illuminating, and persuasive influence, not physical, not
    compulsory, not involving a necessity of virtue. We object,
    strongly, to the idea of many Christians respecting man's impotence
    and God's irresistible agency on the heart, believing that they
    subvert our responsibility and the laws of our moral nature, that
    they make men machines, that they cast on God the blame of all evil
    deeds, that they discourage good minds, and inflate the fanatical
    with wild conceits of immediate and sensible inspiration.
    Among the virtues, we give the first place to the love of God.
    We believe, that this principle is the true end and happiness of
    our being, that we were made for union with our Creator, that his
    infinite perfection is the only sufficient object and true
    resting-place for the insatiable desires and unlimited capacities
    of the human mind, and that, without him, our noblest sentiments,
    admiration, veneration, hope, and love, would wither and decay. We
    believe, too, that the love of God is not only essential to
    happiness, but to the strength and perfection of all the virtues;
    that conscience, without the sanction of God's authority and
    retributive justice, would be a weak director; that benevolence,
    unless nourished by communion with his goodness, and encouraged by
    his smile, could not thrive amidst the selfishness and
    thanklessness of the world; and that self-government, without a
    sense of the divine inspection, would hardly extend beyond an
    outward and partial purity. God, as he is essentially goodness,
    holiness, justice, and virtue, so he is the life, motive, and
    sustainer of virtue in the human soul.
    But, whilst we earnestly inculcate the love of God, we believe
    that great care is necessary to distinguish it from counterfeits.
    We think that much which is called piety is worthless. Many have
    fallen into the error, that there can be no excess in feelings
    which have God for their object; and, distrusting as coldness that self-possession, without which virtue and devotion lose all their
    dignity, they have abandoned themselves to extravagances, which
    have brought contempt on piety. Most certainly, if the love of God
    be that which often bears its name, the less we have of it the
    better. If religion be the shipwreck of understanding, we cannot
    keep too far from it. On this subject, we always speak plainly. We
    cannot sacrifice our reason to the reputation of zeal. We owe it to
    truth and religion to maintain, that fanaticism, partial insanity,
    sudden impressions, and ungovernable transports, are anything
    rather than piety.
    We conceive, that the true love of God is a moral sentiment,
    founded on a clear perception, and consisting in a high esteem and
    veneration, of his moral perfections. Thus, it perfectly coincides,
    and is in fact the same thing, with the love of virtue, rectitude,
    and goodness. You will easily judge, then, what we esteem the
    surest and only decisive signs of piety. We lay no stress on strong excitements. We esteem him, and him only a pious man, who
    practically conforms to God's moral perfections and government; who
    shows his delight in God's benevolence, by loving and serving his
    neighbour; his delight in God's justice, by being resolutely
    upright; his sense of God's purity, by regulating his thoughts,
    imagination, and desires; and whose conversation, business, and
    domestic life are swayed by a regard to God's presence and
    authority. In all things else men may deceive themselves.
    Disordered nerves may give them strange sights, and sounds, and
    impressions. Texts of Scripture may come to them as from Heaven.
    Their whole souls may be moved, and their confidence in God's favor
    be undoubting. But in all this there is no religion. The question
    is, Do they love God's commands, in which his character is fully
    expressed, and give up to these their habits and passions? Without
    this, ecstasy is a mockery. One surrender of desire to God's will,
    is worth a thousand transports. We do not judge of the bent of
    men's minds by their raptures, any more than we judge of the
    natural direction of a tree during a storm. We rather suspect loud
    profession, for we have observed, that deep feeling is generally
    noiseless, and least seeks display.
    We would not, by these remarks, be understood as wishing to
    exclude from religion warmth, and even transport. We honor, and
    highly value, true religious sensibility. We believe, that
    Christianity is intended to act powerfully on our whole nature, on
    the heart as well as the understanding and the conscience. We
    conceive of heaven as a state where the love of God will be exalted
    into an unbounded fervor and joy; and we desire, in our pilgrimage
    here, to drink into the spirit of that better world. But we think,
    that religious warmth is only to be valued, when it springs
    naturally from an improved character, when it comes unforced, when
    it is the recompense of obedience, when it is the warmth of a mind
    which understands God by being like him, and when, instead of
    disordering, it exalts the understanding, invigorates conscience,
    gives a pleasure to common duties, and is seen to exist in
    connexion with cheerfulness, judiciousness, and a reasonable frame
    of mind. When we observe a fervor, called religious, in men whose
    general character expresses little refinement and elevation, and
    whose piety seems at war with reason, we pay it little respect. We
    honor religion too much to give its sacred name to a feverish,
    forced, fluctuating zeal, which has little power over the life.
    Another important branch of virtue, we believe to be love to
    Christ. The greatness of the work of Jesus, the spirit with which
    he executed it, and the sufferings which he bore for our salvation,
    we feel to be strong claims on our gratitude and veneration. We see
    in nature no beauty to be compared with the loveliness of his
    character, nor do we find on earth a benefactor to whom we owe an
    equal debt. We read his history with delight, and learn from it the
    perfection of our nature. We are particularly touched by his death,
    which was endured for our redemption, and by that strength of
    charity which triumphed over his pains. His resurrection is the
    foundation of our hope of immortality. His intercession gives us
    boldness to draw nigh to the throne of grace, and we look up to
    heaven with new desire, when we think, that, if we follow him here,
    we shall there see his benignant countenance, and enjoy his
    friendship for ever.
    I need not express to you our views on the subject of the
    benevolent virtues. We attach such importance to these that we are
    sometimes reproached with exalting them above piety. We regard the
    spirit of love, charity, meekness, forgiveness, liberality, and
    beneficence, as the badge and distinction of Christians, as the
    brightest image we can bear of God, as the best proof of piety. On
    this subject, I need not, and cannot enlarge; but there is one
    branch of benevolence which I ought not to pass over in silence,
    because we think that we conceive of it more highly and justly than
    many of our brethren. I refer to the duty of candor, charitable
    judgment, especially towards those who differ in religious opinion.
    We think, that in nothing have Christians so widely departed from
    their religion, as in this particular. We read with astonishment
    and horror, the history of the church; and sometimes when we look
    back on the fires of persecution, and on the zeal of Christians, in
    building up walls of separation, and in giving up one another to
    perdition, we feel as if we were reading the records of an
    infernal, rather than a heavenly kingdom. An enemy to every
    religion, if asked to describe a Christian, would, with some show
    of reason, depict him as an idolater of his own distinguishing
    opinions, covered with badges of party, shutting his eyes on the
    virtues, and his ears on the arguments, of his opponents,
    arrogating all excellence to his own sect and all saving power to
    his own creed, sheltering under the name of pious zeal the love of
    domination, the conceit of infallibility, and the spirit of
    intolerance, and trampling on men's rights under the pretence of
    saving their souls.
    We can hardly conceive of a plainer obligation on beings of
    our frail and fallible nature, who are instructed in the duty of
    candid judgment, than to abstain from condemning men of apparent conscientiousness and sincerity, who are chargeable with no crime
    but that of differing from us in the interpretation of the
    Scriptures, and differing, too, on topics of great and acknowledged
    obscurity. We are astonished at the hardihood of those, who, with
    Christ's warnings sounding in their ears, take on them the
    responsibility of making creeds for his church, and cast out
    professors of virtuous lives for imagined errors, for the guilt of
    thinking for themselves. We know that zeal for truth is the cover
    for this usurpation of Christ's prerogative; but we think that zeal
    for truth, as it is called, is very suspicious, except in men,
    whose capacities and advantages, whose patient deliberation, and
    whose improvements in humility, mildness, and candor, give them a
    right to hope that their views are more just than those of their
    neighbours. Much of what passes for a zeal for truth, we look upon
    with little respect, for it often appears to thrive most
    luxuriantly where other virtues shoot up thinly and feebly; and we
    have no gratitude for those reformers, who would force upon us a
    doctrine which has not sweetened their own tempers, or made them
    better men than their neighbours.
    We are accustomed to think much of the difficulties attending
    religious inquiries; difficulties springing from the slow
    development of our minds, from the power of early impressions, from
    the state of society, from human authority, from the general
    neglect of the reasoning powers, from the want of just principles
    of criticism and of important helps in interpreting Scripture, and
    from various other causes. We find, that on no subject have men,
    and even good men, ingrafted so many strange conceits, wild
    theories, and fictions of fancy, as on religion ; and remembering,
    as we do, that we ourselves are sharers of the common frailty, we
    dare not assume infallibility in the treatment of our
    fellow-Christians, or encourage in common Christians, who have
    little time for investigation, the habit of denouncing and
    condemning other denominations, perhaps more enlightened and
    virtuous than their own. Charity, forbearance, a delight in the
    virtues of different sects, a backwardness to censure and condemn,
    these are virtues, which, however poorly practised by us, we admire
    and recommend; and we would rather join ourselves to the church in
    which they abound, than to any other communion, however elated with
    the belief of its own orthodoxy, however strict in guarding its
    creed, however burning with zeal against imagined error.
    I have thus given the distinguishing views of those Christians
    in whose names I have spoken. We have embraced this system, not
    hastily or lightly, but after much deliberation; and we hold it
    fast, not merely because we believe it to be true, but because we
    regard it as purifying truth, as a doctrine according to godliness,
    as able to "work mightily" and to "bring forth fruit" in them who
    believe. That we wish to spread it, we have no desire to conceal;
    but we think, that we wish its diffusion, because we regard it as
    more friendly to practical piety and pure morals than the opposite
    doctrines, because it gives clearer and nobler views of duty, and
    stronger motives to its performance, because it recommends religion
    at once to the understanding and the heart, because it asserts the
    lovely and venerable attributes of God, because it tends to restore
    the benevolent spirit of Jesus to his divided and afflicted church,
    and because it cuts off every hope of God's favor, except that
    which springs from practical conformity to the life and precepts of
    Christ. We see nothing in our views to give offence, save their
    purity, and it is their purity, which makes us seek and hope their
    extension through the world.

    My friend and brother; -- You are this day to take upon you
    important duties; to be clothed with an office, which the Son of
    God did not disdain; to devote yourself to that religion, which the
    most hallowed lips have preached, and the most precious blood
    sealed. We trust that you will bring to this work a willing mind,
    a firm purpose, a martyr's spirit, a readiness to toil and suffer
    for the truth, a devotion of your best powers to the interests of
    piety and virtue. I have spoken of the doctrines which you will
    probably preach; but I do not mean, that you are to give yourself
    to controversy. You will remember, that good practice is the end of
    preaching, and will labor to make your people holy livers, rather
    than skilful disputants. Be careful, lest the desire of defending
    what you deem truth, and of repelling reproach and
    misrepresentation, turn you aside from your great business, which
    is to fix in men's minds a living conviction of the obligation,
    sublimity, and happiness of Christian virtue. The best way to
    vindicate your sentiments, is to show, in your preaching and life,
    their intimate connexion with Christian morals, with a high and
    delicate sense of duty, with candor towards your opposers, with
    inflexible integrity, and with an habitual reverence for God. If
    any light can pierce and scatter the clouds of prejudice, it is
    that of a pure example. My brother, may your life preach more
    loudly than your lips. Be to this people a pattern of all good
    works, and may your instructions derive authority from a
    well-grounded belief in your hearers, that you speak from the
    heart, that you preach from experience, that the truth which you
    dispense has wrought powerfully in your own heart, that God, and
    Jesus, and heaven, are not merely words on your lips, but most
    affecting realities to your mind, and springs of hope and
    consolation, and strength, in all your trials. Thus laboring, may
    you reap abundantly, and have a testimony of your faithfulness, not
    only in your own conscience, but in the esteem, love, virtues, and
    improvements of your people.
    To all who hear me, I would say, with the Apostle, Prove all
    things, hold fast that which is good. Do not, brethren, shrink from
    the duty of searching God's Word for yourselves, through fear of
    human censure and denunciation. Do not think, that you may
    innocently follow the opinions which prevail around you, without
    investigation, on the ground, that Christianity is now so purified
    from errors, as to need no laborious research. There is much reason
    to believe, that Christianity is at this moment dishonored by gross
    and cherished corruptions. If you remember the darkness which hung
    over the Gospel for ages; if you consider the impure union, which
    still subsists in almost every Christian country, between the
    church and state, and which enlists men's selfishness and ambition
    on the side of established error; if you recollect in what degree
    the spirit of intolerance has checked free inquiry, not only
    before, but since the Reformation; you will see that Christianity
    cannot have freed itself from all the human inventions, which
    disfigured it under the Papal tyranny. No. Much stubble is yet to
    be burned; much rubbish to be removed; many gaudy decorations,
    which a false taste has hung around Christianity, must be swept
    away; and the earth-born fogs, which have long shrouded it, must be
    scattered, before this divine fabric will rise before us in its
    native and awful majesty, in its harmonious proportions, in its
    mild and celestial splendors This glorious reformation in the
    church, we hope, under God's blessing, from the progress of the
    human intellect, from the moral progress of society, from the
    consequent decline of prejudice and bigotry, and, though last not
    least, from the subversion of human authority in matters of
    religion, from the fall of those hierarchies, and other human
    institutions, by which the minds of individuals are oppressed under
    the weight of numbers, and a Papal dominion is perpetuated in the
    Protestant church. Our earnest prayer to God is, that he will
    overturn, and overturn, and overturn the strong-holds of spiritual
    usurpation, until HE shall come, whose right it is to rule the
    minds of men; that the conspiracy of ages against the liberty of
    Christians may be brought to an end; that the servile assent, so
    long yielded to human creeds, may give place to honest and devout
    inquiry into the Scriptures; and that Christianity, thus purified
    from error, may put forth its almighty energy, and prove itself, by
    its ennobling influence on the mind, to be indeed "the power of God
    unto salvation."


    Kurt,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23