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p. 129, that "he ascribed a beginning to the existence of the eternal Father. No wonder then," you add, "that he should ascribe a beginning to the Son's existence. You are welcome, Sir," you say, "to any advantage you may be able to derive from the authority of such a writer." Lactantius, however, candidly construed, may perhaps be said only to have used an improper expression, namely, that God made himself, meaning no more than we do when we say that God is self-existent, which in fact implies the very contrary of what you ascribe to him. He advances this in proof of his general maxim, Nec enim potest, ut ab ullo esse generatus, qui ipse universa generavit, he cannot be created of any who himself created all things, which clearly implies that he could not be created at all. For though the thing made had a beginning, the maker could have none; and who was the maker in this case but God himself? The term self-existent is in fact (as will appear if it be analysed) equally improper; for it implies that God is the cause of his own existence. For this reason, some who wish to speak with exactness avoid that term, and rather say that God is eternal; but they do not tax those who use the word selfexistent with really believing that God had a beginning.

Whatever mistakes Lactantius may be supposed to have made as a metaphysician, it does not appear that in his own time he was charged with any; and they might have been as little noticed still if he had been a sound divine; and though you suppose that he ascribed a beginning to the eternal Father, yet, if you had found that from the moment of the Father's existence, that of the Son had, in his idea, commenced also, you

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would perhaps have contented yourself with smiling at his notion, or at least have abated of the severity of

your censure.

Constantine, whom you quote, p. 127, as in your favour, is directly against you. Taking your own words, he says, "the Son was begotten, or rather he himself came forth, (being even ever in the Father,) for the setting in order of the things which were made by him. Here," you say, "the emperor expounds generation by coming forth." But then, Sir, he does not say that this generation, or coming forth, was the same thing with the setting in order the things that were made by him; but it was evidently something that took place previous to this setting in order, and with a view to it; so that this mysterious generation preceded what you quaintly call the projection of ener gies, and was not the same thing with it.

You still likewise confound the doctrine of Arius, p. 116, with that of the personification of the Logos, than which no two things were more different, having always been opposed to each other, as you must have known had you been so well read as you pretend to be in the ancient ecclésiastical writers, since a great proportion of their works is occupied in the discussion of this subject. The Arians maintained that Christ was a being created out of nothing, as other creatures were, notwithstanding the vastness of his powers, which were equal to the creation of all other things, visible and invisible; and not believing an eternal creation, they likewise said that there was a time when the Son did not exist. Both these propositions were denied by the orthodox of that age, who maintained that Christ was not made out of nothing, for that he was the Lo

gos, the wisdom, the power, &c. of the Father, and that he had always existed in the Father, as reason does in man, though his personality was by some supposed to have commenced in time. You must give me leave to say you are but little acquainted with the principles even of platonism, and especially those of the later platonists, from whom the christian fathers more immediately derived their notions, if you are not able to enter into this idea.

This personification, or the commencement of an actual personality of what was an attribute of God, is a strange idea; but, strange as it is, it nevertheless actually took place in the minds of thousands, and was in truth all the orthodoxy of the earlier ages. This incipient orthodoxy grew immediately out of platonism, and is certainly absurd enough. The orthodoxy of the later ages and of the present grew out of that, and is infinitely more absurd. Their doctrine was mere nonsense, yours the plainest of all contradictions, as I shall clearly show in my next letter.

"What difference there may be," you say, p. 118, "between a making out of nothing, and the conversion of a mere attribute into a substance, or how a person made out of an attribute may differ from a person made out of nothing, I would rather, Sir, that you than I should take the trouble to explain." I have explained it as well as such an absurdity can be explained, but it behoves you to explain it much more than it does me; for, absurd as the notion is, it certainly prepared the way for the still more absurd notion of three equal divine persons in one godhead.

I am, &c.

LETTER XIII.

Considerations relating to the Doctrine of the Trinity. .

REV. SIR,

I own I was particularly desirous of hearing what you could possibly say on the subject of my seventh letter, in which I advanced some general considerations relating to the doctrine of the trinity; but, unfortunately, you "content yourself," p. 136, "with giving only a general reply to some parts of that letter. A particular answer," you say, " to the several objections which it contains would lead me into metaphysical disquisitions, which I wish to decline, because in that subject I foresee that we should want common principles and a common language."

Now I make no doubt, Sir, but that if it had been possible for you to have given any plausible answer to the difficulties started in that letter, you would have found some principle, common or uncommon, on which to found it, and some language also, which might have been intelligible to me and your readers. But as you profess that you do not expect to convince me, it would have been quite sufficient for your purpose if you could have found common principles and common language for others.

I am the more concerned at your silence, as I was in hopes of having some further account of your own peculiar notion of the necessary origin of the Son from the Father's contemplation of his own perfections; but to my great mortification I find not one gleam of more light on this curious subject. You said that this

doctrine was agreeable to the notions of all the fathers, as well as to the sacred writers, and I challenged you to produce any authority for it, except what exists in your own imagination. In my opinion, nothing can be conceived more absurd than the idea of the necessary production of an intelligent being, possessed of actual substantial personality, equal in all respects to the original intelligent being, from the mere self-contemplation of that original being's perfections. I said that nothing in the Jewish Cabbala could be more absurd. You intimate, p. 149, that I may know but little of the Jewish Cabbala; but for my purpose it is quite enough, that it is a known proverbial expression to denote the extreme of absurdity; and if so, whatever the Jewish Cabbala may really be, (of which I may perhaps know as much as yourself, and of which we may each of us soon learn enough from Basnage,) the phrase could not be misapplied *.

I find, however, a few other things on the subject of that letter which are curious enough; so that, for the amusement, if not the instruction of my readers, I shall make some observations on them.

*The learned Prelate, in the fourth Disquisition annexed to the edition of his Tracts in controversy with Dr. Priestley, has laboured much, not indeed to defend the mysterious doctrine of the Son's generation from the Father's contemplation of his own perfections, but to prove that he was not himself the inventor of the sublime mystery. In his appeal to the writings of the fathers the Bishop totally fails: nor does he succeed much better in those of the schoolmen The first plain example of this curious doctrine is found in a treatise published under the sanction of the Council of Trent, entitled "Catechismus ad Parochos," in which" the true believer is exhorted to pray that he may be thought worthy to be allowed to see what that wonderful fecundity of God the Father is, that, contemplating and exerting his intelligence upon himself, he should beget a son, the exact counterpart and equal of himself." Melanchthon appears to have entertained the same extravagant notion, and Zanchius reproves it. At any rate it is sufficiently apparent that the honour of the invention does not appertain to Bishop Horsley."--Ed.

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