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more to the absence of this spirit, that ChrisMans stand so much aloof from each other, than to the speculative opinions which they respec tively maintain. The prevalent disposition for sneering at other denominations, and the plea sure that seems to be felt in laying open their sores, will generally be found to proceed from a rinciple of pride, and of self-conceit in regard to our own favourite opinions, some of which, when probed to the bottom, will be found as rotten as our neighbour's. Why are men not as much disposed to pass encomiums on what is sound in the opinions, and laudable in the conduct, of other parties, as they are to censure them for minor peculiarities of sentiment? Why? Because it appears, that many professed Christians take more delight in the exercise of malevolent feelings than of benevolent affections; and are like flies, that pass over the sound parts of a man's body, and fix upon his sores. Till such unchristian dispositions be undermined, and tempers of an opposite description pervade the ranks of Christian society, we can expect no cordial nor lasting union in the visible church, however many ingenious schemes may be formed, to bring about this desirable event. For every effect must have an adequate cause: this cause will be found to consist more in the affection than in opinion; and a union formed on an apparent coincidence of sentiment, unmingled with ardent love and affection, would be unworthy of the name, and would soon be dissolved.

It can form no decisive mark of a man's Christianity, that he recognises the peculiar opinions of the Baptists or Pædo-Baptists, of Presbyte rians, Episcopalians, or Independents; it is a matter, comparatively of little importance, whether a man believes that Christ was an actual or a virtual Mediator under the Old Testament; whether he be designated the Son of God in virtue of his office, or of his nature; whether or not we be guilty of Adam's first sin; whether the transaction which passed between him and his Creator, should be viewed as a law, or as a covenant; whether the ordinance of baptism should be administered by dipping, or by sprinkling, &c. &c.-But it is, unquestionably, a matter of the highest moment, both to the person himself, and to Christian society, that his temper, affections, and conduct, should be in unison with the holy law of God, and that he should display the love which it requires, in all his social, commercial, domestic, and Christian intercourses; and if such dispositions and conduct were universally to prevail among the various denominations of the religious world, union would soon follow, as a matter of course.-If, therefore, we wish to behold the unhappy divisions of the church cemented, let us cultivate, with ardour, those amiable and affectionate dispositions which our Jenevolent religion inculcates, and be more anxious to correct our own mental and moral

aberrations, than to magnify the errors and the faults of others. Let us make every allowance for the effects which education, habit, temper local circumstances, and particular associations, may have produced on the opinions of our supposed erring brethren; and let us consider, that we ourselves, had we been placed in the same circumstances, might have imbibed the same sentiments. Let us endeavour to acquire clear and well-defined ideas on every subject connected with religion; that we may not contend about trifles, about mere abstract ideas, or the application of particular terms or phrases. Let us keep our eyes fixed on the great and prominent objects of revelation, and on all the subordinate active means by which they may be promoted. Let us consider religion as consisting more in action, than in speculation. Let our love to Christian brethren be founded, not so much on a general coincidence of opinion, as on the resemblance they bear to the Divine image; and then we may confidently expect, that that period wil. seon approach, when the saints of God" shall seo eye to eye," in reference to all the grand bearings of the Gospel scheme, and when the name of Jehovah shall be ONE throughout all the earth.

IV. We may learn from the subject we have been illustrating, what notions we ought to form of the NATURE of a future state of happiness, and of the PREPARATION requisite to enable us to engage in its employments.-The felicity of the future world will not consist simply in a change of place; nor will it consist chiefly in change of sentiment or opinion. Its foundation must be laid in the principle of Love, and in the complete renovation of the moral powers of the human mind, without which no celestial scene could produce permanent enjoyment. Although all the theologians who now exist were united in opinion about every article of the system of Divinity; and although they were transported to the most splendid world that revolves aroun the star Arcturus; after the first transports, arising from the novelty and the grandeur of the scene had subsided, they would enjoy little more happiness in that orb, than they do in this terrestrial sphere, unless they were actuated with moral dispositions and affections very diffe rent from those which many of them now display. For, not only rancour and malice, but even coldness and indifference to the welfare of others, would prevent happiness from being enjoyed in any region of the material universe. All who believe in the reality of a future world, indulge in anxious wishes to be made happy when they pass from this mortal scene to the world of spirits. Even wicked men, whose consciences frequently forebode evil to them in the other world, indulge the hope that God will ultimately De merciful to them, and admit them to the joys of heaven. But this is impossible, in the very nature of things, unless they be "renewed in the

spirit of their minds," and endowed with those noly dispositions which alone can qualify them for relishing substantial happiness, and for participating in "the inheritance of the saints of light." How could Malignity associate with Benevolence, Contention with Friendship, or War with Peace? How could the sons of discord dwell in unity, in an assembly where all s harmony and love? How could the malicious and revengeful spirit find delight in the employments of kindness and pure benignity? How could the man who now finds his chief pleasure in hounding and horse-racing, in brawling and fighting, have any relish for the sublime adorations, the enraptured praises, and the lofty and refined contemplations, of the celestial inhabitants?

The thing is impossible, unless the moral order of all worlds were completly subverted. Such characters will be banished from the abodes of bliss; not by any arbitrary decree of the Almighty, but in virtue of the moral constitution of the intelligent universe.

It is, therefore, evident, that the happiness of heaven must be founded upon the exercise of love, affection, harmony, perfect good-will to fellow intelligences, and the infinite variety of ramifications into which such principles may diverge; combined with profound, enlightened, and venerable views and affections, in relation to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. When these and similar dispositions are uniformly exercised, without the least mixture of any one in gredient of moral evil, it is easy to conceive, with what transports of delight the inhabitants of heaven will contemplate the displays of Divine Power, Wisdom, and Goodness, and inves tigate the history of his dispensations in the moral government of our world, and in the arrangements of all the other worlds whose physical and moral economy may be laid open to their view.*

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Such views are in perfect accordance with the representations of Scripture." Without holiness, no man shall see the Lord." "The pure in heart (and they alone) shall see God." 'Nothing that worketh abomination, can enter within the gates of the heavenly city." "As we have borne the imago of the earthly, (says the Apostle,) so shall we bear the image of the hear venly." "Christ Jesus gave himself for the church, that he might sanctify and cleanse it, and that he might present it to himself a glorious church, holy, and without blemish." The crown of glory, reserved in heaven for the faithful, is designated" a crown of righteousness." "The

The Author will have an opportunity of illus trating this topic in more minute detail, in a work entitled, "The Philosophy of a Future state; or, an Eternal World,-and of the Aids which its discoveries afford, for enabling us to form a conception of he perpetual improvement of the celestial inhabit ants in knowledge and felicity."

illustration of the Connexion of Science with the

spirits of just men," in the future word, "gra made perfect," freed from every taint of mora pollution, and unrestrained in the exercise of their moral powers. The inheritance t which they are destined, is "undefiled” with the least stain of corruption, or with the exam ple of impure and malignant spirits. "When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, we shali be like him;" transformed into his moral image. and animated with those Divine principles and virtues, which he displayed in his conduct, when he tabernacled among men. The saints “shall walk with him in white," an emblem of their perfect moral purity; "they shall receive an inheritance among them that are sanctified," and "there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying; for the former things shall have pass ed away.'

V. From the preceding illustrations we may learn something of the nature and essence of fa ture punishment. If the exercise of love, in all its diversified modifications, constitutes the founda. tion and the essence of happiness, the unrestraised operations of malevolence must be the soures and the sum of misery. We cannot form a more dreadful picture of future punishment, than by conceiving the principles of falsehood, deceit, and malignity, and the passions of pride, hatred, malice, and revenge, raging with uncontrolled and perpetual violence. We need represent to ourselves nothing more horrible in the place of punishment, than by supposing the Almighty simply to permit wicked men to give full scope to their malevolent dispositions; leaving them "to eat of the fruit of their own ways, and to be filled with their own devices." The effects produced by the uncontrolled operation of such principles and passions would be such, as may be fitly represented by the emblems of “the worm that never dies," of" devouring fire," and of their necessary concomitants, "weeping, and wailing, and gnashing of teeth." (See Chap. II. Sect. iv. pp. 55. 58.) What other ingre dients of misery, arising either from local cir cumstances, from the recollection of the past, or the anticipation of the future, may be mingled with the cup of future wo, it becomes not us particularly to determine. And, whether this scene of misery will ever come to a termination, must be determined by the consideration, whether the effects produced by such a punishment will have a tendency to produce repentance and reformation on the minds of the sufferers. If, after a lapse of ages, the principles of hatred to God, and to surrounding intelligences, continue to operate with increasing violence, without producing the least desire of returning to their allegiance to God, or the least symptom of reformation, then, we may conclude, that the misery of wicked intelligences will continue so long as they remain in existence.

CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHER,

OR,

THE CONNEXION OF

SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY

WITH

RELIGION.

BY THOMAS DICK,

AUTHOR OF A VARIETY OF LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC COMMUNICATIONS
IN NICHOLSON'S PHILOSOPHICAL JOURNAL, THE ANNALS
OF PHILOSOPHY, ETC. ETC.

HARTFORD:

PUBLISHED BY H. F. SUMNER & CO.

NEW-YORK:

BY ROBINSON, PRATT & CO.

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PREFACE TO THIS EDITION.

THE following pages were written under the impression that the visible manifestations of the attributes of the Deity are too frequently overlooked by Christians in their views of the great objects of Religion, and in the worship they offer to the Father of their spirits; and are intended to show, that the Teachers of Religion, in imparting instruction either to the old or to the young, ought to embrace a wider range of illustration, in reference to Divine subjecte, than that to which they are usually confined.

Throughout the whole of the discussions contained in this work, the Author has pursued his own train of thought; and, in so doing, he trusts that he has been enabled to render some of his illustrations more interesting to the young and untutored mind than if he had adhered rigidly to the sentiments of others, and to the technical language of science. The sketches of the different sciences are not mere extracts, or compilations, but are, for the most part, original composition-in which it has been his main object to imbody as many facts as his limits would permit-in order to excite the inquiring mind to farther investigations into the different departments of physical science.

It is presumed, that no Christian reader will for once imagine, that the views illustrated in this work are intended to be substituted in place of the peculiar revelations of the Bible. The object of the volume is to illustrate the harmony which subsists between the system of Nature and the system of Revelation; and to show, that the manifestations of God in the material universe ought to be blended with our views of the facts and doctrines recorded in the volume of Inspiration.

It is taken for granted, throughout the whole range of the following illustrations, that the Scriptures contain a Revelation from Heaven; and, under a firm belief of this important truth, the Author has embellished his work with frequent quotations from the energetic and sublime language of this Sacred Book. It would, therefore, be unfair in any critic, who entertains doubts on this point, to find fault with such quotations, or with the allusions to Bible phraseology which occur, unless they can be shown to be introduced without judgment or discrimination.

The Author has carefully revised every portion of the present edition, and introduced a variety of corrections and modifications. He has likewise introduced additional matter, to the extent of between 20 and 30 pages, and also

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