The Christian Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Christian Life.

The Christian Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Christian Life.
can?  Looking upon the chaos around us, one power alone can reduce it into order, and fill it with light and life.  And does he really apprehend the perfections and high calling of Christ’s church; does he indeed fathom the depths of man’s wants, or has he learnt to rise to the fulness of the stature of their divine remedy, who comes forward to preach to us the necessity of apostolical succession?  Grant even that it was of divine appointment, still as it is demonstrably and palpably unconnected with holiness, as it would be a mere positive and ceremonial ordinance, it cannot be the point of most importance to insist on; even if it be a sin to neglect this, there are so many far weightier matters equally neglected, that it would be assuredly no Christian prophesying which were to strive to direct our chief attention to this.  But the wholly unmoral character of this doctrine, which if it were indeed of God, would make it a single mysterious exception to all the other doctrines of the Gospel, is, God be thanked, not more certain than its total want of external evidence; the Scripture disclaims it, Christ himself condemns it.

I have written at considerable length:  yet so vast is the subject, that I may seem to some to have written superficially, and to have left my statements without adequate support.  I can only say that no one paragraph has been written hastily, nor in fact is there one the substance of which has not been for several years in my mind; indeed, in many instances, not only the substance, but the proofs in detail have been actually written:  but to have inserted them here would have been impracticable, as they would have been in themselves a volume.  Neither have I knowingly remained in ignorance of any argument which may have been used in defence of Mr. Newman’s system; I have always desired to know what he and his friends say, and on what grounds they say it; although, as I have not read the Tracts for the Times regularly, I may have omitted something which it would have been important to notice.  Finally, in naming Mr. Newman as the chief author of the system which I have been considering, I have in no degree wished to make the question personal; but Mr. Percival’s letter authorizes us to consider him as one of the authors of it; and as I have never had any personal acquaintance with him, I could mention his name with no shock to any private feelings either in him or in myself.  But I have spoken of him simply as the maintainer of certain doctrines, not as maintaining them in any particular manner, far less as actuated by any particular motives.  I believe him to be in most serious error; I believe his system to be so destructive of Christ’s church, that I earnestly pray, and would labour to the utmost of my endeavours for its utter overthrow:  but on the other hand, I will not be tempted to confound the authors of the system with the system itself; for I know that the most mischievous errors have been promulgated by men who yet have been neither foolish nor wicked; and I nothing doubt that there are many points in Mr. Newman, in which I might learn truth from his teaching, and should be glad if I could come near him in his practice.

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The Christian Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.