Phases of Faith - Passages from the History of My Creed by Francis William Newman
page 38 of 295 (12%)
page 38 of 295 (12%)
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conceived that the most logical minds among Christians would contend
that there was another solution; which, in 1827, I committed to paper in nearly the following words: "May it not be doubted whether Leland sees the real circumstance that makes a revelation necessary? "No revelation is needed to inform us,--of the invisible power and deity of God; that we are bound to worship Him; that we are capable of sinning against Him and liable to his just Judgment; nay, that we have sinned, and that we find in nature marks of his displeasure against sin; and yet, that He is merciful. St. Paul and our Lord show us that these things are knowable by reason. The ignorance of the heathens is _judicial blindness_, to punish their obstinate rejection of the true God." "But a revelation _is_ needed to convey a SPECIAL message, such as this: that God has provided an Atonement for our sins, has deputed his own Son to become Head of the redeemed human family, and intends to raise those who believe in Him to a future and eternal life of bliss. These are external truths, (for 'who can believe, unless one be sent to preach them?') and are not knowable by any reasonings drawn from nature. They transcend natural analogies and moral or spiritual experience. To reveal them, a specific communication must be accorded to us: and on this the necessity for miracle turns." Thus, in my view, at that time, the materials of the Bible were in theory divisible into two portions: concerning the _one_, (which I called Natural Religion,) it not only was not presumptuous, but it was absolutely essential, to form an independent judgment; for this was |
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