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Chapter 6 No.6

Word Count: 1296    |    Released on: 30/11/2017

n labours, dangers, and sufferings, voluntarily undergone in attestation of the accounts which they delivered, and solely in

ed, or that the writers of Christ's life were induced by the event to attribute such predictions to him; seventhly, letters now in our possession, written by some of the principal agents in the transaction, referring expressly to extreme labours, dangers, and sufferings, sustained by themselves and their companions; lastly, a history purporting to be written by a fellow-traveller of one of the new teachers, and, by its unsophisticated correspondency with letters of that person still extant, proving itself to be written by some one well acquainted with the subject of the narrative, which history contains accounts of travels, persecutions, and martyrdoms, answering to what the former reasons lead us to expect: w

but the miracles attributed to him by which his pretensions could be maintained for a moment. Every controversy and every question must presuppose these: for, however such controversies, when they did arise, might and naturally would, be discussed upon their own grounds of argumentation, without citing the miraculous evidence which had been asserted to attend the Founder of the religion (which would have been to enter upon another, and a more general question), yet we are to bear in mind, that without previously supposing the existence or the pretence of such evidence, there could have been no place for the discussion of the argument at all. Thus, for example, whether the prophecies, which the Jews interpreted to belong to the Messiah, were or were not applicable to the history of Jesus of Nazareth, was a natural subject of debate in those times; and the debate would proceed without recurring at every turn to his miracles, because it set out with supposing these; inasmuch as without miraculous marks and tokens (real or pretended), or without some such great change effected by his means in the public condition of the country, as might have satisfied the then received interpretation of these prophecies, I do not see how the question could ever have been entertained. Apollos, we read, "mightily convinced the Jews, showing by the Scriptures that Jesus was Christ;" (Acts xviii. 28.) but unless Jesus had exhibited some distinction of his person, so

t, but of what had been reported to have been wrought, by those who preceded them. That imitation should follow reality, fiction should be grafted upon truth; that, if miracles were performed at first, miracles should be pretended afterwards; agrees so well with the ordinary course of human affairs, that we can have no

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Contents

Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 1 No.1
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 2 No.2
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 3 No.3
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 4 No.4
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 5 No.5
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 6 No.6
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 7 No.7
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 8 No.8
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 9 No.9
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 10 No.10
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 11 PROPHECY.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 12 THE MORALITY OF THE GOSPEL.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 13 THE CANDOUR OF THE WRITERS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 14 IDENTITY OF CHRIST'S CHARACTER.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 15 ORIGINALITY OF OUR SAVIOUR'S CHARACTER.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 16 No.16
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 17 UNDESIGNED COINCIDENCES.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 18 OF THE HISTORY OF THE RESURRECTION.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 19 THE DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN THE SEVERAL GOSPELS.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 20 ERRONEOUS OPINIONS IMPUTED TO THE APOSTLES.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 21 THE CONNEXION OF CHRISTIANITY WITH THE JEWISH HISTORY.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 22 REJECTION OF CHRISTIANITY.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 23 THAT THE CHRISTIAN MIRACLES ARE NOT RECITED, OR APPEALED TO, BY EARLY CHRISTIAN WRITERS THEMSELVES SO FULLY OR FREQUENTLY AS MIGHT HAVE BEEN EXPECTED.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 24 WANT OF UNIVERSALITY IN THE KNOWLEDGE AND RECEPTION OF CHRISTIANITY, AND OF GREATER CLEARNESS IN THE EVIDENCE.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 25 THE SUPPOSED EFFECTS OF CHRISTIANITY.
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Evidences of Christianity
Chapter 26 THE CONCLUSION,
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