Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION
- PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
- BOOK FIRST GENERAL VIEW OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT AS FITTED TO THROW LIGHT ON THE CHARACTER OF GOD
- BOOK SECOND PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE METHOD OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT IN THE PHYSICAL WORLD
- BOOK THIRD PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLES OF THE HUMAN MIND THROUGH WHICH GOD GOVERNS MANKIND
- BOOK FOURTH RESULTS—THE RECONCILIATION OF GOD AND MAN
- CHAPTER I NATURAL AND REVEALED RELIGION—THE CHARACTER OF GOD
- CHAPTER II RESTORATION OF MAN.
- APPENDIX ON FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
- REFERENCES TO AUTHORS AND SYSTEMS
CHAPTER II - RESTORATION OF MAN.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION
- PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
- BOOK FIRST GENERAL VIEW OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT AS FITTED TO THROW LIGHT ON THE CHARACTER OF GOD
- BOOK SECOND PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE METHOD OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT IN THE PHYSICAL WORLD
- BOOK THIRD PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLES OF THE HUMAN MIND THROUGH WHICH GOD GOVERNS MANKIND
- BOOK FOURTH RESULTS—THE RECONCILIATION OF GOD AND MAN
- CHAPTER I NATURAL AND REVEALED RELIGION—THE CHARACTER OF GOD
- CHAPTER II RESTORATION OF MAN.
- APPENDIX ON FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
- REFERENCES TO AUTHORS AND SYSTEMS
Summary
SECT. I.—SYMPTOMS OF INTENDED RESTORATION.
Our argument under this particular section is far from being very consecutive or conclusive. It is safer, to say the least of it, to establish a posteriori that God has afforded a means of restoration, than to waste ingenuity in proving a priori that such an interposition of heaven is probable. In the conducting of this latter argument, we find invariably, that not a little is assumed which could have been discovered or rendered certain only by the revelation itself.
The few scattered observations which we have to offer are of an a posteriori and inductive character. We are to point to some facts which seem to indicate that God did intend to institute a method of restoring the race. In order to attain even such a presumption or probability, we must take into account two apparently opposite classes of facts.
First, we must carry along with us a deep sense of human guilt, and of God's enmity to sin. Without doing so, we cannot advance a step in the argument. Proceed on the idea that man is very much what God would have him to be, and it is impossible to find a ground on which to build an expectation of the interposition of heaven. It is at this point that the argument of those who would demonstrate a priori, the necessity for a Divine revelation, is felt to be the weakest.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Method of the Divine GovernmentPhysical and Moral, pp. 467 - 516Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1850