Religious Establishments Footnotes.

From: Essays on the Principles of Morality, and on the Private and Political Rights and Obligations of Mankind (1834).
Author: Jonathan Dymond
Published: Harper & Brothers 1834 Philadelphia

Footnotes

1 Paley: Evidences of Christianity p. 2, c. 2.
2 Simpson’s Plea for Religion and the Sacred Writings.
3 See Gisborne’s Duties of Men.
4 Paley: Evidences of Christianity.
5 Hall.
6 Duncan’s Trav. in America.
7 See Mor. and Pol. Phil. b.6, c.10.
8 Godwin’s Pol. Just. ii,608.
9 In the preceding discussion, I have left oat all reference to the proper qualification or appointment of Christian ministers, and have assumed (but without conceding) that the magistrate is at liberty to adjust those matters if he pleases.
10 Paley: Mor. and Pol. Phil. b.6, c.10.
11 Southey: Book of the Church, Sir Thomas More.
12 “Chillingworth declared in a letter to Dr. Sheldon, that if he subscribed he subscribed his own damnation, and yet in no long space of time, he actually did subscribe to the articles of the church, again and again.”—Simpson’s Plea.
13 Paley: Mor. and Pol. Phil. b.11, c.10.
14 “Honest and disinterested boldness in the path of duty is one of the first requisites of minister of the gospel.”—Gisborne. But how shall they be thus disinterested?—Men in the MS.
15 It was not to religious establishments that Protestants were indebted for the first efforts of reformation. They have uniformly resisted reformation.—Men in the MS.
16 Archdeacon Blackburn’s Confessional: Pref.
17 Paley: Mor. and Pol. Phil. b.vi. c.10.
18 J.J. Gurney: Peculiarities, c.7.
19 Charles James Fox: Fell’s Life.
20 Essay 3. c.4.
21 Miscellaneous Tracts, by Richard Watson, D.D. Bishop of Landaff, v.ii.



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