The Existence and Attributes of God (Vol. 1&2)

The Existence and Attributes of God (Vol. 1&2)
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The Existence and Attributes of God in 2 volumes is a series of discourses and lectures delivered by the great Stephen Charnock to the members of his congregation at Crosby Hall. Charnock discusses, in a logical flow of thoughts, the existence of God, and the untenability of maintaining an atheistic worldview. Unfortunately, however, the Discourses were cut short by Charnock's death in 1680.

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Stephen Charnock. The Existence and Attributes of God (Vol. 1&2)

The Existence and Attributes of God (Vol. 1&2)

Table of Contents

Volume 1

Table of Contents

LIFE AND CHARACTER OF CHARNOCK, BY WM. SYMINGTON, D.D

TO THE READER

DISCOURSE I. ON THE EXISTENCE OF GOD

DISCOURSE II. ON PRACTICAL ATHEISM

DISCOURSE III. ON GOD’S BEING A SPIRIT

DISCOURSE IV. ON SPIRITUAL WORSHIP

DISCOURSE V. ON THE ETERNITY OF GOD

DISCOURSE VI. ON THE IMMUTABILITY OF GOD

DISCOURSE VII. ON GOD’S OMNIPRESENCE

DISCOURSE VIII. ON GOD’S KNOWLEDGE

DISCOURSE IX. ON THE WISDOM OF GOD

Volume 2

Table of Contents

DISCOURSE X. ON THE POWER OF GOD

DISCOURSE XI. ON THE HOLINESS OF GOD

DISCOURSE XII. ON THE GOODNESS OF GOD

DISCOURSE XIII. ON GOD’S DOMINION

DISCOURSE XIV. ON GOD’S PATIENCE

Footnotes

Отрывок из книги

Stephen Charnock

Complete Edition

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How should such a general submission be entered into by all the world, so as to adore things of a base alloy,21 if the force of religion were not such, that in any fashion a man would seek the satisfaction of his natural instinct to some object of worship? This great diversity confirms this consent to be a good argument, for it evidenceth it not to be a cheat, combination or conspiracy to deceive, or a mutual intelligence, but every one finds it in his climate, yea in himself. People would never have given the title of a God to men or brutes had there not been a pre‑existing and unquestioned persuasion, that there was such a being;—how else should the notion of a God come into their minds?—the notion that there is a God must be more ancient.22

3. Whatsoever disputes there have been in the world, this of the existence of God was never the subject of contention. All other things have been questioned. What jarrings were there among philosophers about natural things! into how many parties were they split! with what animosities did they maintain their several judgments! but we hear of no solemn controversies about the existence of a Supreme Being: this never met with any considerable contradiction: no nation, that hath put other things to question, would ever suffer this to be disparaged, so much as by a public doubt. We find among the heathen contentions about the nature of God and the number of gods, some asserted an innumerable multitude of gods, some affirmed him to be subject to birth and death, some affirmed the entire world was God; others fancied him to be a circle of a bright fire; others that he was a spirit diffused through the whole world:23 yet they unanimously concurred in this, as the judgment of universal reason, that there was such a sovereign Being: and those that were skeptical in everything else, and asserted that the greatest certainty was that there was nothing certain, professed a certainty in this. The question was not whether there was a First Cause, but what it was. It is much the same thing, as the disputes about the nature and matter of the heavens, the sun and planets, though there be great diversity of judgments, yet all agree that there are heavens, sun, planets; so all the contentions among men about the nature of God, weaken not, but rather confirm, that there is a God, since there was never a public formal debate about his existence.24 Those that have been ready to pull out one another’s eyes for their dissent from their judgments, sharply censured one another’s sentiments, envied the births of one another’s wits, always shook hands with an unanimous consent in this; never censured one another for being of this persuasion, never called it into question; as what was never controverted among men professing Christianity, but acknowledged by all, though contending about other things, has reason to be judged a certain truth belonging to the christian religion; so what was never subjected to any controversy, but acknowledged by the whole world, hath reason to be embraced as a truth without any doubt.

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