14Q MORAL LAW UNDER. THE oostti,; REMARK. Itit proper to Mit in a remark here, which perhaps wotildhave tee i better placed at the endof the first essay,.viz, That the ingenious commen- tator Dr. Whitby, was well known to the learned world, when he wrote his Comment on the NewTestanrent, to be aprettywarm defender of the Armi- niandoctrines concerning the will of man and divine grace, &c: though tit thesame timehewas a zealoni opposerof the Socinian sentiments concerning the porion of Christ, and a strict and zealous asserter of the doctrine of lits satisfaction and atonement for sin, and probably lie borrowed some of his sentiments on that point fromDr. Owen, on the epistle to the Hebrews. In his latter days, á littlebefore his death, he seemed to raise the character of the human nature of Christ as high as the Arians do, but supposed it still be- low divinity:
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