REMARKS ON UNITARIANISM, ADDRESSED TO THE INHABITANTS OF THE STAFFORDSHIRE POTTERIES. "But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and "The Catholick opinion concerning Christ, prevailed in the Church STOKE-UPON-TRENT: PRINTED AT THE OFFICE OF R. C. TOMKINSON. 1822. REMARKS &c. CHRISTIANITY is that system of religion which comprehends the Redemption of mankind by Jesus Christ. AND the doctrine of the divinity and incarnation of Christ, like the keystone of an arch, sustains the whole fabrick of Christianity. Ephes. ii. 20, 21. The Atheists, who deny the existence of God, and the Deists, who deny the Revelation of his will concerning man, are enemies without the camp; but the Modern Unitarians, under the mask of professing Christianity, insinuate with greater effect the principles of practical Deism; for their denial of the divinity and incarnation of Christ sweeps away all the essential doctrines of Christianity, and leaves nothing but mere morality behind. The Unitarians imagine by restricting their profession of faith to a belief in the unity of God, to escape those metaphysical distinctions which they consider to be chargeable upon the doctrine of the Trinity. They believe the Father to be God, but deny the divinity of his Son. And they pronounce the doctrine of the divinity |