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<note><hi rend='underline'>To be copied</hi></note> | <p><note><hi rend='underline'>To be copied</hi></note> | ||
disobedient? did he mean to justify the | |||
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false Philosopher, or the mad Fanatic, | false Philosopher, or the mad Fanatic, | ||
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To be copied
disobedient? did he mean to justify the
false Philosopher, or the mad Fanatic,
in refusing obedience to the laws of his
country, upon motives, drawn from a false
chain of reasoning, or from a mistaken sense
of Scripture? Or, did he mean to perplex, and
confound the well meaning Citizen, by
holding out to him contrary, and irreconcileable
obligations?
It would, I think be no difficult matter to
produce various examples of the flattest,
and most direct contradiction between the
laws of revelation, and the laws of England.
A few examples shall suffice. "Thou shalt not Exod: Chap. 22. Ver. 18
42
Identifier: | JB/096/016/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 96. |
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096 |
comment on the commentaries |
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016 |
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002 |
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collectanea |
4 |
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recto |
c41 / c42 / c43 / c44 |
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168 |
[[watermarks::gr [quartered royal arms motif]]] |
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[[notes_public::"to be copied" [note not in bentham's hand]]] |
31020 |
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