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TO À

GENTLEMAN,

UPON

A Variety of SEASONABLE and IMPORTANT

SUBJECTS in RELIGION.

By JONATHAN DICKINSON, A. M. k
Prefident of the College at New-Jersey.

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THE THIRD EDITION.

To write the fame Things to you, to me indeed is not
"grievous, but for you it is fafe. Phil. iii. 1."
"---I have written briefly, exhorting and teftifying, that this
"is the true Grace of God wherein you ftand. 1 Pet.v.12."
"Even as our beloved Brother Paul alfo, according to the
"Wisdom given to him, hath written unto you. As alfo
"in all his Epiftles, fpeaking in them of thefe Things, in
"which are fome Things hard to be understood, which
"they that are unlearned and unftable, wreft, as they do
"alfo the other Scriptures, unto their own Destruction.
cr 2 Pet. iii. 15, 16."

EDINBURG H:

Printed by R. FLEMING, and fold by YAIR and
FLEMING, and the other Booksellers.

M.DCC.LVII.

BRITISH

MUSDUM

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I

THE

PUBLISHER

TO THE

REA DE R.

Nitead of attempting to give any Character of the pious Author of the following Letters, whose true Worth was well known in America, we fhall give our Readers the two following Paragraphs, which were published foon after his Death; and only add, that we hope this Edition will be found more correct than any of the former two that have gone before it.

CHARACTER of Mr. DICKINSON late Prefident of the College of New-Jersey. Extracted from the Reverend Mr. FoxCROFT of Boften, his Preface to Mr. DICKINSON'S fecond Vindication of God's Sovereign free Grace, printed at Boston, 1748.

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ET I must be allowed to drop a Tear over my deceaft Friend, endeared to me by a long Acquaintance, and on the most valuable Accounts, as a Scholar, a Chriftian, and a Divine of the first Rank, in thefe Parts of the World. His Realon. ableness of Christianity, his Scripture Bishop, bis Scripture Doctrine, his Familiar Letters, hine among bis Works that praise him in the Gates, and

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embalm his Memory. He had a Soulform'd for Enquiry, Penetration, accurate Judgment, and difintereffed Attachment to Truth. With a natural Turn for Controversy, he had a happy Government of his Pafions, and abhorred the perverfe Difputings fo common to Men of corrupt Minds: Nor did he, as is too cuftomary with those of an argumentative Genius, fuffer the Eagerness of Contention to extinguish the Fervours of Devotion, or of Brotherly-Love-In his Example he was truly a Credit to his Profeffion; by good Works adorning the Doctrine of Grace, he was fo zealous an Advocate for.--He had generous Sentiments with Regard to Freedom of Enquiry and private Judgment in Matters of Confcience and Salvation, detefling all Perfecution and Impofitions in Religion, and not approving Subfcription to human Tefts of Orthodoxy. Yet nevertheless, as one fet for the Defence of the Gospel, he boldly confronted what he took to be Error, and knew not how to fit an idle Spectator, when he apprehended an Affault made on the Chriftian Faith. He could not bear the Thoughts of being found either a Traitor to the Caufe of Chrift, or a Coward in it. Whenever he faw it openly invaded, or fecretly undermined, he food ready to appear in its Defence, without confulting his Eafe or his Credit. As Bigotry and Party-Rage, Malevolence, Calumny and Cenfure, too frequently mingling with religious Difputes, were his Abhorrence, fo he was an Enemy to temporifing Diffimulation, blind Charity, politic Silence, and that falfe Moderation which facrifices divine Revelations to human Friendships, and under Colour of Peace and Candur, gives up important Points of Gofpel Doctrine to every Opposer, but still is confiftent with difcovering a Malignity towards others that appear warm Defenders and conftant Alerters of thofe Evangelical Truths.

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