A system of religion, treating of the following heads. I. Of the nature of God, and that Jesus Christ is the Only One and True God. II. Of the Trinity, in a Manner wholly differing from either the Athbanasians or Arians, nearer to the plain literal Text of the Scripture, and less liable to philosophical Objections. III. Of the Devil; that he is no where to be found, but incarnate in Man. IV. Of the Soul's dying with the Body till the Resurrection, shewing that the Notion of an immaterial Soul distinct from the Body, is an inconceivable philosophical Absurdity, and against the whole Tenor of the Scripture. V. That there are in Man two Principles natural to his Constitution, a good and a bad, which Necessarily determine his Actions, and are at Enmity with each other; and how to know which is predominant. VI. Of Predestination. Vii. A philosophical manner of accounting for the Resurrection. Faithfully collected from a curious manuscript, found among the papers of Tho. Tomkinson, gent.

  • Tomkinson, Thomas, 1631-1710?.
Date:
M.DCC.XXIX. [1729]
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London : printed in the year, M.DCC.XXIX. [1729]

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viii,116p. ; 80.

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ESTC T115984

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