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by the Death of the Rev. Joseph S. Christmas. By Gardiner Spring, D.D. New York. John P. Haven. 8vo. Pp. 48.

Extracts from Sermons, by the late Rev. John Emery Abbot, of Salem, Mass., with a Memoir of his Life. By Henry Ware, Jr. Boston. Wait, Green & Co. 12mo. Pp. 139.

A Discourse delivered at the Dedication of the Meeting House of the Keene Congregational Society, April 28, 1830. By T. R. Sullivan Keene. J. and J. W. Prentiss. 8vo. Pp. 25.

A Discourse delivered before the first parish in Hingham, April 8, 1830, the day of public fast. By Samuel Presbury. Hingham. C. and E. B. Gill.

A Sermon delivered in Portsmouth, N. H. April 1, 1830, being the day of the annual fast. By Jared B. Waterbury. Portsmouth. J. W. Shepard.

A Sermon preached at the Ordination of the Rev. Lucius W. Clark. By Joseph I. Foote. Brookfield. E. and G. Merriam. 8vo. Pp. 22.

Two Discourses on the Lord's Supper, preached in Westminster Church, Providence, February 28. By Frederick A. Farley. Providence. M. Robinson. 12mo.

MISCELLANEOUS.

The Pilgrim's Progress; with a Life of John Bunyan. By Robert Southey, Esq. L.L.D. &c. John Murray, Albemarle street. 8vo. 1830.

Illustrations of the Exodus, (printed on large quarto atlas, with proofs on India paper) consisting of six views, from drawings made on the spot during a journey through Arabia Petræa, in the year 1828. By W. H. Newnham, Esq., and engraved on stone by J. D. Harding. The scenes portrayed are those in which the principal events recorded in Exodus occurred.

The Young Child's Prayer Book. Parts I. and II. Boston. Gray and Bowen. 12mo.

The Child's Prayer Book. Boston. 12mo. Pp. 32.

The Youth's Prayer Book. Boston. 12mo. Pp. 55.

Gray and Bowen.

Gray and Bowen.

Moral and Religious Gleanings; or Interesting Stories. Compiled from various authors. By Thomas Latimer. Philadelphia. W. Stavely. 18mo. Pp. 118.

Discourses, Reviews and Miscellanies. By William Ellery Channing. Boston. Carter and Hendee. 8vo. Pp. 603. The Evil of Theft, exhibited in the History of James Forrest. By the Author of "Sabbath School Scenes." Boston. James Loring. 18mo.

An Offering of Sympathy to Parents bereaved of their Children, and to others under affliction; being a collection from manuscripts and letters not before published. Boston. S. N. Dickinson. 18mo. Pp. 224.

The Brighter Age. A Poem. By J. B. Waterbury. Boston. Crocker and Brewster. 8vo. Pp. 94.

The Pleasantness of a Religious Life opened and proved. By Matthew Henry. Boston. Pierce and Williams. 18mo. Pp. 166.

The Evangelical Spectator. By the Author of the "Evangelical Rambler." Revised by the Rev. G. T. Bedell. Philadelphia. W. Stavely. 12mo.

ERRATA IN THE NO. FOR APRIL.

On page 273, line 10, for "eminent or imminent," read "emanant or immanent." On the same page, line 22, for "imminent" read "immanent."

Heinrich Ernst Ferdinand Guerike, Licen-
tiaten und Privatdocenten der Theologie bei
der Universitæt in Halle.

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Halle. 1827.

408

VI. REVIEW.

Review of an Article in the June number of
the Christian Spectator, entitled, "Inquiries
respecting the Doctrine of Imputation."

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THE

BIBLICAL REPERTORY AND THEOLOGICAL

REVIEW.

FOR OCTOBER 1830.

THE DOCTRINE OF ORIGINAL SIN AS HELD BY THE CHURCH, BOTH BEFORE AND AFTER THE REFORMATION.

Although, as has been shown in a former article, the Pelagian doctrines respecting original sin were condemned by councils and popes, yet the heresy was not soon extinguished; but was in whole or in part adopted by many learned and ingenious men. To many, the opinions of Augustine appeared harsh, and hardly reconcilable with moral agency and human accountableness. They, therefore, endeavoured to strike out a middle course between the rigid doctrines of Augustine and the unscriptural opinions of Pelagius. This led to the adoption of an intermediate system, which obtained the denomination of semi-Pelagianism; and as these views seem to have been generally received about Marseilles, in the south of France, the abettors of this theory were very commonly called Massilienses. Augustine entered also into this controversy, and carried on a correspondence on the subject with Prosper and Hilary, two learned men of that region; the former of whom ardently opposed the semi-Pelagians, while the latter was inclined to favour them. By degrees, however, the public attention was called off from this subject. The darkness and confusion produced by the incursion of the northern bar

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