Analogy of Religion to the Constitution and Course of Nature

Analogy of Religion to the Constitution and Course of Nature

by Joseph Butler

25 chapters11h 41mEnglish1873

About this book

Joseph Butler's great work is the Analogy, published in 1736, and from that day read and admired by every highly-cultivated mind. He was induced to write by a state of things very remarkable in the history of religion. Debauchery and infidelity were almost universal, not in any one class of society but in all. England had reached the culminating point of irreligion, and the firm re-establishment of Episcopacy had as yet done nothing to mend the nation’s morals. Piety was deemed a mark of ignorance and vulgarity, and multitudes of those who professed it were persecuted to dungeons and death. It was considered settled, especially in polite circles, that Christianity, after so long a prevalence, had been found out to be an imposture. The clergy, as a body, did nothing to dispel this moral gloom, but rather increased it by their violent and scandalous conduct. In the sad language of Bishop Warburton, “Religion had lost its hold on the minds of the people.” To the Analogy no reply has ever been attempted. Extensive as is its diffusion, and great as is its acknowledged influence, infidelity has had the highest inducements to attempt to set it aside. Written for a present purpose, and most signally accomplishing it, it is yet so written as to endure, in full value, through all coming time. It is undoubtedly “the most original and the most profound work extant, in any language, on the philosophy of religion,” “the most argumentative and philosophical defence of Christianity ever submitted to the world.” - Summary by Preface

Chapters (25)

1Editor’s Introduction
2042
2Editor’s Preface.
186
3Conspectus - Part 1
3863
4Conspectus - Part 2
3217
5Advertisement prefixed to the First Edition & Introduction
1175
6A Future Life
1962
7The Government of God by Rewards and Punishments
1264
8The Moral Government of God
2719
9Probation, as implying Trial, Difficulties, and Danger
946
10Probation, as intended for Moral Discipline and Improvement
2684
11The Opinion of Necessity, considered as influencing Practice
1704
12The Government of God, considered as a Scheme or Constitution, imperfectly comprehended
1268
13Conclusion
731
14The Importance of Christianity
1982
15The supposed Presumption against a Revelation, considered as miraculous
796
16Our Incapacity of judging, what were to be expected in a Revelation; and the Credibility, from Analogy, that it must contain things appearing liable to Objections
1734
17Christianity, considered as a Scheme or Constitution, imperfectly comprehended
878
18The Particular System of Christianity; the Appointment of a Mediator, and the Redemption of the World by him
2120
19Want of Universality in Revelation; and of the supposed Deficiency in the Proof of it
2181
20The Particular Evidence for Christianity - Part 1
1544
21The Particular Evidence for Christianity - Part 2
2645
22Objections against arguing from the Analogy of Nature to Religion
1406
23Conclusion
1003
24Personal Identity
848
25The Nature of Virtue
1207

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