The General Assembly [pp. 529-543]

The Princeton review. / Volume 4, Issue 15

1875.] THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 54L infinitesimal standard, still it remains true, that questions of construction, of application, of the essential and non-essential in them to be enforced or not enforced, will always arise to be disposed of by the wisdom, charity, and faithfulness of the living church. And no creed, as all history proves, can have any higher vitality than the church imposing it. It will be binding in the sense intended by the church so administering it-i.?., according to the a~imzts i?fl~OflCflt?~. A motion made in our late Assembly, in answer to a request from our Board of Publication for instruction on the subject, to omit the words "he descended into hell," from this creed, on the ground that it conveys a wrong impression, was tabled by a nearly unanimous vote. This shows, not that this phrase, in its present most obvious signification, conveys the exactest truth, or that the Assembly thought so; but that this creed, as well as the longest and most minute, requires interpretation and application by the living church to avoid error; and that after the reduction of our Confession, even to this minimum, there would be as much scope as now for heated polemics and vain disputation. 3.The present time is peculiarly inopportune for such a movement, for various reasons. The Re-union was effected on the basis of our common standards as they are, free of every qualifying condition. Every attempt to insert such conditions as that they should be interpreted in any particular way, according to traditions and usages, or the teachings of any divine of either branch, only made it evident that the Re-union could not be effected subject to any such trammels. The animus of the transaction was simply and purely this, that keeping the standards intact, each body was willing to trust the united church to interpret and administer them unaltered. Any serious attempt to reconstruct them thus early, must go far to undo the welding process which has thus far gone so happily forward. It would be, moreover, while divisive as among ourselves, a fatal hindrance to such union with other Presbyterian bodies as has been fervently desired and hoped. It puts an insuperable barrier between us and the United, the Reformed, and the Southern Presbyterians, which would surely outlive the present generation,, But all steps towards our broader union

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The General Assembly [pp. 529-543]
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The Princeton review. / Volume 4, Issue 15

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"The General Assembly [pp. 529-543]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acf4325.2-04.015. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2025.
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