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An essay by Isaac Disraeli

A Catholic's Refutation

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Title:     A Catholic's Refutation
Author: Isaac Disraeli [More Titles by Disraeli]

In a religious book published by a fellow of the Society of Jesus, entitled, "The Faith of a Catholic," the author examines what concerns the incredulous Jews and other infidels. He would show that Jesus Christ, author of the religion which bears his name, did not impose on or deceive the Apostles whom he taught; that the Apostles who preached it did not deceive those who were converted; and that those who were converted did not deceive us. In proving these three not difficult propositions, he says, he confounds "the _Atheist_, who does not believe in God; the _Pagan_, who adores several; the _Deist_, who believes in one God, but who rejects a particular Providence; the _Freethinker_, who presumes to serve God according to his fancy, without being attached to any religion; the _Philosopher_, who takes reason and not revelation for the rule of his belief; the _Gentile_, who, never having regarded the Jewish people as a chosen nation, does not believe God promised them a Messiah; and finally, the _Jew_, who refuses to adore the Messiah in the person of Christ."

I have given this sketch, as it serves for a singular Catalogue of _Heretics_.

It is rather singular that so late as in the year 1765, a work should have appeared in Paris, which bears the title I translate, "The Christian Religion _proved_ by a _single fact_; or a dissertation in which is shown that those _Catholics_ of whom Huneric, King of the Vandals, cut the tongues, _spoke miraculously_ all the remainder of their days; from whence is deduced the _consequences of this miracle_ against the Arians, the Socinians, and the Deists, and particularly against the author of Emilius, by solving their difficulties." It bears this Epigraph, "_Ecce Ego admirationem faciam populo huic, miraculo grandi et stupendo_." There needs no further account of this book than the title.


[The end]
Isaac D'Israeli's essay: Catholic's Refutation

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