John Byrom

29 February 1692 – 26 September 1763 / Lancashire

Thoughts On Imputed Righteousness - Occasioned By Reading Theron And Aspasio : Part I.

Imputed Righteousness! - beloved Friend,
To what advantage can this Doctrine tend?
If at the same time a Believer's breast,
Be not by
real
Righteousness possest?
And if it be, why volumes on it made,
With such a stress upon the
imputed
laid?

Amongst the Disputants of later days,
This in its turn, became a favourite phrase;
When much is divided in religious Schemes,
Contending Parties ran into extremes:
And now it claims th' attention of the age,
In
Hervey's
elegant and lively page:
This his
Aspasio
labours to impress,
With ev'ry turn of language and address.
With all the flow of eloquence, that shines
Through all his (full enough) embellish'd lines.

Though now so much exerting to confirm
Its vast importance, and revive the term,
He was himself, he lets his
Theron
know,
Of diff'rent sentiments not long ago.
And friends of yours, it has been thought, I find,
Have brought Aspasio to his present mind.
Now having read, but unconvinc'd I own,
What various Reasons for it he has shown;
Or rather Rhetoric - if it be true,
In any sense that has appear'd to you;
I rest secur'd of giving no offence
By asking - how you understand the sense?
By urging in a manner frank and free
What reasons, as I read, occur to me;
Why
Righteousness
, for man to rest upon,
Must be a
real
not
imputed
one.
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