ON SANDEMANIANISM, IN TWELVE LETTERS TO A FRIEND. BY ANDREW FULLER, SECOND EDITION. LONDON: Printed for THOMAS WILLIAMS, 10, Stationers Court, BY J. BARTLETT, OXFORD. 1811. PRICE THREE SHILLINGS and SIXPENCE. CONTENTS. II. Containing a general view of the system, with its lead- ing points of difference from the systems which it III. Containing a more particular inquiry into the conse- VII. An inquiry whether, if believing be a spiritual act of the mind, it does not presuppose the subject of it ON SANDEMANIANISM, &c. LETTER I, INTRODUCTION. MY DEAR FRIEND, I HAVE been told more than once, that my not answering the piece written some years since, by Mr. A. M'LEAN, has been considered as a proof that I felt it unanswerable. But if so, I must have felt the productions of many other opponents unanswerable as well as his, for I have seldom had the last word in a controversy. The truth is, I was not greatly inclined to answer Mr. M. I felt disgusted with the illiberality of his repeatedly arraigning my motives, his accusing me of intentional misrepresentation, and his insinuating as though I could "take either side of a question as I found occasion." I contented myself therefore with writing a small tract, called, The ·great question answered, in which, while complying with the desire of a friend, I endeavoured to state B |