v. p.
209), "had read as much as Grotius; but their different modes of reading
had made the one an enlighten'd philosopher; and the other, to speak
plainly, a pedant puffed up with an useless erudition."]
[Footnote 014: Bentivoglio, Histoire des Guerres de Flandres, l,
xxviii.]
[Footnote 015: _Bella plusquam civilia._ Lucan.]
[Footnote 016: Those who wish to obtain a clear, concise, and exact
notion of Calvinism and Arminianism, will usefully peruse the account of
them in Mr. Evans's "_Sketch of the Denominations of the Christian
World_." The thirteenth Edition is now before us, and we believe that it
has been often since reprinted.]
[Footnote 017: Mosheim's Ecc. Hist. Cent. xvi, ch. 2. Sec. 3. part 2.]
[Footnote 018: Chalmer's Biographical Dictionary, Title "Arminius."]
[Footnote 019: A short and clear account of Arminianism is given by Le
Clere, in his Bibliotheque ancienne et moderne, Vol. II. Art. 3. p.
123.]
[Footnote 020: The best discussion of this subject, which has fallen
into the hands of the writer, is Bourduloue's Sermon _sur la
Predestination_.
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