The unauthorised publication of a correspondence which had passed between him and
John Jackson on the
Arian tendency of
Samuel Clarke's
Scripture Doctrine of the Trinity drew from Waterland ''A Vindication of Christ's Divinity
, Cambridge, 1719, in which he attacked not only Clarke, but Daniel Whitby. Whitby replied, and Waterland published an Answer
to his reply, Cambridge, 1720. The Eight Sermons in Defence of the Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ'', his
Moyer Lectures in St Paul's Cathedral, published at Cambridge in 1720, were reprinted at Oxford in 1815. A second edition was issued in 1728. Reprints appeared at London in 1850, and at Oxford, edited by
John Richard King, in 1870; Waterland's argument was discussed by
Joseph Rawson Lumby,
History of the Creeds, 3rd ed. 1887. Waterland's other works, besides sermons and charges, included: •
The Case of Arian Subscription Considered, Cambridge, 1721; •
A Supplement to the Case of Arian Subscription Considered, London, 1722; reply to
Arthur Ashley Sykes. •
The Scriptures and the Arians compared in their accounts of God the Father and God the Son, London, 1722. • ''A Second Vindication of Christ's Divinity'', London, 1723. • ''A Further Vindication of Christ's Divinity'', London, 1724. • ''Remarks upon Dr. Clarke's Exposition of the Church Catechism'', London, 1730; to Sykes and
Thomas Emlyn. •
The Nature, Obligation, and Efficacy of the Christian Sacraments Considered, London, 1730; and its 'Supplement' published the same year. •
Advice to a Young Student, London, 1730; 3rd ed. Cambridge, 1760; London, 1761. •
Regeneration Stated and Explained, London, 1740, 1780. •
A Summary View of the Doctrine of Justification. •
An Inquiry concerning the Antiquity of the Practice of Infant Communion. These two last tracts first appeared posthumously with Waterland's
Sermons, ed.
Joseph Clarke, London, 1742, 2 vols.; 2nd ed. 1776. A collected edition of Waterland's works, with a review of his life and writings by
William Van Mildert, appeared at Oxford in 1823, 10 vols. The last volume is mainly letters; there are also
Fourteen Letters to
Zachary Pearce, ed.
Edward Churton, Oxford, 1868, and
Five Letters to William Staunton, appended to the latter's
Reason and Revelation Stated, London, 1722. Four letters to
John Anstis the elder are in
Stowe MS. 749, ff. 273–49. ==Modern Treatment==