. His first literary work was his
Essay on the Origin of Evil, a translation of Archbishop
William King's
De Origine Mali, which Law illustrated with copious notes in 1731. In 1734, while still at Christ's College, he prepared, with
John Taylor,
Thomas Johnson, and Sandys Hutchinson, an edition of
Robert Estienne's
Thesaurus Linguæ Latinæ, and in the same year appeared his
Enquiry into the Ideas of Space and Time, an attack upon à priori proofs of the existence of God, in answer to a work by
John Jackson entitled
The Existence and Unity of God proved from his Nature and Attributes. The work by which he is perhaps best known,
Considerations on the State of the World with regard to the Theory of Religion, was published by him at Cambridge in 1745. The main idea of the book is that the human race has been, and is, through a process of divine education, gradually and continuously progressing in religion, natural or revealed, at the same rate as it progresses in all other knowledge. In his philosophical opinions he was an ardent disciple of
John Locke, in politics he was a
whig, and as a priest he represented the most
latitudinarian position of the day, but his
Christian belief was grounded firmly on the evidence of miracles The
Theory of Religion went through many editions, being subsequently enlarged with
Reflections on the Life and Character of Christ, and an
Appendix concerning the use of the words Soul and Spirit in the Holy Scripture. Another edition, with Paley's life of the author prefixed, was published by his son,
George Henry Law, then bishop of Chester, in 1820. A German translation, made from the fifth enlarged edition, was printed at
Leipzig in 1771. In 1754, Law advocated in his public exercise for the degree of D.D. his favourite doctrine that the soul, which in his view was not naturally immortal, passed into a state of sleep between death and the resurrection. This theory met with much opposition; it was, however, defended by Archdeacon
Francis Blackburne. In 1774, Law, now a bishop, published anonymously an outspoken declaration in favour of
religious toleration in a pamphlet entitled
Considerations on the Propriety of requiring Subscription to Articles of Faith. It was suggested by a petition presented to parliament in 1772, by Archdeacon
Francis Blackburne and others for the abolition of subscription, and Law argued that it was unreasonable to impose upon a clergyman in any church more than a promise to comply with its liturgy, rites, and offices, without exacting any profession of such minister's present belief, still less any promise of constant belief, in particular doctrines. The publication was attacked by
Thomas Randolph of Oxford, and defended by
A Friend of Religious Liberty in a tract attributed by some to Paley, and said to have been his first literary production. In 1777, Law published an edition of the
Works of Locke, in 4 vols., with a preface and a life of the author. This included, anonymously, his 1769 essay 'A Defence of Mr. Locke's Opinion Concerning Personal Identity'. Law also published several sermons. His interleaved Bible, with many manuscript notes, is preserved in the British Museum. == See also ==