n; 



stantly devoted to a. final restitution. He is re- 

 sponsible for saying: 



"Every soul going out of this world shall 

 either enjoy the inheritance of lit'*' and bliss, if 

 his deeds have rendered him lit for bliss; or, be 

 delivered up to eternal fire and punishment- 

 (ignt ceti mo ac suppliclis—GT. " ; ' ; " w ). if his sins 

 have deserved that state." 



Dr. Schaff says " that he can by no means be 

 called orthodox either in the Catholic or Protes- 

 tant sense.'" 



F. D. Maurice. Canon Farrar. and Dr. E. H. 

 Plumptre are also modern advocates of the the- 

 ory of restitution. " In the conservative church 

 of England, in the year 1853, Prof. Maurice hav- 

 ing publicly renounced his belief in this doctrine 

 (future punishment), was expelled from the 

 chair of Divinity in King's College, London/" 

 These modern advocates of final restitution are 

 not regarded as giving any material coloring to 

 the shade of orthodoxy ; but are looked upon as 

 novel and heretical by the universal church. 



Universalists might be mentioned. in this con- 

 nection, although they differ among themselves: 

 some holding Restitution and others Annihila- 

 tion. 



There are also those who flatly contradict the 

 orthodox opinion as did Theodore Parker when 

 he said that he ••believed that Jesus Christ meant 



