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r ¦ ¦ . Gleaning^ 10?
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gleanings; oh, selections ak» reflection...
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No. CCCXL. Real Heresies of Priests in t...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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- Clapton, Sir, February 9, 1819-Thje Fo...
with us in these advices , who desire j we woiifd signify so much to the world , though they have not here : subscribed their names . Immediately following this
pamphlet , in a volume of Tracts , is " A . Letter to the Rev . Mr . Tong , & c . " By a Layman , " ( in MS . Samuel Sanders , ) 1719 . This Letter is by one of those Nonconformists who
objected to the demand of ministerial subscription . They called themselves Lay-Christians . In an Appendix , is a paper , ( p . 81 , ) containing their sen ? - tirnents " touching the methods of healing the present divisions among Protestant Dissenters / ' On a blank
page some early possessor of the pamphlet , who evidently resented this lay interference , has written , *• The names of some of the laycanon makers are as follow : —
Sir George Caswel Sir Henry Houghton Sir John Fryer David Polhil John Birch G / ay Nevil John Harrington Shute John London John Deacle John Hartop Samuel Sanders
Henry Bendish Samuel Read William Kingsford ——— Forster t Edward Richter , Sen . Edward Richter , Jun . Mosps Rapier Francis Harrison
Henry Lovel — . Picard Thomas Holies Samuel Browning Thomas Abney Sir Gregory Paige . "
Page $ 2 , Note t- To this coin Raleigh alludes in his Pilgrimage , where he speaks of Heaven ' s feribeless hall , Where no corrupted voices brawl ,
No conscience , molten into gold , No forg- 'd accuser , bought or tfold , No cause deferr ed , no vain-spent journey , For there Christ is the KAngV attorney , Who plftftdft for all , without degrees , For lie hath angels ^ but no fees . Page S & , coU 1 , line 6 . Viller $ f Author of « An Essay on the Spirit
- Clapton, Sir, February 9, 1819-Thje Fo...
and Influence of the Reformation by Luther , " ! which obtained the prize from the National Institute . An English translation wajs published in 1805 . Under Italy he mentions ( p . l 6 S ) " the two SocinL natives of
Sienna , " among those " who took a liking to reform , " and " went into other countries , where they might adopt it at ease . " Under Poland , ( p . 164 , ) he says , " The two Saeinir imcle and nephew , but particularly the latter , made a great number of
proselytes here , and founded the sect , which bears their name ; a sect which has spread very much -in Poland , the principle tenet of which is to honour Jesus Christ as a sage sent by God , but not as one of the persons of the Divinity itself . " J . T . RUTT .
R ¦ ¦ . Gleaning^ 10?
r ¦ ¦ . Gleaning ^ 10 ?
Gleanings; Oh, Selections Ak» Reflection...
gleanings ; oh , selections ak » reflection 9 made in a course of general reading .
No. Cccxl. Real Heresies Of Priests In T...
No . CCCXL . Real Heresies of Priests in the Thirteenth Century . At the very time that these firiars were setting the example of the most infamotfs vices , they appear also to have originated th £ most sacrilegious
heresies . The Mendicants not o » ly continued to cry up their innumerable antiquated visions , but invented new ones still more absurd , which they continued to have revealed , sworn to and believed . The University of Paris was for several years agitated ,
Europe scandalized , and the Vatican occupied , without knowing how tct extricate itself , with a long trial of the Dominicans , for a singular attempt , aided by a Franciscan fanatic , t & substitute the prophetic visions of the AbbS Joachimf with some supplements of
their own , for the New Testament . Matthew Paris , either from not being exactly informed of what was passing abroad , or not daring to state all he knew , speaks of this circumstance only in general terms : " They preached , " says he > " commented and
taught certain novelties , which * as far as they were known , were considered mere raviugs t and reduced those into a book wftirti they weje pleased to style The Everlasting Gospel ; with certain other things , of which it would not be wise to say too
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 22, 1819, page 107, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/mrp_22021819/page/39/
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