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BIOGRAPHY.
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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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MRS . CAPPE has favoured the public with an account of the excellent Mr . Lindsey , to the time that he quitted the lfvins of Catterick , CM- Kepos . vol . iii . p . 637 . } This decisive step deprived him of an occupation , in which he took great delight ; that of performing the duties of a parish priest with the utmost assiduity , and of studying the holy scriptures at c \ ery leisure hour . His future employment was unknown . Under the necessity of
quitting the vicarage house to make room for his successor , he fixed upon the metropolis for his residence , and on his arrival in town was most hospitably received by the Reverend Mr . ltamsden , of the Charter-house , who was afterwards Dr . llamsden and master of the house . This trait in the character of Dr ., Ramsden , does great honour to nis memory . Many a person would have turned his back on an old friend , marked by singularities , which made him obnoxious to the heads of the church : but Dr . Ramsden was not of that stamp , and liis virtue in this respect was not without its voliv
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THE ' MONTHLY REPOSITORY OF Theology and General Literature .
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No . XXXVII . " ] JANUARY . [ Vol . IV . ' — - ¦ ¦ .
Biography.
BIOGRAPHY .
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MEMOIR OF T * IE JLATE REV . THEOPHILUS LIXDSEY , A . M . \ ' ' '
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reward . It did not prevent him from being master of the Charterhouse , and it rivet ted a friendship , which we believe was afterwards not without benefit to his family .
After some little stay at Mr . Ramsden ' s , Mr . and Mrs . Lindsey removed to lodgings in Featherstone Buildings , Hoi born ; where Mrs . Lindsey ' s first care was to give him all the conveniences for study , which such small apartments could a fiord . Here he was visited by a few of his old friends , and in a short time acquired many new ones to counterbalance the loss of those , who could not justly appreciate between worldly profit and
conscientious integrity . On resigning the living of Catterick , he published a Farewell Address to his parishioners , containing the reasons for his conduct . These reasons were weighed by many judicious persons in LofuJon , and led them to consider the mil state of religion in this counttry . They saw the impossibility of any reform in the chui'ch by means of its heads ; and to enjoy reli giou s worship upon scriptural grounds ,
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1809, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1732/page/1/
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