On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
ravlans found the Poles did not believe the Trinity . Then one party was shocked at the other for doubting it , and the other again at them for believing it * So they parted . It is , however , certain , that each party had many excellencies , and both held some general
principles , which might have formed an ecclesiastical union ; but neither of them then understood what Philipowski afterward taught the Poles , that virtue and not faith was the bond of union , which , by the way , they seem to have soon forgotten . There was , at the same time , another party of Baptists in Moravia , \ t-ho lived on the lands of I ^ ichtenstein ,
formerly of the Boscowickz family , the heiress of which married a German prince I ^ ichtenstein * Among thes e people there were no regularly ordained ministers , and women taught . The first
lady Boscowickz herself did so , and the Jesuit , who reports this , assigns that as one reason why these Anabaptists did not believe the Trinity - These therefore were not the Baptists to whom the Poles addressed themselves . But these
were an honour to religion . They were about as many as the inhabitants of Manchester may be—industrious , frugal , modest , and much resembling the modern Quakers in their public worship . Such as these have been lost , because
they were never , inspired with a passion for making proselytes , nor ever took part in the disputes of eeclesiasticks . They were banished by the Emperor , and the contrivance of the Jesuit Caraffa , whose letters , while they breathe nothing but blood and slaughter , speak in high terms of the people , to whom , he says , the lay gentry were very much attached , because the dirty rascals were profitable to the state . What signifies profiting the state , if you do not believe as the church believes ? And what 5 'gnifies the favour of the nobility , when
Untitled Article
the nobility are skives to an emperor , and when the emperor himself consults a beggarly priest , his confesloT , as an oracle of Almighty God ? For my part , I consider nothing when I meet 'witl * such people , except that they are men who do honour to their species by
resisting tyranny , and prove - their profound respect for the Deity by fearing him more than what all the empire fears , the frown of a prince , and the fury of a priest . Strictly speaking , these Tatter Baptists were Bohemians , but on , the borders of Moravia . So 1 learn from
Bohuslai Balbini Hist . Regn . Bohemia . Pragae . 1679 . &an . sjeqq . I believe the / se people went into Moldavia , Wallachia , and the territories of the Turks , where they found a toleration which the bloody Catholicks denied . Now , may not , in a History of Baptists , each of
these parties bs placed at proper stations to speak with the enemy in the gate ? Cannot the Poles speak on learning and criticism ? May not the Bohemians speak on the subject of trade and manufactories ? Cannot the Moravians afford
also a lesson ? And may not all plead the common cause of liberty , the necessity of personal conviction in religion , and the safety and advantage of following its dictates ? May not all these be contrasted with ' states depopulated by penal sanctions , and churches converted JBto slaughter houses by human creeds , and by the everlasting trammels of
priests and enthusiasts r I think they may . Perhaps you will be so good as consider the above tale of my burrowing under ground as a reason for suspending a correspondence witn , my friends till f came up again . However that may be , 1 am sure you will consider the few leaves I have sent as a MS . not published , and treat them accordingly . I am , dear Sir , yourTs ever , ROB ' . ROBINSON . RevU Mr . Toulmin .
Untitled Article
Original Letter of Mr . Robinson ' s tcr Dr . Tottlmi / i . SIX
Untitled Article
1 . r
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1809, page 311, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1737/page/9/
-