On this page
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
of Tombes , who was of Oxford University , the following account of their disputations . *< Tombes was the Coryphceus of the Anabaptist ? , and Baxter of the Presby- „ terians * Both had a very great
company of auditors , who came many miles on foot round about , to admire them . Once , I think oftener , they disputed face to face , and their fojlowers were like two armies ; and at last it came so to pass that they fell together by the
ears , whereby hurt "was done , and the civil magistrate had much ado to quiet them . All scholars there and then present , who knew the way of disputing and managing arguments , did conclude that Tombes got the better of Baxter by far . "— Athenac . Oxon . ii . 557 ,
Baxter , however , in h » s own opinion , had the advantage of his opponent ; this disputation having * ' satisfied all his own people and the country that came in , and Mr . Torabcs ' sown townsmen ,
except about twenty whom he had perverted - * ' According to Wood , Tombes afterwards appeared as a champion of Antipoedobaptists , in a very different situation .
" In 1664 , he was present at the Oxford Act , and there in th « vespers he did modestly challenge to maintain against any person certain anabaptistical tenets , but none there did think . it
convenient then to grapple with him , and the rather fur this reason , that he had made these matters his study for more than 30 years , and that none ever before went )» eyond him . "—Athen , Oxon . ii . 558 . Of Denne , the other divine
Untitled Article
KEBIAKKS ON A SUPPOSED MISTAKE IN THE MEMOIRS OF THE J , ATli REV . W . WOOD ,
Untitled Article
To the Editor of the Monthly Repository .
West Ixfding of Yurk sir , June 6 " , 1809 . In the Repository for April last , page 22 o , your reviewer in his account of the Memoirs of the Bev . \\\ Y ^ oodj alter expressing
Untitled Article
mentioned by Lady Hutchinsoh , there is probably an account in " Crosby ' s History of the Bap , tists , " a work which \ never saw . I have found the name . introduced
by Wood in his account of Bishop Gunning , to whom he attributes the following publication . * ' A contention for truth in two several public disputations before thousands
of people in the church of St . Clement Danes , without Temple-bar , on the 19 th and 26 th Nov . ( 1657 ) , between Mr . Gunning on the one part , and Mr . Hen . Denne on the other , concerning the baptism of infants , whether lawful or unlawful , "— -Athen , Oxon . ii . 766 .
Such disputations were not unusual in those times . From 'his Life , by Dr . Toulmin ( p . 91 ) , it appears that Biddle was challenged to one which , but for the tolerant principles or policy pf Cromwell , would have ended fatally for that Christian Confessor . His
challenger , worsted ii > the first onset , adjourned the debate , and in ths mean time contrived to have his opponent detained in Newgate , In the words of Jortin , on another occasion , this exemplified , " the
true agonistic style and intolerant spirii , the courage of a champion who challenges his adversary , and then calls upon tfre corr stable to come and help hitn /* Yours , N . L . T
Untitled Article
his hope that the Protestant Dissenters , " wil ( never agajn repea $ their request for a repeal of the Test Laws , " concludes the sentence with the following very singular expression , bearing ths
Untitled Article
3 C 8 The late Rev . W . TVood .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1809, page 368, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1738/page/14/
-