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nutted to baptize our children and to commit our departed friends to the silent abodes of the grave , in the use of religious forms which we prefer to those which are prescribed by an
authority unacknowledged by us . In the present enlightened state of the world , justice and decorum , no less than religion , require that , in a Protestant country , there should be full and complete
liberty of conscience to marry -and to bury where and as we like . If dissenting registers are valid for the purposes of baptism , they may be equally so in cases of marriage . The noble and truly Christian Protest of the Lords Holland ,
Stanhope , Lansdowne , and Norfolk , may surely be hailed as a prelude to the arrival of that auspicious day , when the twin bro - thers , Intolerance and Toleration , shall be consigned to their proper abode * T .
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Answer to Mr . Belsham ' s " Calm Inquiry " Sir , Sept . 7 , 1812 . It is now nearly two years since * he publication of Mr . Belsham ' s ** Calm Inquiry into the Scripture X > octrine concerning the Person of Christ / ' &c . It is with some
surprise and disappointment that , as yet , I have not been able to | earn that any Reply has been published , or is intended from qi ) y quarter . The work appears io , n > e capable of being fairly
4 i . od , satisfactorily refuted ; hut # uchv a refutation would require larger ; scope than , the limits of a review or a pamphlet * The principles of , Mr . Belsham '* inquiry % mH b 0 ^ futly analysed , every text critically re . cxamined ,
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every part of his reasoning $ ifted , and the latent , but primary and extensive sources of fallacy should be detected .
If any gentleman to whose notice this rimy come has in hand such a work , it will materially oblige the writer to be informed of it , either through the medium of the Monthly Repository , or by a private letter to the care , of Mr , Stower . If no such communication be made within two or three months , he will perhaps fid him . self bound to attempt such a work ; but most reluctantly , not merely because the daily urgencies of a laborious station render any new engagement very unwelcome , but because he wishes to see the desired work executed in a much more able and complete manner than he can venture to hope that his own abilities are equal to . X . / Y . .
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568 Answer to Mr . Bukhara ' s " Calm . Inquiry . "
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On a Passage in Air . BehhamU Memoirs of Mr * Lindsey . Sir , Avg , I 5 , ' l £ l 2 . In the "Memoirs of the late
Rev . Theophilus Liridsey , * ' which I have just read with high gratification , the following paragiaph concludes a very interesting chap . ter on the religious character of the late Duke of Grafton .
u Some have affected to believe that this virtuous nobleman was not thoroughly consistent , and that he did not carry his principles to their proper extent . Suffiqe it to say , in reply to such ungenerous insinuations , that the Duke of Grafton &t all times acted up % o ( tig . owii ideas of cousistency arid rectifude , though his judgment might cor entirely
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1812, page 568, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1752/page/36/
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