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Morgan should put the least shackle or restraint upon Dr . Infield . What his opinion of the congregation at Norwich was , at the time of his accepting their invitation , the following quotation will shew . I copy it from
1 lie original letter in his own handwriting " , it is addressed " to the Society of Protestant Dissenters , assembling in the New Chape ] , Norwich , " and dated " Warrington , May 2 , 17 85 . " " It is a circumstance which
jjias great weight in determining my resolution , that you have long been distinguished for that liberality of spirit , which will allow your ministers full scope for the faithful execution of their office , without hazard of giving offence . " The letter concludes
thus : " It is my sincere prayer , that the relation , which is commencing , may , under the blessing of heaven , be productive of our mutual satisfaction and benefit , in the most important concerns . I have no higher ambition than to approve myself in the
cause of religion and virtue . " Those who knew Dr . Enfield , will agree with me that these were not words of course . No minister ever discharged the duties of his station with more
unwearied assiduity ; none ever enjoyed in a higher degree the esteem and affection of his people . —I will not trespass farther on your readers' time , but I hope enough has been said to vindicate his character from a direct
charge brought against it , and the congregation of Unitarians here from an insinuation which they have not deserved . I am , Yours respectfully , EDWARD TAYLOR . ^^ fc
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as " a learned person who compi / ed too much with the times , " represe nts him cis asserting in this Assize sermon , Thai , in the little town of Read ~ ing , Le was verily persuaded , ifAih gustin s and Epiphanius ' catalogues
of heresies were lost , and all other mode mi and ancient records of that kind , yet it would be no hard matter io rt ^ tore them , with considerable enlargements from that place . That they have Anabaptism , Familism , Socinianzsm , Pelagianism , Rantiny , and what not $ and that the Devil was served in heterodox assemblies , as frequently as God in theirs : and that one of the most eminent church-livings in that county was possessed by
a blasphemer , and one in whose house he believed some there could testify , that the Devil was as visibly familiar as any one of the family . " At the date of this sermon , some opinions and practices were maintained , as contrary to the design of Christianity as to the operations of a sound mind . Yet many were now reviled for uttering words of truth and soberness . Thus Biddle was persecuted as a blasphemer , and rescued only by the
justice or policy of Cromwell from the power of the Assembly of Divines , who , with misguided zeal , thirsted for his blood . Those divines , all good Nonconformists are taught , from the nursery , to venerate as the harmless sufferers of 1662 , and are thus prepared to read , as authentic history , the partial narratives of Nealand Calamy . R . B .
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492 Unitarians at Reading , 1653 . —Natural Theology . No . VIII .
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St . Ardleon , Jqity 14 , 1815 . Sir , IT may gratify some of yotir readers to be informed that the apostolic doctrines of one God , the Father , and the man Christ Jesus , in opposition to those fictions of the schools , a
TriuneGod 9 and a Grod-man were publicly professed at Reading more than a century and a half before their ] ntc revival in that place . This appears by a quotation in Grey ' s Examination of Neal's fourth volume , ( p . 59 , ) from ** Simon Forde ' s Sermon at the
TVssizes at Reading , Feb . 28 , l 653 . ( Pp . SI , 22 . ) Besides the complaint of Socinianism , for which I refer to it , the whole passage is curious . Dr . Grey having described the preacher
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Natural Theology . No . VIIL Of the Mechanical Arrangement of the Human Body . —The Trunk . rriHE trunk of the human body JL comprises the spine , the pelvis , and the thorax or chest . The spine
or back-bone is that chain of bones which extends from the skull to the end of the loins . It consists of twenty-four distinct bones named vertebrae , from the word vertere to turn , because they perform the chief turnings and
bendings of the body . They also form a tube or canal along * the whoJ < j length of the sp ^ ne for lodging defending the spinal marrow , and they support the whole weight of the trunk , head , and arms .
The vertebrae are divided into those of the neck , back and loins , and the numbflr of pieces corresponds vntB
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1815, page 492, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1763/page/28/
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