On this page
-
Text (1)
-
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
timentg or affections , its views of truth , or its sympathies of benevolence within the contracted walls of the synagogue or the tabernacle , but which extended its thoughts
through the universe , and made its tender regard co-extensive with the race of sentient man . When Jesus composed this prayer , lie fitted it for the use of all the devout worshipers of the Father of Spirits in the temple of the universe .
" Had Christians uniformly adhered , in their fotrns of public worship , to this incomparable model of simplicity , sublimity and benevolence , so many tempestuous feuds would not have been engendered ,
and so many ang'iy sects would not have arisen in the sanctuary . All Christians , of all denominations , might have combined to worship the Father of the universe iu the kind sympathies of love , and in the gentle spirit of peace . "—Pp . 37—41 .
The Author next proceeds to trace , in the narrative called the Acts of the Apostles , the creed which these inspired teachers themselves inculcated upon the first professors of
Christianity : and lie proves from numerous passages , that the principal point of their preaching , as far as regarded matters of faith , was the all-iinportant and well-attested fact of the resur
rection of Christ , considered as the earnest of a future life , and the pledge of immortality to man : " If religious concord in the Liturgy of a National Church he at all desirable , how is it to be obtained except by rendering ' the points , in which an agreement is required , as few as possible , compatible with
the glorious ends of the doctrine we profess ? Now that great doctrine of the resurrection of the dead , which is the corner-stone of Chrisfrnnitv , and which the -Acts of the Apostles prove to have been almost exclusively impressed upon the first believers in Christ , seems to he better calculated than any other tenet to form the
bond of union among-Christians in modern times . For whatever contrariety of opinion there may be about the nativity of £ hiist , there is no Christian of any denomination who does not unfeignedly assent to the truth of h ? s resurrection . There is no
Christian who will not readily say with St . Paul , that if Christ be not risen , then is ©« r faith vain . Bui if Christ be risen from the dead , then have we good grounds for the hope of i in mortality . Then may the persecuted rejoice , and the wretched cease to mourn . On this fundamental
article , therefore , a National Church may lr * y the groundwork of i-eligiong peace . This essential tenet of the resurrection of Jesus from the dead is very comprehensive ,
Untitled Article
not only in its practical inferences , but in its speculative results . For it , of course ,, includes belief in the divine mission of
Jesus , of which it was the evidence and the consummation Re , therefore , who sincerely believes in this all important fact , cannot doubt but that Jesus was a teacher who had a commission from God to make known bis will to mankind . It includes a belief in the fatherly concern of the Deity for his creattnes , in 3 iis superintending * providence and his moral government of the world . He , who believes in this essential tenet of the Christian faith , cannot hj » t be strongly impressed with the importance of a viituous life , as he is convinced that death does not terminate his existence , but is only the passage to a stale of . retribution . 19 —Pp . 60—03 .
The Author flatters himself that the reformation iu the Liturgy of the Establishment , for which he strenuously pleads , might be easily accomplished . " The Liturgy of the Church of England
might readily be simplified , so as to admit all Christian sects into its spacious sanetuary . Not many alterations would be requisite for this purpose ; and . these would chiefly consist of omissions . We should retain all that was essential to
render it a service worthy of a great national communion , calculated to nurture the growth of virtue , and to diffuse , ihrough the different orders of the people and the different denominations of believers , a spirit of universal charity . —Pp . 74 ,
75-We agree with the Writer of this tract , that though the demand for religious reform may , at present , be only a still , small voice , yet that it will soon become » loud and
imperative cry ; and that it would be wise to anticipate the progress of opinion , and not to wait , with inconsiderate temerity , till reform is clamorously demanded . But- when wo observe
the obstinacy with which every particle of the system is maintained , we are led to conclude , that the guardians of the edifice are themselves imp res * sed with a conviction flint the
structure is so crazy and tottering , that the removal of a single stone would endanger the whole fabric . Entertaining this opinion , we apprehend that the sensible and temperate remonstrance of the Writer of this tract
will not meet with the attention it so justly deserves . J ^ . R #
Untitled Article
43 B Review . —The Essentials of a National Church briefly explained .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1819, page 438, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1774/page/38/
-