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
rthie doctrines have been very generally k lieve d 'among- the nations of the Eastern world , is asserted with equal confidence , flW bv a nnmejous train of esteemed and popular authors . ' The tare Dr . Claudius BiiefiaiisHi in particular , whose authority Meeting facts uf this nature stands in the hi ^ lifst repute , and whose information
wsis received a few years since with an avidity and admitation rarely paralleled , states that the ideas of a Tri-une God , and of ( he Incarnation and Atonement of the Second Person , are current throughout almost the wh <> le of Asia . * What a glaring inconsistency is it , to call these the * Peculiar Doctrines of Christianity ^ and
yet to attempt the confirmation of them by citing the Jongf-estaWished convictions of innumerable heathen nations !"—Pp . 5—7 . After a few further remarks upon the prevalence of these ideas among the Heathens , tending to shew that , even if they belong to Christianity , still they are not confined to Christianityy Mr . Yates proceeds to state some
important principles which are not only maintained by Christians of every denomination to be parts of their system , but which never formed a part of any other system , and which , the restore , have a strict and i n disputable claim to be regarded as Peculiarities of the gospel . These are the
dortrine of the Resurrection of the Dead ; the doctrine that the Love of God is the First and Greatest Commandment ; and the injunction of IViversal Philanthropy . On these topics the preacher dwells with much
seriousness and judgment . He fully establishes his point , and concludes with an animated and powerful appeal to his auditory on behalf of pure Christianity , and of those institutions which guard and promote it . For its excellence as a composition , and for tlie comparative novelty and , at the
from our evangelical law , as their manner ?! fcssion , ' iheir adoration of Three in JH and such like ; the which , against e WlU of tlie enemy , have holpen for the ^ . eceivit ^ () f Ihe truth / * fcee also ihe History of California , by J * S » S Vol . I . pp 88 , 92 , English by ih £ and tlle History of America , tt w ^ Tr altIloIl tf * V as we might lmve Jifc is ° au hetfirodox philosopher , Wt £ **} * ve »* y sceptical upon the sub . ^ ailn the East , 7 th Edition , 1810 . "
Untitled Article
Art . 1 V . —Letters from Lexirigton and the Illinois f containing a Brief Account bf the English Settlement in the Latter Territory , and a
Refutation of the Misrepresentations of Mr CdbbeiL By Richard Flower , 8 vo . pp . 32 . Is . ) 819 . MR . RICHARD FLOWER ia an old correspondent of ours , and is well known to / many of our readers . He is one of the late Illinois
settlers , and his account of the settlement is interesting frgm his intelligence and probity . " On a tract ofland from the Little Wabash to the Borapar on the Great Wabashj about seventeen miles irt width , and four to siX / from north to south , there were but a few hunters * cabins , a vear and a ii-aif sinee , \ and
now there are about sixty English families , containing nearly four hundred souls ; and one hundred aud fifty American , containing about seven hundred ' souls . " P . 24- Already a
capital is rising , named Albion . A market house is built , and an jnn and a place of worship are building , the latter intended also for a library . Of
the land , Mr . Flower , who i& a practical agriculturist , speaks in terms of high praise , as he does also of the climate . Indeed , his picture of the country altogether is very invitmg ,
and will , we annrehoHcL to . mnt manv and will , we apprehend , tempt many an industrious family to follow his steps . The neighbouring capital of Lexington is , as Mr . Flower says ' , p . 1 O ;
" a phenomenon in the history of the world . Twenty-five y £ arsf since , it was trodden only by the foot of the savage ; now it contains about three thousand inhabitants . " It has «« a
college , at which are already one hundred and forty students . " Tea-parties , balls , routs , an Athenaeum and a Museum , have taken the place of log cabins and Indian hunts . But slavery is forcibly denounced by this write * as the opprobrium of Kentucky .
The American character generally has made ? a favourable' impressioi ^ upori Mr . Flovvei ' s mind . He speaks * With fcefin ^ s natural to an English Protestant Dissenter off the exemption
Untitled Article
# wiew >~ JFYoiderV ttiiers frtiM Le £$ ti $ roti < M ( t the Tttiiiote . i 6 S 9
Untitled Article
same time , the cfrninfeht importance of the subject , the sermon deserves tb be widely circulated by means of Unitarian , missionaries and Book Societies .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1819, page 763, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1779/page/47/
-