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
excellent men , proved themselves every way worthy of such instructors . Their congregations were numerous and respectable . In some to < yns the Corporation w&s of this profession ;
arid it was no uncommon thing for the principal families in the neighbourhood to pass by the parish church 6 n their' way to the meeting-house . Several of the nobility and gentry had been educated under Noriconformittg tutors , and still continued the
practice of retaining them as chaplains . and tutors . Uncorrupted by the profligacy of the times , by the temptations of the court , or the servile
compliances of those around them , they held fast the profession of their faith without wavering , and sanctioned the religion of their forefathers by an attendance upon the same forms of
worship . With the reign of Queen Anne ended the hopes of the high-church party , and the persecution of Dissenters by the civjl pgwer . George I . being of a different religious profession from the sect established , felt no sympathy with its prejudices , and would have extended the boundaries of toleration
had the scheme been practicable . He clipped the wings of the clergy by overturning their convocation ; and his successors in royalty have discovered the same tolerant disposition towards the Dissenters . But thi 3 sunshine of
prosperity , however desirable , has been far from favourable to the Dissenting interest . To whatever cause it m&y be owing , it is certain that from the period of the accession of the House of Hanover , it has been visibly upon the wane . This declension was more
particularly apparent in the reign of George II ., and in the earlier years of his successor , when many meetinghouses in various parts of the kingdom were shut up for want of support . This circumstance sufficiently marked a numerical declension ; but there were other particulars in which the signs of decay became manifest .
At this time the snares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches had drown aside from their ranks most of the 4 eading persons in their communion . Mmiy of the clergy , also , ran the same race of Conformity as the laity . Of the elder ministers , who continued atedfeet to their principles ,
Untitled Article
there w&re many who distinguished themselves by their lea ^ nirig-and talents ,, b y their personal piety , and by their - valuable writings . As ' thfey grew in years , however , their congregations
declined ; and the younger ministers who took their places , being deficient in popularity , w ere unable to ; support a drooping cause . There was also a considerable alteration in the style and matter of their preaching , which was but ill adapted to the capacities of
their people , and often involved topics in which they felt but little interest . It is no breach of charity to observe , that the race of ministers which sprang up about the middle of this period ,
was by no mean * equaito those which preceded it , either in ministerial qualifications , or in attachment to the cause . On account of the expense incurred at an university , some of them h £ d received biit a slender
education ; whilst , in some instances , they were taken into the pulpit without any previous preparation . The injury that must accrue to any cause from its falling * into the hands of ignorant or half learned-men , was soon exem-:
plified in the case of the Dissenters . Their adversaries began to treat them with contempt , from which their pretensions to piety could not redeem them ; and they sometimes courted it by their folly and indiscretion .
Destitute of the spirit of their profession , some of their ministers quitted it for trade , whilst others combined them together , and thus rendered themselves unfit for either . The little
encouragement that was given to Dissent , deterred persons of any property from bringing up their s 6 ns to the Dissenting ministry . The consequence was , that their preachers were usually taken from the inferior ranks of life ,
and being wholly dependent upon their people for support , their inebpaeri were generally small and precarious . Thus circumstanced , and destitute' of that polish and refinement whidh are the effect of education , it is no wonder
that they sunk from that station society which was occupied by the earlier Nonconformists . Another very material circumstance that affected " the prosperity of the Dissenters during this period was , the divisions that took place amongst them upon questions of dogmatic theology *
Untitled Article
346 The Nonconformist . No . XXVII .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1823, page 346, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1785/page/34/
-