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
of Dissent and to raise a considerable alarm within the bosom of the National Church . The consequence has been , that the clergy in some places havq put forth more zeal and industry ;
whilst others , less prudent and less enlightened , have betrayed symptoms of that intolerance which always attaches itself to a richly-endowed and lordly hierarchy . Their apprehensions , however , may be stayed ; for the tolerated sects are too much disunited both in
principle and in affection to admit of any coalition for the purpose of procuring the downfal of the Established Church . Whenever such an event may take place , it will be the work of society at large . From the foregoing remarks , it may be inferred that a reference to the
number of edifices devoted to religious worship , and to the crowded congregations that attend them , will afford but little clue to the real state of the Dissenting interest . If we extract from the general mass those who
conscientiously dissent from the doctrines , discipline or constitution of the Church of England , the number of such persons will probably be found much smaller than is generally apprehended ; probably much more so than at the period of the Revolution . If the question be viewed with reference to the
increased population of the country , the gain has been decidedly in favour of the Church of England . But the declension of Nonconformity has been most visible in the quality of its adherents , it having been deserted bv almost rentsit having been deserted by almost
, every family of rank or influence in society . It is true , that in cities and large manufacturing towns the cause is still supported b j a few opulent merchants and tradesmen , and here
and there by a professional man ; but \ t is undeniable that dissenting congregations are generally composed of persons in humble life , and this is almost wholly the case in small towns and villages . It has been often remarked as a
subject of regret , that when Dissenters # row rich or succeed to an inheritance , they commonly go over to the Church . To whatever cause it may be owing , it is certainly a curious fact , that a wealthy dissenting family is but rarely known to continue stedfast ia the principles of Nonconformity for xnor $ than two generations . Singular ! how-
Untitled Article
ever , as this may appear , and injurious as it > s to the prosperity of the Dissenting interest , a little acquaintance with mankind will furnish us with sufficient reasons to account for it . Here , let it be remembered , that
Dissenters are made of the same sort of materials as other people , and that there is nothing so peculiar in the nature of their principles as to detach them from the rest of society , or to prevent them from taking that station
in it which the accidents of life may have assigned to them . When Dissenters acquire property , their intercourse with the world most usually becomes enlarged . If they have children , they feel a laudable desire to introduce
them into society , and they naturally select that class of it which is best adapted to their improvement . Having received an ornamental as well as a useful education , they find but few associates to their taste in dissenting congregations , and are soon disgusted by the familiarity and rudeness of
lowbred persons , who presume upon their supposed spiritual attainments . This aversion is farther strengthened by the unnecessary austerity assumed by many religious persons , espec 4 ally when advanced in years ; so that , upon the earliest opportunity they throw aside the fetters that restricted their
youthful enjoyments . It being the fashion amongst wealthy persons to train their children to learned professions , similar pursuits bring them in contact with persons belonging to the Establishment ; and rising in life they are called to fill stations which are
incompatible with the profession ot dissent , or which , at any rate , render them unfit associates for the bulk of persons who compose dissenting congregations . Others are brought
together by the concerns of business , which occasion the formation of private friendships ; and the desire which peop le usually manifest to form alliances jn the same station of life , only ag £ ra '
vates the evil . A farther obstruction to the profession of Nonconformity may be referre d to the qualifications of its teachers , to the mode of their teaching , arid to the quality of the religion that is taught in many congregations . Upon a subject surrounded by » o ipu ^ h combustible matter , J shall be very brief ; but the importance wfeicli it tears npou
Untitled Article
39 £ An 4 & */* y on the Causes of the Decline xjf Nonconformity .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1823, page 392, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1786/page/24/
-