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
NeHch&teA in 1744 / These the fte ^ port says were collated in forming the new &cutian . But it is admitted that the text has been changed and the translation of Martin foisted into Oatervald , in 2 Cor * v . 19 , * ' in order to express more / decisively the
Divinity of Jesus Christ I" C Le texte rofeme n ' a aabi aucun changenaent queleonqne , & P exception df ¦ un seul passage . Au verset 19 , chapitre v . de la 2 % aux Corbitliiens , la traduc tion de Martin , conservee sur ce point dans V edition d Osterwald de 1724 ,
l ' ae * t £ e * galementdans Ian 6 tre , conune plus fidele et -expriinant plfts formeUe ment la divinit y de Je * su 8-Christ . " ) After this we cannot wonder at seeing in the Report a profession of unity with Roman Catholics on the subject
of the Trinity ( p . 121 ) , or at finding one of the orators describing Christ as the " Saviour-God , who perished on the Cross ; " but we confess ourselves a little surprised at some
semipapistical language with regard to the Virgin Mary ( p- 131 ) . This comes from the Lutherans , and the Reformed suffer it no doubt as tending to conciliate their Roman Catholic
neighbours . ' With the Report we have received Bulletins 15 and 16 of the Society , subsequently published . The former of these gives an account , which is truly French , of the distribution of Bibles in a country-school , as ** Wisdom— - ^ p rizes . " On this occasion , the President addressed the successful candidates , and one sentence of his speech is a carious specimen of Bible - Protestantism : "On
this subject ( of the Bible ) flee all discussion ; your piety would be destroyed by it and toleration would be injured . " The words must surely he stolen from some Boinish Priest's
charge to his flock against the use of the Bible . In these Bulletins and in the Report itself much is said of M . Stapfer ' s visit to the last Annual Mcetr ing of the Bible Society in London . His Speech on this occasion is . trans * , lated , and all the compliments to him
and praises of him are careftilly pre- * served . He makes a special report of his mission , the accuracy of whjcja may be judged of from Ids describing the Mends of the Bible Society under the general term of " Worshipers of
Untitled Article
£ 2 urfcr , ' > w 4 Iron * Jos representing ft $ & common for the EagJisQ Dissenters to express their wish of seeing the National Church maintain its authority untouched . These publications are
full of euktgmro ? on the late Mr , Owen , one of the Secretaries of the Bible Society . The Report contains an " Eloffe" upon him of thirty pages . His merits were doubtless
great in relation to the Bible Society ; but it is a real injury to his memory to speak of his learning * , talents and virtues as if they were never equalled aqd the loss of them can never be supplied .
Untitled Article
844 Liberal Theological Concessions I * Quarterly Review .
Untitled Article
Sir , Nov . 1823 . WILL you allow me to call the attention of your readers to wfyat appears to me a striking proof of the progress of those liberal opinions wnich it is the main object of your Repository to advocate and diffuse ? In the Quarterly Review for
last September is an article mtitled * ' BucklancPs Reliquiae Diluviante " in which I found , not without surprise and I may say delight , some observations so congenial to the opinions which I have always been taught to entertain , that I could not help giving way to a sort of
triumphant feeling . It is true I am about as much entitled to triumph as the private who wears a Waterloo medal for having during the battle been somewhere within sound of the cannonading ; but one cannot help
sympathizing ii | the triumph of one ' s party or principles , and we by-standers are apt to forget that we have ao right to appropriate to ourselves any part of the glory . You , Sir , have always advocated
the principle that a liberal interpretation of the Scriptures , was most conducive to the interests of religion . Point after point has been contended , and though the opponents have Strug- * gled desperately and refused to own their defeat , we have seen them
gradually abandoning the object of contention , mid cautiously avoiding to exeite fresh discuftftion ; but I am not aware that so bold an avowal of this fact has ever been made as is contained in the following extracts from the Quarterly Review . P . 162 . < ' Others object to it , "
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1823, page 644, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1790/page/28/
-