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Untitled Article
The interpretation i& most irii £ rab&ble ¦} but , continues he , the oath fe conceived in ternis of sailbtgtrofus import , aaid is therefore such , possibly , as a conscientious cler ^ msin may safely take ; especially if he be careful to have * it understood , at the time of this compliance , that he never will consent to interpret this evasive formulary in anjr tnanner inconsistent with his duty as a * Christian arid a citizen . " But by whom understood ? Surely by the party imposing the oath ; and had Clement been present at this protest ,, can it be
conceived that he would have suffered the Archbishop elect to assume his new dignity ? The conduct of Cranmer , however , on this occasion , is regarded by Mr . Soames as ¦ " a proof of his candour and integrity" ! " With that sincerity by which he was so distinguished , he came forwards publicly before he took an ambiguous oath , to declare that he would consent to interpret it , and to act upon it , in that sense only which was perfectly unexceptionable !"
That an exceptionable oath can be Tendered unexceptionable by the uncommunicated protest of the party taking it , is one of those refinements in casuistry Which we might expect to meet amongst the disciples of Loyola , but which we could scarcely have anticipated from a Protestant clergyman . Had Cranmer been as sincere in his desire of avoiding his new dignity , as Some writers have supposed , the imposition of this oath would , it may be thought , have- afforded a very plausible ground for refusing the mitre .
The portion of his work devoted by Mr . Sharon Turner to the History of the Reformation , is inconsiderable , and scarcely evinces the research and indus- * try which are observable through the rest of his pages . He has , indeed , in his preface , given some explanation of this omission . " " The author has left the theological subjects which arose little noticed at .. The author has left the theological subjects which arose little noticed at
present , that he may more distinctly consider them by themselves at a future period , when the great subject can be more justly and more intellectually contemplated on its moral ana philosophical bearings , and as a completed whole . f n the meantime , the works of Burnet and Strype , the late publications of Mi * . Butler and Mr . Southey , and the recent history of Mr . Soames , will fulfy supply all the religious details which are here deferred . "
In attributing the Reformation to political rather than to religious causes , Mr . Turner has taken a more correct view of that event than Mr . Soames but . his unfortunate resolution to vindicate the character of Henry ( of which we shall say more hereafter ) forbids us to look for either a candid or a philosophical narrative of that event from his hands . The spirit in which we may expect this subject to be treated may be gathered from the brief- specimen which Mr . Turner has presented to us in the present volumes , and especially from the severity with which he has commented upon the character of Sir Thomas More .
The limits which we have prescribed to ourselves will not permit us at present to enter into a detailed examination of Dr . Lingard ' s History , so far as it is connected with the Reformation , but we shall probably revert to it on another opportunity . We shall only observe , that it lies open to much remark , more especially in the confidence with which Dr . L . cites the authority of Sanders and Pole , upon whose statements it is difficult to place reliance . We shall , however , conclude by quoting his succinct history of religious intolerance : " The king , Uke all other Reformers , made his own judgment the standard ,
of orthodoxy , but he enjoyed an advantage which few besides himself could claim—^ he power of enforcing obedience to his decisions . That the teachers of erroneous doctrine ought to be repressed by the authority of the civil magistrate , was amasrim which at drat ' period had been consecrated by the osdtiftt
Untitled Article
2 ? 8 Mewefo . ^ EnglishKtiformtition .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1827, page 278, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1795/page/46/
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