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
jections to Unitarian Christianity , $ rid exhorted his audience to evince the superior excellence of their faith by the parity and holiness of their lives . Me pronounced a justly-merited eulogium on
those useful meu , who , though engaged ' in secular pursuits during the week , go out on the Sunday to instruct their fellow-creatures' in the great and important truths- of Christianity , and whose labours have been attended with such signal success- in this populous district .
After the conclusion of the services at the Chapel , the friends , in number one hundred and twenty , male and female , retired to an inn and sat down to a plain , inexpensive dinner . This arrangement admitted the poorer brethren to participate in the pleasures which Christian intercourse is so peculiarly calculated to impart . After dinner the business of the
meeting was transacted in the Chapel , the Rev . N . Jones in the Chair . Reports were then given of the different societies connected with the Association , viz ., Rochdale , Newchurch * Burnley , Todraorden , Oldhatn , Rawtonstall , and Padiham . We were happy to hear that most of those" congregations and the Sunday-schools connected with them are in a flourishing state . The societies at Newchurch and Padiham have consi
derably increased during the past year . Padiham is principally supplied by two worthy individuals of the congregation , with occasional assistance from the " Lancashire and Cheshire Unitarian Missionary Society . " The writer of this report spent the following Sunday after the Association with this truly
interesting and religious people , and preached to unusually large audiences—in the afternoon to about two hundred and fifty , and in the evening to upwards of three hundred . He likewise preached in some of the adjacent villages , and considers this district a genial soil iu which to disseminate the seeds of Christian
Unitariantsm . We lament to say that trade in this place , and indeed throughout this part of the county , has been so depressed , that the weavers have scarcely been able by honest industry to supply even the wants of nature ! One of the humble individuals above alluded to
remarked , " that amidst all their distress they had not lost their religion , which imparted to the dejected mind , under the most calamitous Circumstances , the purest and highest consolation I" Such is the happy influence of Unitarianisiii when it assumes H # sway over the human mind . It affords w sincere pleasure
Untitled Article
in being able to state that the societies in this district have received assistance both in money and clothing from congregational collections and benevolent individuals iu the metropolis , for which they return their grateful acknowledgments .
In the evening the friends again assembled for divine worship . Mr . Buckland , the Missionary , read the hymns and engaged in prayer , and a very excellent sermon was preached by Mr . Jones , from the words of the apostle " If any man think himself to be something when he is nothing , he deceiveth himself ? ' No one could listen to the
preacher but with a lively interest ; and but few we think went away without being convinced that charity and humility are essential to the formation of the Christian character . We regret to state that Mr . Tate , who had engaged to preach in the evening , was prevented in
consequence of indisposition . —Thus ended the proceedings of a day devoted to the cultivation of friendship , the promotion of piety , and to the furtherance of the Christian religion . U . M . Manchester . June 16 , 1827 .
Untitled Article
Unitarian Association at Hull . On Weduesday and Thursday , July the 4 th and 5 th , the Anniversary Meeting of the Unitarian Association of Hull , Doncaster , Lincoln , Thorne , &c , was held at Hull . On Wednesday evening , the Rev . Dr . Hutton , of Leeds , preached an excellent sermon on the silent and
uuobserved but constant progress of truth , at the close of which he ably defended the Unitarians against the charge , which has been so pertinaciously brought against them , of the want of missionary zeal . On Thursday morn ing , the Rev . W . Duflield , of Thorne , preached a sermon on the respect entertained by Unitarians for the authoritv of the
Sacred Scriptures , jn which he successfully vindicated them from the charge of irreverence , and , by an appeal to numerous facts , shewed that such a charge could not be maintained against those who consider the Scriptures as of sole authority in religious matters , who interpret
what is figurative in them by that which is literal , and the obscure by the plain , and who express their religious sentiments in the most unambiguous scriptttral language . At one o ' clock the meeting for business took place in the chapel , when the Secretary ' s Report , which contained , among other interesting partial-
Untitled Article
£ 30 Intelligence . ^ Unittxrian Aamekitwn at Hull .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1827, page 630, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1799/page/78/
-