On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
OBITUARY.
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
imiTARTAN CHBONiei / E > $%
Untitled Article
the contrary we perceive the greatest activity , although ina very secret And unostentatious manner , displayed by the body * For example , they have printed for the use of their own denomination , a record of their achievements during the past year , and what these have been we need not remind
our readers .- ^ JWe , se 0 ^ also ~ a ~ manifesttation of their zeal in circulating the most insidious publications of a minor description all over the country . In aid of their cause , they are availing themselves of the assistance of Transatlantic Socinians *
'It has been observed that the writings of such men as Channing have lately begun to swarm over the country , and in particular there is one publication of that gifted but antichristian writer , which is calculated to produce the most fatal results among the ignorant and ill instructed .
* In the last number of the Presbyterian Review , it is Said , that this treatise , entitled , * ' Objections to Trinitarian Christianity considered , " has been stereotyped and published in _ immense numbers , in a neat and even elegant form , for the small sum of "four-pence . " It is added , " written expressly with the object of entrapping and gaining over the unwary ,
distinguished by no less plausibility than uncandid and artful misrepresentations ; it is without doubt one of the most formidable Socinian statements which have appeared . "
' Our Presbyterian . mends in the North , where Socinians never found much favour , do not seem to share the same confidence about the decline of that heresy , which is published b y the Ministers of the Three Denominations , for they again remark , " Any one who reflects for a moment on the pernicious consequences of the
diffusion of Socinianism to the moral condition of mankind , will duly appreciate the importance of arresting the progress of so terrible a scourge . * 4 So far from , considering Socinianism on the decline , we fear that , in an altered form , it is eating like a canker in the Church ..
r ' It is true we do not perhaps find among those who have a regard fpr decency * such revolting language as that which abounds in the writings of Priestley * Belsham , and the rest pf their school . We do not find many who stand forth like Jefferson , whose " good sense " is extolled by the
^^ estrriinsUr ^ Revkw . ^ axid ^ imfiouisl ^ denounce the Apostles as a " band of dupes and impostors with their coryphaeus Paul . " Such blasphemies are reserved for more private opportunities . But we are sorry to see a neologian leaven stealing into places where we should least expect to find it , and even intermingled with what is really good . We are happy to observe , in the last number of the
Christian Observer , some articles exposing works in which this leaven is contained , but we shall shortly be compelled to notice panegyrics upon the same publications abounding in such errors , proceeding from quarters where this might not have been anticipated . '
Untitled Article
We insert the following from the ' Christian Reformer / because it contains a correction of an error as to the place of Mr . Browne's death , and some additional particulars concerning him . ' Jan . 13 , died suddenly in one of the public offices of th / Bank of England , the Rev . Stephen Weaver Browne , B . A . He was a native of Norwich , was educated for the Church
of England , took orders and oihciated for some time as curate at Harleston . The breaking out of the French Revolution had a powerful influence upon his mind : he quitted the Church and was intimately associated with the political reformers of his native city . At the peace of Amiens he went over to France , where he continued to reside till the general peace . On his return to England he became temporary minister of the Unitarian congregation at Newport in the Isle of Wight j he next became one of the ministers of the Old Meeting ,
Obituary.
OBITUARY .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 1, 1832, page 31, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1807/page/15/
-