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" *•,»..— I. - I _. HI,, M I 'I .^Wmp^MMMNtaM THE GENEVAN CHURCH.
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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.
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UNITARIAN CHRONICLE . 181
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we lost our old President of the Coiisistory of Paris , Marron : he died almost suddenly , and rather of old age than of the cholera . He came to Paris as chaplain of the Dutch embassy in 1782 , and was pastor of the church of Paris since 17 SS , fora space of near half a century . He was—an ~ amia : ble ^ m-an 7 ~ "ai ] "d ~ a *~ grFa : t ~
classic scholar . A great and lasting outcry has been raised at Geneva and in Holland against Marron , because in the year 1793 he sent to the Municipality of Paris the two silver cups for the sacrament , belonging to his Church , as an offering pour les besoins de la patrie . After having closely examined the case , it is my opinion
that what has been said on this point is very unjust . The Protestant Church of Paris was open in the time of terror , while all the rest were closed ; and it was then the more necessary that something should be done to disarm the fury of Jacobinism against every form of worship- It was really an oMvgatdry step that the Church
took in those momentous days . This did not hinder Marron to he arrested a little later ; and six days before he was put at liberty by the fall of Robespierre , four of his comrades in prison were taken to ike scaffold . Who will affirm that such awful circumstances did not justify measures ,
which , in ordinary times , would be deemed st . r , ang * e and culpable ? Marron ' s funeral was celebrated in the church of the Oratoire , that is to say , a funeral discourse was delivered over the coffin . This cere * - naony is ver rare with us , and even is contrary to the strict rule of our ecclesiastical discipline . Some of
our old French Puritans condemn this custom in strong terms , as a step towards mummery and Babylonism . I cannot say that , for my parti I am not disposed to side with them . But , however , there is no great harm in a ceremony of this kind now and then , provided it should not serve as a precedent . We have a French proverb , saying , I * ' exception
confirms la regie . We have now in . France two very important nominations in our Protestant affairs , which must be dene soon . The first is the vacant place left by Marron ' s decease ; we have little doubt that so important a station for France will be filled by a sound and rational Christian
"mTnismr 7 " " ^ Th ~ e ~ n ^ minatloii to the other place will be more difficult , I mean , to the vacant professorship of eloquence de la chaire > at the Protestant academy of Montauban . We have , you must know , professors of eloquence in our religious seminaries . How eloquence can be made a subject of public lectures , is a
question which I will not attempt to decide . What makes the appointment ; very arduous is , that a professor of eloquenbe must ; for the first quality , be eloquent himself ; unless this last science resembles political economy , where people reason very well about riches , though very poor themselves . - It is , ho we ver , of great importance that a learned and distinguished man
O should be" appointed at Montauban , v order to yield a fresh reinforcement to the rational party , which has for ever to combat the intrigues of the saints , headed by Dean Bonnard . I will let you know the result of these two nominations , which are for us of the greatest importance . —O . [ Seepage 199 . ] ¦¦¦¦ ¦! I ¦ i ! Ill
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In the Monthly Repository for September , 1831 ( p . 607 ) , we gave an account of the disputes which had occurred at Geneva between the Company of Pastors and M . Oaussen , one of their own body . Our readers wiUl'ecoirect that this pastor HdTw some time discontinued to teach the .
catechism prescribed by the Church of which he was a member ; that , after protracted discussions , he promised again to introduce the obnoxious book , but at the same time refused to withdraw the offensive letters which he had addressed to the
" *•,»..— I. - I _. Hi,, M I 'I .^Wmp^Mmmntam The Genevan Church.
" *• , » .. — I . - I _ . HI ,, M I 'I . ^ Wmp ^ MMMNtaM THE GENEVAN CHURCH .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 1, 1832, page 181, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1821/page/5/
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