On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (4)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
SCOTTISH UNITARIAN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.
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
184 UNITARIAN CHRONICLE . T *
Untitled Article
published and elsewhere . To prove to our readers that the editors are neither ignorant of what is going on abroad , nor indifferent to its occurrence , we may mention that they
have translated and inserted in their journal the greater part of Dr . Channing ' s sermon at the ordination of 'J " argd " S ] JaTlfsr aswell ^ as ^ his ~ obseT- vations on the originality of our Lord ' s character ; that they have
explained the merits of the Irish tithe and scriptural education questions : and recorded Mr . Hutton ' s prayer , at the great meeting at Birmingham on the occasion of Lord Grey ' s return to office ; nothing , in short , of a religious cast is indifferent to them , from the unknown
tongues ' oft . the Caledonian Church to the vagaries of the Shaking Quakers at Lebanon in the United States ; and from the visionary excitement in *" the grand duchy of Baden to ~* more -unpretending history c \ f TBw&ypoor Yaudois in Piedmont . * " * "Of the general spirit by which the Protestant de Geneve is characterized , the following passage , which
we translate from the proposal made by a certain lay member to the Consistory , may serve as a specimen . " Such is the work of peace and of security for our national church , to which the Company and the Consistory may powerfully contribute . Let them , declare that they reject everything which would tend to make
religion a code of exclusion and intolerance ; let them declare that , in their opinion , religion cpnsists not in such or such an interpretation of certain obscure doctrines , which have been matter of discussion from the very infancy of Christianity . Let us say plainly , that we regard as contrary to its spirit everything which tends , by doctrines of terror and
desolation , to strip religion of mercy , of consolation , and of love . Let us open our doors , without demanding any absolute profession of faith * , to * We cordially wish that the rulers of the Q-enpvan Church would act upon this rycom-
Untitled Article
all who s . hall come to ask of us strength , comfort , or information : let us declare , in short , that we regard as contrary to the spirit of the Gospel , all exclusive , mystical , and obscure doctrines ; and that we will
admit as friends all those who prove their religious faith hy their works , who-thinkr-that—th e reHs—more—thanone way which leads to God , and who draw from this faith , consolation for the present , and high hope for the future . ' —Vol . i . p . 245 .
Untitled Article
Abridged from the Christian Pioneer .
The Second Anniversary of this ^ Society was held at Glasgow , oa iSunday and Monday , July 22 d and 23 d . Friends were present from Edinburgh , Dundee , Lanark , JPais" ' ley ,. Greenock , Dumbarton , Renfrew * Port-Glasgow , &e , Qn Sunday morning , the Rev . H . Montgomery of Belfast preached a l most powerful ,
eloquent , and argumentative discourse , which deeply interested and impressed a very large congregation , from Eph . iv ., 1-3 . In this sermon , the evils resulting from the attempt to enforce uniformity in matters of faith were most forcibly delineated . Ireland , in her episcopal
establishment—in herpresbytenan inquisition —illustrated those eyil § . most fearfully . In'the- afternoon ,-the Rev . B . T . Stannus of Edinburgh delivered an eloquent illustration of the wanderings of Christendom from the Great Father of all , and on the
gramendation . Their terms of admission to holy orders are very liberal ; but we know not how they can boasf as they do ( ProtV < ls Gen ., i ,, p . 7 . ) that they have no confesnion , of faith , while they retain the Apostle ' s Creed ; nor do we see how men of enlightened views can continue to repeat every Sun-1
day that we are < born in sin , and that Christ , after a life of righteousness , ' descended into hell . ' ( If words have any meaning , these cannot be pronounced with sincerity by any one of liberal sentiments in religious mat * ters ,
Scottish Unitarian Christian Association.
SCOTTISH UNITARIAN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 1, 1832, page 184, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1821/page/8/
-