On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
JOHN MANSELL.
-
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
one pages of priiited ma , tter , and sells for 2 d . ; whereas Houlston ' s , which contain in every page five lines more , seldom offer less than eleven pages and a hall of letter-press . It may jbe said that the donations of Tracts made by the Society must be taken
into the account . Unquestionably ; - but-followiog ^~ a ~ rule—whkh—I-have hitherto found admits of but very few exceptions , I should say , that what is thus given away is not the most valued , and that not all the forced means resorted to on this occasion have probably procured so
large a circulation among the poor , as has been obtained by Houlston ' s Tracts . It is true some of ttte latter are highly orthodox , and it may be a saving of time to those persons who are in the kabits > £ giving , Tract& ,
to have them published by a society which may be depended on for not circulating anything liable to objections on the score of doctrine ; but it should , at the same time * be remembered , tfial the ^ lcnowri or suspected Unitarianism of the Christian Tract
Society is a means of preventing , to a great extent , the circulation pf its books , while in reality they are not more Unitarian than a number of tfr $ Wellington Tracts , which lie under no such stigma , I believe I am not wrong- in saying , indeed , that some of the latter are written by Unita *
rians , and among others , that the authoress of * Illustrations of Political Ec ^ noimy r" 'h as jaotItnought it beneath her to contribute to them . "Why therefore , if good tracts , I will boldly say better and cheaper ,
conveying the same moral and religious views , are to be had , without all the machinery of reports , subscriptions , secretaries-, and —annual- meetings ^ should the public be called on to uphold so expensive a concern ?—A .
Untitled Article
UNITsAftt&N CHRONICLE . € 6 ?
John Mansell.
JOHN MANSELL .
Untitled Article
Sm , ~ T-. About thirty-four years since I was a zealous Calvifrist , resident in howdtiR , I" ^ collect' there f was
Untitled Article
some sensation at that period respecting aMr . Mansell , a Calvinigjtic , or particular Baptist Minister , whom the celebrated W \ Huntington had introduced to London or its vicinity , as , one supporting his peculiar views of the GospeL The sensation was
occasioned by this Mansell becoming -an-o pen ~ and-a vowed-heretieTpreaeh »•—ing and writing against the Holy Trinity . An acquaintance of mine , a young man , Jent me the book , which . I read , and many an . angry and bitter controversy had my friend and i on the subject ; as I then considered the belief of the doctrine of
the Trinity essential to salvation . Nevertheless , the reading of the book made some impression on my mind , which I could not well get rid of ; , and ., 1 devoutly , wished I had never seen the publication , as it had in some measure disturbed and
unsettled my mind . I told my friend I would argue no more with him on the subject , as it only stirred up ungodly " passions , and tended to no real good . After , this I = accompanied my friend , one dark winter ' s night , to some chapel in the Borough to hear this then celebrated ManselL
I saw in the pulpit an apparently plain , frank , honest , open-hearted man , who preached a most excellent sermon in defence of his new views , from the conclusion of the Lord ' s Prayer—** Thine is the kingdom , the power and the g lory , forever , Amen . '' I never forgot' that discourse ; I never shall forget it while consciousness exists . He showed that all
authority , government , power and glory originated from the one God and Father of all > and must all terinitiate in him . He showed us , that though Ohristwas- the * ambassador of God , the prophet , the messenger ,
the lma ^ e , the forra ^—even the Son of God , yet he was not God himself ; for that all things , all beings were subordinate to God ; that Jesus Christ was Lord , in a higher sense than any other created being , but that he was hovA only to the glory
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 1, 1832, page 267, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1825/page/27/
-