On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
i mi i n i " ji i .i "Y i m ¦ '¦ i —¦—— . ¦ . .. . . ' i —yi i » , T RELIGIONS,LITERARY, AND POLITICORELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. *
-
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
The commercial , literary , and religious public , have lately sustained a severe loss in the death of Mr . THOMAS BI . AYJLOCK , of Newcastle upon Tyne , a young man of superior talents , excellent principles , and amiable manners .
Asa * ont a brother , a friend , and an active member and manager of useful institutions , ( particularly of the . Literary Society of Newca tie , whose general and co-mmittee meetings he constantly attended ; of the New Institution for
Philosophical Instruction , of whose lecturer he was ever the ready , cheerful , and intelligent assistant in every c $ se of difficulty ; and of-: the Sunday Schools supported by the ynitarian Society in Hanover-square , of which he was the Treasurer , and faithful superintendent ) ,
I Mi I N I " Ji I .I "Y I M ¦ '¦ I —¦—— . ¦ . .. . . ' I —Yi I » , T Religions,Literary, And Politicoreligious Intelligence. *
i mi i n i " ji i . i "Y i m ¦ '¦ i —¦—— . ¦ . .. . . ' i —yi i » , T RELIGIONS , LITERARY , AND POLITICORELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE . *
Untitled Article
RELIGIOUS . The Report df the Committee of the UNITARIAN FUND is row published , and maybe had either with Dr . Toultnin ' s sermon , preached before the
Society at their first annual meeting , or separate y- It wili give the public full information con erning the object and operation of the Fund , and will , we trust , be the occasion of a great augmentation of the list of Subscribers .
A sufficient sum has been already raised for beginning the New Version of the New Testament , proposed by the Unitarian Book Society ; and the work will accordingly be p oceeded on immediately by the Committee appointed for the purpose .
The conductors of the " Missionary Society , " established in 1795 , are seeking to au . ment hs wealth and enlarge Jts powers already great , by the establishment of " Auxi . iary Societies , " in London and throughout the co : ntry , for the purpu e of raising subscriptions from the poorer friends to the Society , in very
small sums . A these AuxMary i ~> ocietits arc to meet annually , a > they are to choose rheir own <> ffi < crs , as the reports of rhc JVEi-siuuary . \ ociety are to be reg ilarly laid before them , it is not imp rv liable thiit . they may be the occasion © f introducing a manly iiabit of thinking among the Whitfield Methodists , and a
Untitled Article
he will ever be remembered vvith the deepest regret . He perished in the Brothers , Capt . Poad , of Shields , with whom he was going a passenger to Copenhagen , on business of importance to his family . The ship foundered off Stroom - stadt on the coast of Norway , and all hands were lost , except a hoy -who was washed ashore on the sky-light hatchway . Such events are among the most mysterious dispensations of Providence $ but we confidently trust that the time
will come , when not only these , but also x ^ iore ex tensive calamities , which at present baffle our limited comprehension , wiil be seen to be parts of one great scheme , and , in ways as yet inexplicable , " working together for good . ' T .
Untitled Article
spirit of liberal enquiry among CalviJiisU , Similar Auxiliary Societies have been established for supporting the JBritisk and Foreign Bible Socety ,
poiaTicq-RELXGioys , THE JEWS . To the Editor of the Monthly Repository . Sir ,
As a fewenlightenedmmds maypossi * bly feel interested in the fate ^ f the Jews , a very great revolution among them seeming to be at hand , I am encouraged to throw a little light upor * the latter part o £ their history in Fiance , since the establishment of the Sanhedrim , at Paris .
To this assembly the continental papers inform us , members are hastening from all parts , even from Constantinople ; and their waiting for their full complement may have prevented them from proceeding any further than passing ; i decree , consisting of ij articles , for
organising their worship , and appointing a Consistorial Synagogue in ea , h deparrment that contains 3000 individuals professing the religion <* l Mo , ts—( for the appellation of Jeius is to be laid a ide , J and a grand Rabbi is to be chosen by the Con ^ istoriai Synagogue , and to have a salary oi 3000 franes per annum , paid him by government . To the Jews iji
Untitled Article
106 Religit u ? Intelligence .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1807, page 106, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2377/page/50/
-