On this page
-
Text (1)
-
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
sure that the affinity which Calvinism iri many of its parts bears to Paganism , iriay not facilitate the conversion of Hindoos and other Heathens . The Roman Catholics have always proved more successful in their missions to the Heatheris than Protestants , owing to the circumstance of their barbarous
doctrines , and gross ceremonies , befitting the degraded , minds of their auditors . Tne accounts which the Baptist Missionaries transmit home , from time to time , familiarize throughout a wide circle , Indian manners , customs , mythology and Tiistory to British minds , and thus connect the colony moreclosely
With the parent state . If their design should fail , they will have had the merit of having laid a mass of information concerning Hiiidostan before the public , and of having made the study of the character and religion of the Hindoos popular . The labours of the Asiatic Society interest only the learned .
In our first Volume , p . 493 , 494 , gave an abstract of the 15 th number of the < c Periodical accounts relative to the Mission . * We refer our readers to it fer the sake of entering more fully into the epitome with whicrh we now present diem of the 16 th number .
The head quarters of the . Mission is at •* Seramporey a Danish settlement , a little above Calcutta , on the river Hoogly . '• Here the Missionaries have always received the encouragement from a foreign people , which they were denied by their own countrymen . Colonel Bit , the Governor , who was very obliging to them , died May 18 , 1805 , aged
seveiitvfive . One of them , noting his death in his J ournal , remarks that " a ray of hope beamed forth at the last hour . His relations' * he adds , " say that they heard him almost the wfiolc night preceding his decease , praying most fervently to his Saviour . As a governor he was a worth y character . His mind had been cultivated by a liberal education , and his sentiments were noble and
enlarged . He revered a good man , and despised modern infidelity / ' He was burieel by Mr . Carey , who preached his funeral sermon . " All the poor natives lamented hi * death , exclaiming , * Never shall we « ce another such a master . He b succeeded in the government by
Untitled Article
Mr . Krcftingi who has been congratulated by the missionaries . . Two new missionaries have arrived in Bengal -which makes the number , now there , ten . One who was on prq « baiion in England , has declined ; t wi * other probationers have been received . A new place of worship is erectin g ^ partly , we suppose , for the use of the missionaries at Calcutta . The mission .
house has been much enlarged by the purchase of some adjoining premises . An interesting account is given of a . missionary journey , undertaken by two of the missionaries , in company with two of the native brethren , to Dha ? ca \ large city , two or tjiree hundred mile ^ N . E ; of Serampore . On their way , the people of one place desired to know 4 < what difference there was between
Creechno ( their God ) . and Christ ; and whether they were not ih £ same ?' ' After arriving at Dhacca ,, they distributed in an hour and a half , no less than 4000 pamphlets . But they were stopped by a magistrate who dcr manded their passports , which they fea 4
not , and forbidden to circulate any more tracts , as they had created gr ^ U uneasiness among the people . * ' They therefore left the city for the country * In one village they found a congregation of Hindoo Roman Cathoiifj , consisting of 500 families 1 Nothing is said of their history , but they are described as enter *
taining the same blind devotion to the priest as Roman Catholics of othei countries . They did not appear how * r ever to hold their idols in high venera ^ tion . The missionaries could not help admiring the visible change which even so corrupted a system of Christianity had
produced in their manners . It would be worth while for the society to make inquiry into the means by which so many Hindoos were converted ; so many more than have been converted by their missionaries , confessedly able and zealous men , after m *^ ny years of
painful labour . The missionaries pursue their studies with ardour ; some of them arc labouring hard at the Clxinese language . " A young Armenian , Mr . y . Losscr , bora at Macao , and educated u « d « er native Chinese masters , is instructing the »*« He has Uecn employed by a geotleawi *
Untitled Article
560 Baptist Mission in India
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1807, page 560, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2385/page/52/
-