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
sanctuary 5 according to the iiiaxirn of a learaed djvine , which bur Priestleys arid Wakefields Jhave so well exemplified . If , on the jcontrary , his opportunities have
left him a mere English scholar , ( a character in our dfrys comprehending no smajl portion of taste and information ) he * will freely use that variety of assistance which the labours of learried
Christians , through several ages , have now provided for the studious though unlearned inquirer . A preacher thus prepared for his employment ^ if he would become a popular Christian instructor- must not content
himself with delivering a sermon , or rather an essay on some devotional or moral topic 5 which , however serious ^ correct and elegant , shall contain no elucidation of the
scriptures , nor be indebted to the New Testament , except perhaps for a motto , called a text , or a concluding sentence . # Such sermons I have been mortified to
hoar , inhere better things might have been expected . It seemed to rue as if the preacher , * like Cardinal B ^ mbo , one of the literary glories of ** Leo ' s golden age /' had been fearful of corrupting a Ciceronian style by quoting a book so unciassical as the bible .
rhe popular preacher must pursue a different course . Though too many religionists have really , however unintentionally , bur * losqued a the worthy name by
which they are called / ' in sernpons " full of Christ / ' ringing changes or his name , as if it possessed S (> me magical efficacy , he will * void the other extreme . " The
htness of thiUgS , '' ?« the natural lotions of right and wrong , '' Sec . plough important sqbjects of
Untitled Article
ethical discussion , he will forego as JUetter suited to a " Coacio . cje ^ uiW ox a lecture to academic studeats . The preacher t 6 a congregation , in which , as in th § 4
dispensations of Providence , * the rich and the poor , '* the learned and the uninformed , " . i&eet together / ' will rather dUfeU on the pretensions , doctrine and character of Jesus of Nazareth the teacher aud exemplar of virtue , and , under God , " tUe author and finisher of faith . '
Informing the understanding ? he wiil endeavour also to engage the . affections ; expecting , according to the often applied 'Pagan maxim , te interest others only by appearing to be interested himself . More solicitous , as Doddridge piously
recommends , "to save a soul than to round a period / ' he will avoid as much as possible , a
phraseology remote from common apprehension , fearing to ** speak in an unknown tongue , * an ev ? l by no means confined to the Latin service of the papal church : * he will rather iollow this excellent counsel of a Christian poet , who was also an admired preacher : Smooth be your style , and plain and
natural , To suit ; tbc sons of Wppp i ** g 4 ^ 4 WhitehaJL , Such is the idea which X have formed of a pppalar preacher , and which I think might be embodied without going beyond the Unitarian communion . 1 could easily name $ pme among us who tliqs ** serve God in the gospel of his son , ' * working ^ like their honoured master , ' * while it is day ? because the qight cometh / ' $ ut 1 . imve soinewhere read that th # ancients rjgveT sacrificed to heroes till tbe stan was set : and I have indeed far ex-• * * ¦" ¦ ' . ¦ ' cceded the rcasoq ^ t > le limits of a
Untitled Article
On Popular Prtacki&g : in qntiaer to a Modest Querist . 87
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1808, page 87, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2389/page/31/
-