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BIOGRAPHY.
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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.
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ftii MONTHLY REPOSITORY OF Theology and General Literature . i f * ¦ iii ' ' i iirm ii 'ii—i ¦¦"¦¦ ¦! in ¦ n ¦ li - i iTi—mmn — — ¦ -- 1 i IIITl r -- ,- , | _ . | r— .. r 1 W , T mm m a
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1740 . 3 S 5 . Samuel Lowthion-. Born at Penruddock , a small village in the parish of Greystock , Cumberland . On leaving
Kendal he settled for a short time at Ravenstonedale , then at Penrith , andj in 17 ^ 2 , removed to Hanover Square , Newcastle , at first as as * distant to Mr . Richard Rogerson , and afterwardsas sole minister . His
pulpit talents were very great ; his mode of conducting religious worship was uncommonly fervent , serious , and impressive ; his dis ~ courses were judicious and highly animated . Superior to the fear
of man , he followed truth wherever she led him , and communicated the result of his inquiries into the doctrines , duties , and prospects
held forth in the gospel , without concealment or disguise , to a ' people who , he was happy to know , did not grudge him the liberty which he assumed ; but freely heard what he freely declared ,
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even though they might not always go along with him in the deductions to . , which his researches led him ; allowing to their minister the full right which thcy > - claimed for themselves , of examining and judging , every man for lsin : sclL This liberal conduct of theirs he
gratefully acknowledges in the dedication of his , sermon on the death of Mr . -Rogerson , 1760 . Besides this , he printed several other sermons , particularly an excellent one preached at the ordination of Mr . Caleb Rotheram ^
his tutor ' s son and successor , ( No . 51 of this list , ) and published ia 1756 , under the title of " The 46 Reasonableness and Duty of ci allowing Ministers to declare
u their Sentiments with Freedom . It well deserves a more permanent existence than is the usual fate of single sermons . * During the greater part of his residence in Newcastle , he kept an academy for a limited number of
* Would not a very select collection ( say two volumes ) comainzng forty or * fifty of the Very best single seimor ^ s , prcacbccl by ministers of all driioinirarions durin g the eighteenth century , and not reprinted in the collected works o £ theitf authors , form a useful * and , probably , successful publication ?
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NoyLVII . ' SEPTEMBER . [ Vol / V ,
Biography.
BIOGRAPHY .
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vox ,, v . 3 x
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t , lST OF ' -DR . ROTHERAM ' S PUPILS . ( Continued from p . % ZJ . )
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1810, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2408/page/1/
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