On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
REVIEW. ^till pleas ed to praise, yet not afraid to blame.—— Pope.
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
Art . I . A Second Letter to the Rev . Herbert Marsh , D . D . F » R . 6 . Margaret Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge ^ concerning the Opinion that the vital Principle
of the Reformation has been lately conceded by him to the Church of Rome . By the Rev * Peter Gandofphy , Priest of the
Catholic Church * London , printed and published for the Author , by Keating , Brown and Keating , &c . &c . 1813 . 8 vo . pp . 101 .
When a controversy is at once voluminous and important , a retrospect of its successive stagesof the questions at issue and of the nature of the arguments severally employed , —may answer useful
ends . The discussions , of which the Bible Society has been the occasion and the subject , are perhaps approaching their termination . However , they are too interesting and remarkable to share
the late of the mass of the polemical effusions of the day : and men who are not indifferent to the main principles of Protestantism , will anxiously watch the progress of a dispute in which the cause of the Reformation is concerned .
Dr . Wordsworth , the respectable editor of < c Ecclesiastical Biography , " , if we mistake not , the earliest of the Antibiblists : he laid before the publfc his apprehensions that the British and
Foreign Bible Society would have an unfavourable influence on the state of certain long-established asso-
Untitled Article
ciations for the diffusion of religious knowledge at home and abroad . It was replied , that the world furnished ample scope for the efforts of all these societies , that their several exertions would animate
each other ' s zeal , and that it seemed impossible for the interests of a Protestant church to be endangered , or for the duty of its ministers to be compromised , by measures of which the sole view is the circulation of the Scriptures .
Indeed , it has been fully ascertained that the associations thus referred to were insufficient for supplying even our poorer countrymen with the sacred volume . After some minor combatants .
whose names and feats do not deserve to be recorded , had shewn themselves on the stage , the " Margaret Professor of Divinity in Cambridge , " at length , appeared . His strength was greater and his
weapons were brighter than those of his predecessor in this conflict . To drop the figure , he was superior to Dr . Wordsworth in point of perspicuity and skill . He boldly aimed at proving that those members of the establishment act a
hazardous and inconsistent part who join Dissenters in the distribution of the Bible , unaccompanied by
the Prayer-book . For them to bestow the volume of heavenly truth without this explanation o f it ) was , he argued , to countenance a sort of generalized
Protestantism , neither contained in creeds nor defined by articles : it was an improper concession to
Untitled Article
( 329 )
Review. ^Till Pleas Ed To Praise, Yet Not Afraid To Blame.—— Pope.
REVIEW . ^ till pleas ed to praise , yet not afraid to blame . —— Pope .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), May 2, 1813, page 329, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2428/page/45/
-