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i't " ' ¦ ><*•. 1 < • • ^ 11 - ¦ ¦¦ » .11 ¦— > ¦ " —¦¦ -'-¦' ' ¦ ¦' ' m t REVIEW, " Still pleas'd to praise, yet not afraid to blame.— Pope,
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g s public singing , must frequently have afforded to the pious lathers toom ( or doubt as to its expediency , and displeasure on accqunt of supposed innovations . They complained of the theatrical nature of the airs , the too great nicety of the sinking , &c . ; and
" Isidore of PHusitim ( at t-he be * ginning of the 5 th century , ) brings the charge of these abuses more especially against women ; and goes so far as to say , that though theapostle" ( I do not know where , )
u allowed them tosing in the eburch , yet the perverse and li ~ centious use they made of this liberty was a sufficient reason why they should be totally debarred from it . "
( Bingham , p . 118 . ) . Ci From the first and apostolic age , singing was always a' part of divine service , in which the \ vhole body of the church joined together ; which is a thing so evident ^ that though Cabassutius denies it , and in his spite to the reformed church-
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Aet . I , A Course of Lectures containing a Description and Systematic Arrangement of the several Branches of Divinity : accompanied with an Account
both of the principal Authors , and of the Progress , which has been made at different Periods , > n "Theological Learning . By Herbert JVJarsb , D . D . F . R . S . Margaret Professor of DivU
nay . Part III . On the Jnur-P retation of Ae Bible . Cam-
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es , where it is generally practised , calls it only a protestant whim , yet Cardinal Bona ( RerunrLiturg . lib . i . c . xxv . 19 . It . de Div . Psalm , c . xvii . ) has more than once not only confessed , bot solidly proved it to have been the primitive practice . " If the Car *
dinal s proofs are not stronger than the Protestant ' s , they are worth nothing . Bingham s sweeping as » sertion at the beginning shews that his statements are not to be received without examination . ( See
$ 3 . p . 463 . ) I propose to conclude this long protracted discussion (* nd I hope briefly ) in another letter 5 in which it is my intention to consider the grounds of the employment of
music , vocal and instrumental , it * public worship , and to examine the objections which are urged against the latter in particular . lam , Sir , Yours sincerely , L . C .
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bridge , printed : SolcJ in Loir * don by Rivingtoas . 1813 , 8 vp . pp . 117 . After an interval of three * years , we are happy to perceive that the
. Margaret Professor resumes those official and literary labour by which he at once maintains h ) s own reputation , and assists th $ progress of others in , the most important of ^ U the sciences . In —~ ' . "igW .
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Jtcoitw . —Marshs ' Lectures . Tart 111 . 673
I'T " ' ¦ ≫≪*•. 1 ≪ • • ^ 11 - ¦ ¦¦ » .11 ¦— ≫ ¦ " —¦¦ -'-¦' ' ¦ ¦' ' M T Review, " Still Pleas'd To Praise, Yet Not Afraid To Blame.— Pope,
i't " ' ¦ ><*• . 1 < • ^ 11 - ¦ ¦¦ » . 11 ¦— > ¦ " —¦¦ - ' - ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ' ' m t REVIEW , " Still pleas'd to praise , yet not afraid to blame . — Pope ,
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1813, page 673, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2433/page/49/
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