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
¦ auje jess astonished . than grieved that the Margaret Professor has been assailed with abusive letters fx ^ jpti in ^ jyi ^ ufils of £ hjs , descriptmp » t $ ureiy , ' liis discernment and ifitDartialitv will forbid " -. him to
identify thefn vyth the cause of V $ xjc £ ^ bey ajre ^ ffie afjvqcates : rior need . h ^ Wj appwhen ^ i ^ e ( 69 ) that he may be required to make some otfrersacrifice besides the sacrifice of fcis cfr ^ # cter . —The Panic ^ Baptists of this coijntry , we are ha £ py to learn ( 70 ) , have presented hjln with ' * a very valuable token
of their esteem , " for the publication of his History of Scripture Translations , in which justice is rendered to the biblical labours of their missionaries at £ > erampoxe . Those missionaries merit no
common praise for their zeal , discretion and jper § everance . ' and , observing the direction of their studies irj Indi ^ , j ) r . ^ I firsU styles that class of Protestant Dissenters to which they belong , * a very
respectable and learned ( bp ^ y . " respectabje aftfl earned QPf l y-His chapters on Calvinism , fgrnish some acute remarks in relation to the nature and tendency of the system and the history of the controversy . Speaking of the
popular doctrine of predestination , or jnore correctly of absolute decrees , \ ie affirms ( 84 ) , " There is no middle path . On the subject of predestination we can have no such thing as half a . Cal y , inist , or * i moderate Cafvinist . " This is a
fair and not an unimportant inference . W ^ however ^ we see the ingenious reasonings by which it is endeavoured , on the one side , to sljew that the articles of the Church of ( England are Calvinistic , and , ori £ he other , to vindicate , them from this represeritatipn , we must suppose that ouir Professor will not
Untitled Article
seriously defend clerical subscription as essential for 'preserving unity of faith ! We copy the following sentences ( 129 , 130 ) , because they describe a memorable incident in Dr .
Marsh ' s public life , and contain information of which ) it is probable , some of our readers have not been hitherto in possession : «* When in 1798 the public opinion on the Continent ran like a torrent
against England , afld the miseries occasioned by the war in Oermany , excited a clamour against us as the reputed authors of it ; when the journalists in the pay of France teemed with abuse of England , and they who were attached to us were afraid to defend us , I laid aside Theology to vindicate ray
country . I stood alone against a host of adversaries , who loaded me with invec . tives , though with invectives far short of Dr . Milncr ' s . But I persevered ; and I changed the public opinion , from hatred of England to praties of England . In a work , written in the German language , I proved that we were not the authors of the war . "
—« The Dissenters and Methodists , ' * observ . es Professor Marsh , when referring to them as members of Auxiliary Bible Societies ( 137 ) , ' * are now called annually together in county meetings , where public speeches are made , which are much better calculated to inflame
t ) ie passions than to inform the judgment . ' * Thi $ language is unhandsome : nor has it the authority of numerous and acknowledged facts * § 9 rne oi ; fbe speeches deliverer ! $ t these meetings , are perhaps ill
calculated " to inform the jud gment : ' some are eocarpples of a very bad fastp in compositioji ; but , with fe w exceptions , th e * have no tendency tp inflame tt } $
angry passions . In general , thejr breathe the spirit of conciliation and good-will . A ^ any Jiave t ? e $ n « fe % ar ^ lirngn ^ tlv ^ j efo * quent and appropriate ; white others , it must be confessed ^ par
Untitled Article
Rtviqtai— Marsh ' s jRep / y to the Rev . Isaac JMitner . 7 & 9
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1813, page 789, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2435/page/37/
-