On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
not go : tins pen < h-opt ; and no chapter is t 6 be fou&d itt his wofk , In which an attempt is made to defeiid insincerity in the worship of Almighty God , *< The appeal is made to every pious parent , and to every ingenuous yduth , Whether the taking of oaths which are not
to be observed , and the subscription to articles which are not believed , as the first step of a preparation for the Christian niiiiistry , would not be succeeded , as its second step , by joining- in the worship of God with ^ lying lips ; and whether such a repetition of sounds -can be called the worship of God at all . " P . x .
. Every enlightened mind will take pleasure in the author ' s benevolent speculations with regard to the progress of •* " pure and undented religion . " " The return of peace ; the general cirdilation-of the Bible and the extension of
the ability to read it ; the recognition and the bringing into exercise of many general principles , which in former ages were only occasionally discerned , and soon obscured by the clouds of ignorance and prejudice ,
arc most auspicious circumstances ; and in the midst of so much enthusiasm , superstition and bigotry on the . one side , and indifference on the other , ^ -re highly consolatotf and gfrateful to the feeling- mind . "' * There is a rotation of intellectual
taste , as well af of outward fashion . The attributes of God ; the character of his administration j the everlasting state of mankind y the tefeatift of obtaining and enjoying that felicity for which Ood has desigtied us 5 the obligations of religious
integrity > and Christian humility and charity ; in a word , the science of religion and morals „ with a view to its practical application , -will not , in every perjod of the world , be considered as the least important of all the subjects which can employ the attention of the human mind / ' P . xvi .
Untitled Article
jLVLT / tlir-r-The History and Antiquities « Vi * ' a' fit 2 Cr * of Dissenting Churcnesp cSTc . [ Continued from p . 29 « . ] ATHAMEL ilAtoNE ^ , P . D . Nis one of the few name * of which all the Dissenters make their boast .
A full account of him is here given from the memoirs already existing . Jt is a circumstance not generally kno wn * says Mr . Wilson , I . 91 , that he commenced his stated labours in the ministry at an ancient meeting-! house in Hoxton Square . Hero he preached for a few years as assistant to fiis father ^ Mr . Richard liardner .
" In the year 1767 , Dr . Latdner , in conjunction with the Rev . Caleb Flemings , v * tis * d tot publication wiaiatroducetj with
Untitled Article
a preface , a posthumous tract of Mr . Th « nas Moore , entitled , < An Inquiry into the Nature of our Saviottr ' j Agony in the Garden/—Mr . Moore was a woollen - draper in Holywell Street , Strand ; a thinking , man and studious irf the scriptures . Ttie design of nis pamphlet is to
account for our Lord ' s agony , from ih * series of cv&nf * which befel bhu chirifcg the latter part of hid mitttBtry , without supposing it to have been the result of any preternatural inflictions / " Pp « 103 ^ 104 ; and note .
We take notice of this tract in order to suggest that if any person possessing it will entrust it to our care by means Ol our publishers , we will cause it to
be re-pnnted . There ie a' sermon , ajso , on the same subject , which we beg leave to inquire after , with the same view : the following character of it and of the author is taken from
JVakefidd ' s Evidences of Christianity , 2 nd edit . 8 vo . 1 793 , pp . 136 , 137 : — " But I forbear to enlarge on thistubject of our Lord ' s agbny , because it has been discussed with tnuch good sense * and pdrspicuitjr , by nay venerable friend , the Rev . Timothy ff ylde , late
master of the jree-scfiool in Nottingham ^ in a sermon preached almost sixty ^ three years ago at that p lace , upon . flllatt . xxvi . 39 , * from which I shall q « ote the three reasons assigned for this ex-, traordinary emotion of our Saviour : 4 t 1 . The first ground of * Christ ' s fm and agony I shall rnentiort , is his knowing Ieforeftaild ' the patticiilar circumstances of his t 6 ri » ent and death .
' 2 . Another reason of our Saviour ' s fear and disorder was , the remarkable severity of his sufferings , and the miny circumstances of cruelty with which his death was attended . ** 3 . The only other reason I assign for our Saviour ' s fear of death ( and what I principally rely on ) , is his sense of the important consequences which depended on his dying well . " Thus far this intelWrtt preacher , who reasons on each or these propositions in & rational , convincing and instructive manlier . "
Td return \ o the History : Mr . WUedh having given an accoMrtt of th £ piibltdaAiori of Dr . LaVrfrifeVV £$ m m iMfygos , drops a reftection which w ^ cannot pass ov £ r ; 1
¦" * " Tlie A ^ tlior is & \\ al ive , and K * s tbe fall enjoym «^ <* f hi * intelleet . 5 ^ i & ' treme olfl a ^ e . TOe seimoi * . Well « fc * rf ^ rc-publie » tioii . J '
Untitled Article
ft * Kev&m . ~ Witoin ' s LHssdnting C&wches .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1816, page 342, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2453/page/34/
-