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POETRY,i
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• * 4 of modern ** Evangelical" preaching ; which is indeed explained to he . preach ing upjhe doct ^ Ines of grace . " Holiness" is insisted on in several of these Discourses , as we suppose , it is iri ' most discourses bearing the Tabernacle stamp , the mint mark of orthodoxy ; but we fear the common people would not €€
understand by this term ; doing justly &nd loving mercy . " It imports something done for them , rather than any thing which they are to do . We shall not ; however ,- here borrow the langtiagenf the alarmists on the subject of giageof the alarmists on the subject of
tmi anti-moral teachers , partly because we believe that it is coinmonly unjust , and therefore mischievous , but principally because Mr . John Hyatt has not provoked censure by a single remark or expression , that we have met , in disparagement of good works and moral worth . .
" ^ These Sermons considered as the official homilies of the Tabernacle or * ' Evangelical" party , present us wkh the idea of a sect not far advanced in knowledge and refinement ; they can be relished only by persons of little inqu iry and of mediocrity of talent .
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AjLT- VI . — . 4 / 1 Open and Fearless Avowal qffhp Unitarian Doctrine Recorqmended and Enforced . A Sermon preached at the Unitarian Chapel in Artillery Lane , Londqn ,
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Iftotrfptioft on a Tombstone in Cheshttnt Church-Yard * THIS STQNE IS ERECTED IN MtfrT&RY or , 1 ? HJ £ $ EY- JJEMMXAft apWB , tyfco ' was Bprjj Fel >? ^ 1763 , ~ And t > ied June 21 , 1816 .
Y « who in solemn contemplation tread Tty ^ j ^ epin ^ t * , & % cjqe 4 tothe , sUj ^ nt d ^ ad , Pa ^ te ^ and Vith iceVre . lice , mftrk , tl ^ e . ^ pot ^ iv ^ exe res ( t H ^ l cold i ^ m ^ ih ^ who er ^ witb daun ^ I ^ , bret ^ t , Firm ia ^ Cquatxyfs w 4 in , Fyee ^ oin >
J CSLUSCj . , . . . _ --Brav'd the dread peril of perverted laws . * Thodfirh bold , yet gentle , bis well cultured Gltifofyfc '; with a generous I 6 ve of human ' ¦ tfJI ^ JjK ., j ¦ . > - f \ • ¦ . . ¦ . * . - ^ Hit .- ¦ " - ., . ¦* ¦ ' ¦
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< g Wednesday , June 5 , 181 $ , b ^ the Friends and Supporters of tht Unitarian Fund , B y W . Broai bent , Minister of the Uflitamn Chapel at Warrington . io mrt
pp . 3 D . Hurvter ancf ^ aton .. IT seems strange that amongst s « cl > as agree in tjbe Unitarian doctrine as the truth of Df yme revelation , there should be any division of opinion with regard to the ^ uty of avowing it openly and promoting it to the furthest possible extent . Such division
of opinion however exists , though it is lessening daily ; and J ^ lr . Broad : bent ' s Sermon will , we tr ^ ust , increase the number , already great , of those that tiling that to hinder the truth when it may be furthered , is a species of unrighteousness . *
Mr . Broad bent argues the subject coolly and charitably ; , a ^ nd . we see nol how the argument can be opposed by sxich as admit the truth of Christianity . If divine truth be revealed , it must be esteemed of supreme importance to the happiness of ^ mankind , and neither piety nor benevolence can allow us to be indifferent to its success . The
same principles that in former times made martyrs , will at all times form zealous proselytes . * Rom . i . 18 . See Wakefield ' a Tramlation and Note .
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Whilst Friendship * $ joys ^ xpahsnre and sincere , - ; ¦ ¦' . - ¦¦ , And bliss dop ^ e&tic oro . v ^ q' 4 eaoh passing year , -. . ¦ •» - - . - > ¦ ¦ r - ¦ 1 '' Swift flew the bolt tli ^ t sp ed , hint jfcofthe tomb : ( . , . > ; .. . But check the bufsiing te ^ r th ' ap inptixi )* his doom . " \' n ,, ; The task perform'd to humble mortals g ^ rfl , A sudden death ' s the easiest way ' fr Hkatt ' iw
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From i ^ e Periuguexe of &iicag * . Wbeij Joidst tlfe busy ? worid I foqa 4 » c Eagerly V lookM Around me . For * si Wot couch and a ^ e ^ eef ^ lbomeV But Alas it Jook'd in yTain ^ -whefe '« r J turned , —but tumult an £ toil w « e ther < 5 ^ - < ^ ' ~ x ¦ ' So i ^ n « l « d < contetttwt m& I * & #£ *"* Tomb * " ^ ' * ' ' ¦ " , * ¦ .
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G \ 4 k ^ Poetry . —To the Memory of the Jleu . Jeremiah Joyces
Poetry,I
POETRY , i
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1816, page 614, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2457/page/50/
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