On this page
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
practical adoption ot fihe great principles of religious liberty . America te the oottiitry of experimental legislation . The Puritan colonies of New England disgraced themselves by fanaticism ; and even the constitution
filmed by OLoeke for Carolina , has restrictions on the liberty of public ^ worship , as it required the union of seven families to legalize a sect 5 while IPerin freed thre public profession of religion from all limitations whatever . From this brief review of those
particulars in which the conduct of the primitive Quakers differed from that of other Noncoiiformists , it appears that they are eminently entitled to the honourable notice of the litetorism of Dissent . It has been common
to itpeak harshly of their entfomtesm * 3 ? heir pretensions to *» spimtftta were absurd enough ; but they werfe ireiflier insincere nor pewliar . The takers of the present day , though
highly rsespeefcatole , ctftttiot , I appre-Itesid , % e placed in so advantageous a contrast with otiifer setifcs , as their predecessors . Jn one particular , fcfrfcy hive varied / rom themselves
remarkably . Now they aVe the least , as then they werethe most eager proselytistsu This is to be lamented . They did much good by thei ^ zeal , and it is carious to observe how many of their converts were in * the more elevated
« nd dissipated classes of society . Many also tif their most celebrated members and 'ptfeachers had been military men . * Tbecelebrated El wood carried something of a chivalrous
spirit into controversial warfare , and like a gallant duellist offered his adversary the choice of weapons , con * tgtfditig , udHbttum , in prorie or verse . Had the Quakers retained their
original -zad , it would have *>*? en highly tfteAil to the community , ntft merely by the increase of a valuable body of raHgianfats , but by influencing public opinion tm mtmy important moral subjects . Thfcy might thave preserved
out- country m > Yn a 'part at feftfct of ttie guilt « it has incurred by ^ he ^ tieiedlm& and profjtne miiltiplic ^ tion of oftthft , atld by ^ t * isat teve of war Which l \ m deluged the tvod 3 with blood , and bvouglit upon ou ^ elv ^ K # 0 many calamities . F . ^ A % LH lAii ^ e , © . Bawjhiy , t ^ ibb ^ y ^ om , An * e « Btintarrtwton ^ Gito » 6 » Vcwshtity .
Untitled Article
176 Church Endowments in &i $ setotmg Trusts .
Untitled Article
Ftl . \ % 1 ^ 18 . Sir , HAVING lately had occasion to look pretfcy minutely over tbe eaiTy official retards of the ecclesiastical bewefi ^ ees originally reported to of
the governor ^ Quee n A » ne s bounty , as competent for augmentation , I was struck by observing the following instances in the list of the Chester diocese , stated as having their incomes dependent on Disse 7 iters , The cases referred
to are , " 1 . Ringey ; ^ a donative in the deanery of Frodsham ; valuation , nothing certain , send in Dissenters' hands . u Horwich ; a chapelry in the deanery of Manchester : valuation , interest of IQO 1 . trustees for which being . v © i « sehters , refuse to give an account , and pay the curate nothing .
" 8 . Ohobentj in tlie deanery of Warmigtonj in the hands of Dissenters , nothing certain . ' * It seetns , I own , an extraordinary case , and is a still more unaccountable circunofistance , considering # ie very
existence of parochial endowments as prior to the origin of any dissenting societies , how any portion of the ecclesiastical revenues ( however inconsiderable its amount ) should have become connected with , or subject to , dissenting trusts . No account of
the places in question , that 1 have been able to discover , throws the smallest light upon this singular peculiarity . It is probable that some of your northern readers may have it in their fpdwer to supply some notices of these heterogeneous endowments , and if so , the communication of them
through the chnmrel of the Repository would be esteemed a favour V . . M . H .
Untitled Article
Feb . Qy 1818 . Sir , AMONG the Sydney papers are preserved several letters Kfrom ** Algernon Sydney to his Fecther , Rotert 9 Eafl of Leicester . " In one of them , dat ^ d < c IFrankfort upon Maine , Sep . 8 , 1660 , ^ speiitoing of the ignorance of the priests , he says ,
" The most eminent men atnongst 4 : h « m , learn to understand English Their libraries < mn full of Sa ^ ter ^ Burr < ittffhts \ and ^ tliter Engli . ^ h puritan serm ( Tn-t ) Wikw , ancl out eff them they preaeh . I wm acquuintcd with one
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1818, page 176, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2474/page/24/
-