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
of a Saviour , ia the literal meaning of ihe term as applied not , as Mr . W . argues , to God , but to Christ 9 as the agent of God , ia the work of redemption . Mr . W . will surely allow that , when in " assuming" - it as my idea that the fact does not , by any means ,
( from what has yet appeared , ) seem to bear out any thing like the sanguine hope he , and those who think with him upon the point at issue , seem to entertain of the eventually successful
diffusion of such missionary principles , 1 take A ?> pwn reports , connected with . practical observations , as the basis of that conclusion ; I am not building on vague or ambiguous data , that I am not deficient , as he con *
ceives , m acquaintance with " the doctrines and the affairs of . Unitarians : " wot that I see how they require any extraordinary mental energy to comprehend them , and that after all , perhaps , I have not such " very incorrect &iew $ of the subject on which I have Written . "
SIMPLEX . P . S . As my letter referred to an express point argued as a fact , I can ^ riot concur in Mr . W . ' s idea of laying down particular " grounds on which the efficacy or inefficacy of
Unitariatiism , for the purposes of conversion , should be argued . " Surely it is not what should be the mode , or even vHhat might be a better mode , of discussing- the subject with which my argument is concerned ; but , what the effect is de facto . On this position
( to which I must beg to confine myself , although I shall not regret to see the subject now taken up and discussed on all the bearings to which MnW / s invitation extends , ) the letter of Ebion [ p . 185 ] claims no
consideration from me , as not applying to t ^ euubject , as I viewed it , viz . as a case . I must beg , however , to observe , that he Jbas set out with ' * assuming" an inference from my statement , which it neither asserted , nor did I there mean U > deduce . Both he and Mr . W .
a ^ em have misconceived my idea , which was to confine a specific inquiry to ' a given pbSnt , and that point a particular doctrine , as maintained in aji ghj : unfavourable to the success of iiXi s ^ iouary preaching , I do not see that I . c « n state my idea , more plainly , oph ^ prtbafL Vn ypel f mpre unambiguous ) y or distinptly on the business .
Untitled Article
Sm > May % i mis : > . FROM the notice of the lines on Sleep , in / the last Repoisitory , [ p . 277 , ] I perceive that a letter ' concerning them , which I sent ,, has , from , some cause , not reached the
Repository . The fact is , I was not aware * till I saw them in the Repository , that 1 had sent those lines [ p . 64 ] among a bundle of other verses * I do not recollect where I got them , and do not know who is the author of thenru The early insertion of this is an act of justice due to ~ ¦ J .. C _/ . H ,
Untitled Article
S&O Reply to Mr * Jhyhroh ^ nJPrieMeys ^ d p ^ Sermons .
Untitled Article
Birmingham , -. Sir , April 9 » 1818 . IN the Niumber for February ,. [ p # 94 , ] of your useful Repository , Mr . E . Taylor , of Norwich , notices a query of mine respecting Dr .
Priestley ; and what he so confidently asserts ^ as to the Doctor preaching sermons written by Dr . Enfield , I am persuaded he believes to be true ^ I confess , however , it appears rather strange that such a circumstance should not be more generally known
among his congregation . I can assure him , though I had the pleasure of being one of those who constantly , attended his services for several years , before he was unfortunately driven from Birmingham by the riots , yet I never heard of it , except from the occasion which induced me to write
that letter 5 though I believe my connexions afforded me as favourable opportunities for hearing what he usually did , as any one belonging to the placef It is remarkable too , that those at whose houses he was used to visit , and where he indulged in that fririk communication which rendered his
conversation so interesting and instructive , were most surprised at the assertion . Since I have read Mr . T / s letter , I have diligently inquired of others if they had ^ ver heard any thing on the subject , and find one lady , who believes she has heard of such a thin g !
Td impute the practice alluded to , us " a blemish" to Dr . P . was what I never intended ; and so far from disapproving it , entertain the opinion , that were it much more general , both iu the Church and amongst JD ^ ssenters , the advantages would bfe v ^ ry obvious . The great abundance of r . excellent
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), May 2, 1818, page 320, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2476/page/32/
-