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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.
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which glory may he bring us who hath most dearly bought us with his own blood 1 Amen .
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The following is part of a letter written by a lady from Manchester to a friend in Chester , dated July 1 , 176 l . It is interesting on many accounts . What do you hear of our good Mr . Seddon ? " foul think it very probable the rumour of his present
subjects has reached you , as I find they afford great matter of speculation here , and last Sabbath-day we had several strangers at cliapel , drawn by curiosity y but whatever they think of his particular sentiments , sure I am , whoever has a love for sincere piety and virtue , for the noblest zeal for what
he believes truth , for the honour of God and the Redeemer , for the good of mankind in striving to give the gospel its full force upon the heart and life ; whoever prizes the very spirit ^ nd temper of the glorious founder of Christianity , must feel their hearts warm towards one who shews so much
of it $ and I confess I never attend him with more affection than when I most differ in opinion . Sorry I was at first that he had taken up the subject , but Sabbath-day was se ' nnight ,
he addressed us in so striking a manner , gave such weighty reasons , as not only justified him to me , but highly raised him in my esteem . " I have ( says he ) many years been fully convinced of the truths I now deliver , and I have
found the greatest satisfaction in them . I have always intended to bear my public testimony to the truth , and the growing precariousness of my life makes me not dare to delay any longer , lest I should not have time allowed
me to discharge it , and should not be able to give a just account of my ministry at that awful ( or impartial ) bar , to which I expect shortly to be called ; it is become to me an indispensable duty . " These , or near it , were his
words ; rejoicing in the generous freedom of the congregation that could bear to hear so long-received opinions so freely canvassed , as being so open
to truth , speaking his suspicion of the censures he might fall under , but with a generous disregard of every thing short of approving himself to his great Master . Indeed , my friend , you must have loved tfie good man , the upright ,
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the brave Christian , however you had dissented in faith . I heartily hope him mistaken as to his own life , and rejoice he is in an age in no danger of being treated like good Mr . Emlyn ;
for such disinterested goodness appears to me the very essence of Christianity , however it may differ in particular opinions . He has given us five discourses , and I expect his farewell yet behind , nor will 1 lose one of them if
I can help it . Willing to hear all that can be said , and picking up many pleasing flowers by the way , at the same time finding ray long-learnt sentiments oft confirmed by the very things opposed to them , and happy I can hear v them with , I hope , some degree of the same Christian spirit ,
with which I am persuaded they are preached . The first was a kind of apology for the subject , and speaking of the vast importance of it , and a little touch at the Trinity . The second more fully the Trinity , and expounding some texts which speak of thepreexistence of Christ . The third more
fully to explode the belief of the preexistence , and shew the ill effects of the opinion . The" fourth to prove the real humanity of Christ ; and the last Sabbath-day , the running through a variety of instances in the gospels , that proved him anointed of God and invested with a fulness of divine
power , above every other created being , and made Lord of all things , all from one text , St . Peter ' s words in Acts ii . 2 % : " A man approved of God by miracles and wonders , " &c . [ The sermons here mentioned were published 1793 , with a Memoir of the Author , who died in 1769 , aged 53 . }
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430 Mr . Seddons Preaching ' . —Indifference to Religious Opinions ,
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Edinhurgh 9 Sir , June 5 , 1818 ~ IT is common for a certain description of persons , who lay claim to greater liberality than their neighbours , to ask , Why will you not allow
every one to g 6 to heaven in his ow » way ? And what % the use of disturbing the world with the disputes aud cavils , the divisions and misunderstandings which the doctrines of
controversial divinity have given rise to ? That such should be the language of infidels , or even of conscientious Deists , is not surprising ; t > ut that persons who , profess to believe in the divide mission of Jesus Christ , and who fcaye Jtytt J **
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1818, page 430, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2478/page/22/
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