On this page
-
Text (1)
-
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
nature for those who disUked them . The fact was , that the case submitted to their lordships wag really & question of theology ; and he believed no inquiry of the nature of the present was ever yet instituted in their Lordships' House . The truth of religious doctrines could not be
a fit subject for discussion in either House of Parliament . If any inquiry on this petition were gone into , he apprehended that their Lordships could not alter , far less prohibit , the questions alluded to . The 43 th canon made examination on
the Church Liturgy and Thirty-nine Articles the duty of the bishop ; and that mode of examination which he had adopted was that which was best calculated for his diocese . The same questions had been used ever since he . was a
bishop , and had not been objected to ; but if he were wrong , could their Lordships interfere for the purpose of correcting or removing the questions ? If the 48 th canon were to be altered , that surely could be done only by the same authority that made it . Be the allegations of
the petition what they might , still the subject was not within the jurisdiction of their Lordships . But he did not say this from fear to meet the allegations ; he would shew that they were gross misrepresentations . He would , therefore , describe the examination . The questions referred to in the petition were arranged
under distinct heads or chapters , and every chapter contained references to the Liturgy of the Church and the . Thirtynine Articles . The object of the inquiries was to know whether the religious opinions of the applicant accorded with the doctrines of the Established Church .
The petitioner could not pretend that he did not know this , because he had received an explanation , stating the object of the examination ; and that explanation he had printed in his statement of the correspondence . The petitioner and the applicant must therefore have known that the standard alluded to in the
correspondence meant only the standard of the doctrines of the Church ; and yet it was ventured to be asserted in the petition that he ( the Bishop ) had set up U new and arbitrary standard . If these allegations contained a particle of truth , it would be the duty , not of their Lordships , but of the convocation to
inter-* ere . Far from his having forsaken the standard of the Established Church , it had been his endeavour to preserve it ; a » d had his endeavours for that object not been successful , their Lordships would never have heard of the present complamt . Nothing coulfl be more ahura than to suppose that the putting seilea ° f questions w * s requiring sub-
Untitled Article
ftcription to a test or standard . If in subscribing the answers , it appeared that a new standard was subscribed , it was the standard of the person who answered , not of the examiner . But the signature was only req \ nred to authenticate the
answers , and not as a subscription to any new standard of faith . It wags not sufficient to give a thing a name , and then declaim against it ; the question first to be determined was , whether the name was properly applied . He was at
a loss to understand how a string of questions could be called a standard of faith . That name might belong to the answers ; but without a perversion of terms it could not be applied to the questions . If his own declaration of
attachment to the doctrines of the Church , supported by the references under the heads of chapters to the Liturgy and the Thirty-nine Articles were not credited , he would appeal to all hia publications . On receiving answers to the questions , if he found any deviation from
the doctrines of the Church , he never rejected without remonstrance , and sometimes he had succeeded in correcting deviations . Only those who refused to answer at all were rejected in the first instance . His conduct had always been
open ; nothing was therefore so easy as bringing proof , if there were any wellfounded complaint against him , and in such a case the absence of proof shewed the impossibility of producing any . The noble Lord had endeavoured to extract
from his letter to the petitioner an admission of setting up a new standard of faith . But had his standard been different from that of the Established Church , he surely would not have been raised to
the bench on which he sat . His publications were before the public ; his opinions were well known ; and when he spoke of hi 3 standard , he meant no new standard , but the old standard of Church doctrine . The mode of examination
which he had thought fit to adopt was particularly necessary at the present time . If great care were not taken , the Church of England would fall into that anomalous state which was exhibited by another church in a part of Switzerland , the clergy of which subscribed to a Calvinistic test , and preached Sociuian doctrines . *
* This statement produced the following letter in the Times newspaper of June 20 : — " Sir , " Amongst other statements in the speech of the Bishop of Peterborough , in the debate of Thursday last , is one which may serve to shew how far the correctness of that Bight Reverend Prelate is
Untitled Article
Intelligence e + ^ Parltam entary . Peterborough Questions . 435
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1821, page 435, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2502/page/55/
-