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
i « esday ,, i Jafce the 26 J& . Mr . O . Kenrick pt&pcfrt fd ©» L tb $ pccaeicw ^| iro » i tbe coneluding clause of Luke « ii :. -22 a . * ' Tosthe poor , tW ; Gospels a preached * ' * shewing ttot UQitarianisin is that Gospel , and' that it is infinitely better suited to the capacities and wants of the industrious classes , than the tenets to which it is opposed . Such were the combined excellencies of
tins discourse , both as it respects its composition and its delivery , that they can be . estimated only by its being heard from the lips of the preacher . The writer jmist be content with expressing his cordial sympathy in its benevolent design ; may it have proved efficacious in promoting in the auditory , whose attention it so
powerfully arrested , and particularly in that numerous and respectable class to whom it more immediately related , those convictions and those salutary impressions * for which it was so eminently calculated . That it has produced such effects in no ordinary degree , there is 6 very reason to conclude .
After the service , the Report of the Committee was read , including the journal of Mr . Harding , who has in the course of the last year been engaged by the Unitarians of these parts , in the capacity
of their Missionary . Some extracts from his journal have already appeared in the Ckristiau Reformer , and have been adopted in the Report of the Unitarian Fund . The engagements of Mr . Harding from the commencement of his labours in
October last , have been various ^ and his success in the several objects has been , all tilings considered , highly satisfactory and encouraging . His applications , being supported by the Resolutions of the Committee ef the Association , have proved effectual in uniting the exertions of almost all t ) iir churches ; which , with the friendly of
^ im generous assistance the Unitarian F » nd Committee , in concurrence With that of the Unitarian Baptists in London , $ iaB enabled him to enter upon the under--fcaKing . He has been employed on the Sabbaths in conducting the services of several of our churches which have no
• stated- 'ministers ; and much of the intervening time has been employed in announcing - 'Unfearianism where it was previously little known , hi Queenborough and Hastings he has introduced Unitarian preaching in the first instance , and has excited a considerable degree of public attention . In Sheerness he has been the
leading instrument of re-uniting the " little flock" into a regular society , and of making a permanent accession to their number . Having at his suggestion formed a Fellowship Fund , they lire now carryingi 0 * 1 ' their services . arid conducting a Sunday-school by their own exertions . In the course of a little more than five
Untitled Article
mouths , when _ bis report closed Mr . Harding had , tra ^ flled . « 733 miles , and preached 74 times . A vote pf thanks was passed & > the Committee of tf * £ Unitarian Fund for the liberal granj , of £ 20 , and for their frien ^ y aid in , Awarding the undertaking by the occasional , labours of Mr , Wnght , Thanks were aJso voted
to the Unitarian Baptist Committee , and to those chuiches and individuals who , though not previously members of the institution , have generously co-operated with them in carrying this object into effect . The Society resolved on using their utmost exertions toward continuing Mr . Harding in his present " useful and animated career of missionary preaching . "
The business of the day having closed , the Society now retired to partake of a common repast . The afternoon was spent with much harmony and friendly intercourse . Some appropriate sentiments were given , which called forth addresses from
Mr . Holden , Mr Kenrick , Mr . Harding , and several other friends . Among others , the memory of that good man and liberal supporter of benevolent institutions , Mr . Sampson Kiugsford , was not forgotten , which gave occasion to some excellent remarks from his intimate friend and
coadjutor , Mr . Benjamin Marten . Mr . Paine , who a few years since wrote two excellent JLetters to a Clergyman in Defence of Unitarianism , which obtained a rapid circulation , addressed the Meeting on occasion of his having again been engaged in a similar contest with one of that order . His sound refutation of the
general charge tbax his principles were erroneous , had received no other notice from his clerical opponent , than that of the almost immediate return of his Letter . Such methods of shutting out the approaches of liglit are but too congenial wi ^ h the principles of an establishment , which attempts to say to advancing knowledge , Hitherto shalt thou come , but n <> further . T . P . June 30 , 1822 .
Untitled Article
Eastern Unitarian Society . Tiir opening of the New Chapel erected by the Unitarian congregation at Dims took place on Wednesday , evening the 26 th June . The building is delightfully situated iu a . field adjoining the town , which ^ overlooks a large piece of water ,
and ia constructed in eveny way inost tastefully ., and 'judiciously * . ; . ^ There is > notiiingjaboulsiit ah&myaor ekttavagaot , bvt all is substantial and i convenient . « I * is calculated tax - iseatu about * * 30 ft " hearers . The congregation at Visa is riot a iiujnerous one , and the erection of such a
Untitled Article
446 InteUig&nee . < ^ Ke&t unlJStA 8 * ex Unitarian . * Chrisiian Association * .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1822, page 446, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2514/page/54/
-