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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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into the hearts of the vDiin ^ er me mbers of this Society to establish a Sunday-School , to enable all the children of the poor to read the Holy Scriptures , to guide them through life , to support them in death , and to lead them to everlasting mansions of happiness beyond the grave .
Having mentioned but few amongst the numerous benefits we have derived from your invaluable ministry among us , we sincerely hope it will please our hea ~ venJy Father to bless you with many years of health and strength to continue your ever-active and useful exertions .
Happy , Rev . Sir , am I to state to you , this Cup is procured by the mutual wishes and mutual exertions of the whole of this Society , whose feelings of affectionate attachment are but feebly shewn in
offering for your acceptance this " small tribute of respect and gratitude for fifty years' exertion in the cause of Christianity , and in promoting the best interest and happiness of man . "
Mr . If oldens Reply . I confess , my fellow-christians , that L want words to express my obligations to you for all your acts of kindness ; for the attention you have always been ready to pay me iu my public services , and
particularly for this testimony of your respect and affection ; for , next to the favour and approbation of Almighty God , and the testimony of my own mind , I have ever set the highest value on the esteem and a / feet ion of this congregation .
All the returns I cad make are the warmest good wishes for your earthly prosperity ; or that , so far as a Being of i n finite wisdom and goodness shall know it to be consistent with your highest and best interests and everlasting happiness ,
j r our cup of earthly good may now ovor ; but above all , that you may be pre-eminent in all Christian knowledge , and more especially in all those Christian virtues which add the highest worth to the human character , and are your appointed qualifications for the happiness of an endless being .
Upon your reminding me of the various plans of usefulness which have taken place in this Society , I can only wish that I had done more , and this more effectually , in promoting the good of others , and the sacred interests of religion in the world .
But particularly a& to the Sunday-School , I wouFd pay a just tribute to the youajg of this Society , with whom it originated , and who have pursued this highly commendable object with unabated zeal and ardour from ks beginning . To * this I wotfld add , that on all other occa-
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sions I hare had the ready cooperation of ! my friends . As tp myself , in whatever degree I stay have T > een useful « o you or to the world , to God be all the glory .
To the Two Deacons . I have also to express my obligations to you , Gentlemen , for the respectful and affectionate manner ia which you have fulfilled the trust reposed in you . I can only add , may the best blessings of Heaven attend on all around me .
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TkB congregation of the New Meeting in Birmmgkam , a few months ago , testified its sense of the important services which it has received during a series of years from one of its members , who ( will
he excuse the writer for saying it ?) cannot be knowu without being esteemed ^ by presenting him with a very elegant piece of plate . The following is th € inscr iption which it bears :
" This piece of plate is presented to Mr ^ Thomas Ryland , by the Members of the Congregation of the New Meeting House , as a memorial of their gratitude for his highly valuable services in instructing the children of their Sunday-Schools in singing , during thirty-four years , and for his kind attention to the psalmody of their pubHc worship .
" Birmingham , November 1 , 1821 . " We have sineere pleasure in recording such testimonies of gratitude and affection . B .
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f&tellig % nee * - ^ Te * tbmhp of Bespecl to Mr . Thomas Ryland , ? 7 * fl
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The Rev . J . Donougbue has resigned the pastoral charge of the congregation assembling at the * ' Great Meeting House , " iu the High Street , Coventry : and on Sunday , October 13 , the Meeting House , which had been shut up for more
than three months , during which time a large proportion of the congregation regularly met , on the Lord ' s ^ day ^ in a different part of the city , was again opened for public worship , by the R « v . James Hews BranBby , of Dudleys who preached , in the morning , from Psa . exxii . 1 : " I
was glad when they said unto me , Let us go into the house of the Lord ; " and ki the afternoon , from Gol . i . 28 : *< Whom we preach , warning every man , aud teacil ing every man in all wisdom , fhafcjjpt may present every man perfect in CSSffli
Jesus . " Mr . Bransby concluded his morn ^ ing sermon with an address adapted to the peculiar circumstances of" the congregation , urging on hi ^ bearers , the paramount importance of those great principles in the prtffessirin of which they were assembled ; and affectionately re *
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1822, page 711, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2518/page/55/
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