On this page
-
Text (10)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
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
these by Imh freeholders , landholders and capitalists . A curious fact has come out , that the Marquiss Wellesly , the Lord J aeutenant , has sent u document to the Cabinet in which he attributes the present peace of Ireland to the Catholic Association . Attempts have been made to >
raise the " No Popery" cry , and to get up Anti-Catholic petitions , but without effect , except as regards a few of the rural clergy . The bill against the Usury laws has been lost , chiefly through the the activity of a few members of
-corporations and country gentlemen , against the political economists and the majority of the ministry . The Unitarian Marriage Bill was read a first time , without an observation , on the 23 rd instant , on the proposal of Mr . William Smith , and is to be read a second time on tlie 4 th
of March , when the ministers in the Lower House will have made up their minds as to the course to be pursued . There is a probability , we should hope , of the bill passing the Lower House ; of
its reception trom the Upper House , the experience of last year allows us to form a tolerably accurate opinion . It seems to have been judged expedient , by tlie supporters of the Bill , that no further
petitions should be presented .
Untitled Article
In the Press , and will appear early in Autumn , Four Volumes of Sermons , by the Rev . Philip Doddridge , D . D ., agreeably to a clause in his will to that purpose , and four MSS ., which will be furnished by the Family . —Such an acquisition will be duly appreciated by the religious world .
Untitled Article
CambridgCy Dec . 31 . —The prize for the Hulscan Dissertation for tlie year 1824 , is adjudged to James Amiraux Joremie , B . A ., Scholar of Trinity College . —Subject , " The Doctrines of our Saviour , as derived from the four Ciospels
are . in perfect harmony with the l > octriiR \ s of St . Paul , as derived from his epistles . " Friday , Jan . 7 . The following is the subject of the Hulscan Prize Dissertation for tlie present year : iC In what respects thi * Law An a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ . "—New Monthly Mug . p . 61 .
Untitled Article
The King of this Cbwrttrp has ! al € fy issued edicts in favour of Religious Liberty , and of an equitable adnniiistfati ^ m of Church Revenues . Were Ireland Hanover , how little cause woulcF the Irish have to complain 1 Proclamation , George IV ., ic .
It having come to oui ; knowledge , that some doubts are entertained respecting the interpretation and application of the first paragraph of the 16 th article , of the act of the German Confederation of the 8 th of June 1815 , which is to the following effect ; " The difference of the
Christian religious communities , cannot lead to any difference in the enjoyment of civil and political rights , in the countries composing the Germanic Confederation ; " we are induced to issue the following declaration and ordinance :
1 . The several professors of the Chris ~ tian faith , enjoy a perfect equality of civil and political rights in the kingdom * , and , in conformity with the said article ^ the notion of a predominant and of a merely tolerated church , is entirely abolished .
2 . All Christian religious communities have a right to the unobstructed and free exercise of their religious worship , and eyery clergyman can require the surplices , &c . only from the parishoners of his own persuasion . Consequently ,
3 . Those inhabitants who belong to a different Christian persuasion from that of the parish , are to pay the fees , & . c \ only to tlie clergyman ot their persuasion , to whose parish they are positively annexed . Fees can be required by a clergyman of a different persuasion , when he has been required to perform an official ditty , and has really performed it .
4 . On the other hand , all dues to churches and schools , which proceed from houses , farms , and other landed property in a parish , without regard to the personal qualifications of the professor in respect to hifc religious belief ,
are still to be paid to those entitled to them l ) y every possessor , even if be bo 3 ong to a Christian party different frorn 3 hat ot" the parish . 5 . Contains regulations for the entries in the church books . Hanover , Dec . 18 . ¦—I Tit \ lT 7 ri t—
Untitled Article
324 Intelligence * ^« Li terary * Foreign .-r-lfanwer * " £ ttj \ efriea .
Untitled Article
Archdeacon Wrangham is said to be engaged in preparing for the Press , Walton ' s Prolegomena , with additional notes .
Untitled Article
Two iu'vv Utilitarian Churches have hens crt'cU'd , one in Boston and the other in Salem , Mass . ; the former has be « rii receiifJy dedicated to the worship of th *' only living and true . God .
Untitled Article
AMERICA . i
Untitled Article
LITERARY .
Untitled Article
FOREIGN . HANOVER
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1825, page 124, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2533/page/60/
-