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
Sir , LATE occurrence in my neighjTjL bQurhpod led me to reflect upon the gross inconsistency of the ultra-religious , who place so much of their religion in the Jewish observance of the sabbath . They will harass and
distress a poor widow who sells ior her livelihood a bunch of greens on the Sunday , and yet they themselves will countenance and uphold practices which are equally a violation of the sanctity of the day , according to their own notion of sanctity . Without any
ilonbt of its propriety , they take places in short sta ^ e-coaehes , ( the difference between skorts and longs in this respect involves a great deal of religion ) or call hackney coaches on the
Sunday , though these vehicles cannot run without taking many persons ( horsekeepers , drivers , watermen , &c . ) from church duties , and laying a burden upon the poor beasts employed , which the Jewish s <\ bbatie law forbids . Thev
will also open without compunction letters by the Monday ' s post , which . have been on the road all the preceding clay , and in their transit have made a host of sabbath-breakers . And again , who reads more eagerly the Monday morning newspapers ,
the getting" up of which is well known to occupy the printers a great part of the Sunday in labour ?—These inconsistencies should surely teach the £ i \ ger observers of days and prosecutors , or , correctly speaking , "
persecutors , of ' non-observers , that they liiive something of the Pharisee in
Untitled Article
them ; for while they strain at the gnat , they swallow the camel . A few years ago an association was formed for enforcing , by the strong arm of the law , " the better
observance of the Lord ' s day . " An appeal was made to the public for support in a project which was to divert the wrath of God from a guilty land . One of the patrons of the pious scheme was , at the very time of its announcement , seen every Sunday driving a
pair of jaded horses from pillar to post—from a Tabernacle here , to an Ebenezer there , in order , no doubt , to explain and recommend the duty of man and beast doing no manner of
work on the seventh day , which in . popular oratory is always assumed to be the first day of the week . The projector of the combination was young in a profession , the members of which sometimes make work for
themselves ; and it this sabbatic company be dissolved , it may be supposed to be owing to other and more profitable companies having been projected . *
Works of necessity and charity have been generally allowed on the Sunday by the severest Sabbatarians 3 but so far do some professors of the sabbath day carry this their religion , that they hold it unlawful to take off the beard
on this day , and even begin to look with an evil eye upon Sunday-schools . The Wesleian Methodists have deterin ined in Conference that the sabbath is profaned when it is employed in teaching poor children to write !
With all this zeal for the sanctity of the Lord ' s day , we sec the chapels of the zealots frequently turned into scats of money-changers . Sunday is the great day for collections , though it is contrary to the Jewish law of the
sabbath to touch money within the sacred twenty four hours . Nay , there is a great trade carried on in sohie of the most thronged chapels on the Sunday ; the vestry being turned into a sitopfor the sale of hymn-books , tune-books , sermons and pamphlets .
I am no enemy , 1 am a sincere friend , to the religious employment of the first day of the week ; but I cannot consent to the application to Christians of merely Jewish laws , nor hear without strong dislike professions contradicted by practice . ONE OF THE GENTILES .
Untitled Article
feat of his antagonist is in my opinion comp lete . I have only to observe , in conclusion , that with all Dr . Copleston ' s learning and talent , his reputation as
a sound reasoner is greatly impaired by the present publication . He has absurdly attempted to identify the doctrines of Fate and Philosophical Necessity ; he has failed in proving the two pernicious consequences which he attributes to the latter ; his nrinci-^_ j ^^ ^ p- — — — .. _ — _ _ _ — — — ___ . ^ — — ^^ __ — _ „ v W ^ — — —
^ pal example of fallacy in the use of language is irrelevant to the purpose for which it was introduced ; and his reasoning on the distinction between analogy and resemblance has been combated with signal success . Cjdericus Cantabrigiensis
Untitled Article
Inconsistency of Sabbatarians , 557
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1825, page 557, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2540/page/41/
-