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It looks as if the Archdeacon of # a | h w # e ^ # ri ^ a of tl ^ ^ elt ^ on : ' pj Tifefti 6 * ii i ftod i ^ lt S <> ffe about * the rnnsshRfiTientfe ^ fouififed tom e ut > on him
on account ? of the ^ corre ^ pondetit doctrine , when he claims for hijiiseif and his church the rtkfcie bif U ^ iurian , I lore to trace these ( little symptoroa of the | ffo \ virig honour and importance of otir ic ^ dtrse : \
€ forresffoftdeHCe betiveeh an ¦'¦ p hifjarkikanduiJhlvifiist ^ Ftoto $ \ e artificial toiid set krfaf | ge&ent qf these arj 2 ^ 3 ftneats ] 1 a ^ fi ^ aj ft Mditat ^ % e stirraHs ^ whether ohS in ( divid | tial fee not the aitthor xrf ftiis ctiite' tod tierce of theology .
Let me ask the Calviriist , ( on the supposition of Ms real existence , ) whether such & consciousness of the mighty evil of sin as he has pertinaciously pressed upon his opponent
throughout the whole of this controversy , would not involve in itself a manifest begging of the question under discfussion . As far as I can judge , the Calvinist would only be contented when he could extort from the
Unitarian an acknowledgment that sin deserves ail infinite punishment . But when such a concession is made , there is little room left for argument . Mr . Munn ' s Conscientiousness . — The whole transaction here recorded is an honour to human nature .
A Southern Unitarian on Sunday-Schools holds a fair balance between two « bf yotlr opposing correspondents , and j Exhibits a spirit worthy of ail prais £ Widifcnitation . Criticism on Ephes . iv . 26 . Acute , and I am iiiclined to think , decisive . Mr . Frertd on the British Critic .
Worthy of his cause . Cantabrigien&is and A Psalrnodist must speak for themselves . Review . Not Paul but Jesus . This is a good little abstract of the argument for Paul I > but dislike the personal allusions with which the artide concludes . It is an invidious
and suspicious thing to talk of the * ' impaired mind" of an opponent . For my part , I would rather believe that Mr . Bentham ' s intellect is still in all its vigour , and rejoice that he is able to make no more out of his
attack on the great apostle of the Gentiles . I see no symptoms of decayed powers in the few specimens here presented from the work review-
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ed . I s $ pj ^ $$ \ the author has lon g been an Iijfidsjy : and would haverwtiu ten just »^ 1 % > ij > q $ k 4 @ft >! 8 '< tt a §^ r his " Letters on Usury / ' Tktemi $ pbthesif of his decaying p&jver ^ is also inconsistent with $ © in # % fcima * - tions in tfte pe ^ t , artiel ^ whete it fee said that Gamaliel & imth oht&i taefeed
some points V wit& gteatl ^ ii ^ nes 8 # &C . ? . . : < ; t . ^^ iut % _ . ^ h . ^ M ¦ ¦ > » , ^ - ' . Ought not tlx ^ i ^ Cer ^ ce ^ i 614 , bottom of 2 d col ., to t ^ GaUi . instead Of V . 1 ¦ ¦ ; ' ' ¦ ¦) : \' 7 f ^^ i ' " - ' :
Art . 2 . Ben J ) mi 4 ' fMe $ ty * & wonder if Triaitarians ve | U ire Willing to acknowledge and praise all that is unquestionably excellent in this W 6 rk of Dr . Jones . Supposing , for in ^
stance ^ that new OmBium Gatherum of Divinity , the Quarterly Theological Review , should see fit to notice thia book , would the editors give a cheerful testimony to the beautiful arguments extracted from it in this
article ? - On the other hand , I must say , thrat some of these extracts are . as wild a farrago of learned tjrasii a $ aj * e is even destined to meet withr r Th ^ remotest analogy of facts ^ the merest aiid most accidental resemblance ot .: m name ,
sets the author ' s imagination on fire , and leads him through ^ deviousKfeacksr where mortal ^ Is ^ nev ^ r trqC Jsd&tKa one moment vf < k ^ ^ an ni&tauce . f ^ Or * pheus iu tiel ^ rqw is ptrecis ^ iy j ?| iiat ^« h > ? f we cut olf its Greek termination , and read from right % o Jeft ^ t
Haying strained so much to make out this case of identity , the author after all spoils the vyhole l > y confounding the wife of Orph « w ,: nQt with the wife of Pharaoh , which , to shave been consistent , he ought to have done , but with Sarah , the wife of Ai > rahain . \
Obituary . Rev . Thames Owen . — - " His views were liberal and enlighu ened , being a believer in philosophical necessity , and a materialist . " J trust his views might have been liberal and enlightened , on other conditions than this .
Intelligence . Southern Unitarian Fund , &c . Some movements have recently been made towards a general organization of the Uuitarimc'UUflc iu this country * . > : ri > ... !» . , i ii . ¦ ' . « . ' ' ¦ ' * ***^ r'Pi ^^ ji ,- ? ; . i . ' l ' f '
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590 Critical Synopsis of the Monthly Repository for October , 1824 .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1825, page 590, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2541/page/14/
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