On this page
-
Text (5)
-
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
Presentation of Copies of the Holy Scriptures , by the Presbyterian Congregation of Strand Street , Dublin , to Hevds , # / . Armstrong and Dr . Drummond . [ From the Freeman's Journal of July 23 . ]
" It affords us much pleasure , " says the Editor , " to give publicity to the following address from the Presbyterian Congregation of Strand Street , iu this city , to their Pastors ; with the replies of those Rev . Gentlemen . The truly Christian sentiments expressed in these papers , are highly honourable to this respectable body . Happy would it be for this distracted land were such sentiments more generally acted on , and more widely diffused :
—TO THE REV . JAMES ARMSTRONG , AND THE REV . WILLIAM HAMILTON DRUMMOND , D . D . Rev . and Dear Sirs , We , the Members of the Presbyterian Congregation of Straud Street , in Vestry assembled , beg leave to offer you the sincere tribute of cordial approbation ,
respect , and affection , with which we unanimously regard your unceasing efforts to promote our spiritual welfare . Your pastoral exhortations- —your enlightened instructions—your manly example—your disinterested encouragement of . a liberal , elevated , and rational spirit —and your unwearied cultivation of all the charities to which our nature can be
awakened py the lessons taught by Christ , and inspired by his Father and our Father , by his God and our God , demand a testimony of . our gratitude , regard , and high estimation . The most suitable that we can present , and we believe the most acceptable that you can receive at our hands , is the Sacred Book which contains those momentous lessons . We
beg , therefore , that you will , each , accept a copy of the Old and New Testa ments , not only in English , but , as more desirable to studious , erudite * and inquiring minds , in the venerable languages in which they were originally written . To these , as an useful appendage , we have added the best Hebrew and Greek Lexicons we could procure . And , we
trust , that when the present generation shall have passed away , and our places are occupied by new pastors and people , our children shall , like ourselves , be united in Christian love ; and that not only with each other , but with all mankind , according to those everlasting precepts which you have so diligently drawn from Holy Writ , and so faithfully and forcibly Impressed upon your people .
Untitled Article
With a sincere desire for your temporal and eternal happiness , and that you may long continue the guides and guardians of ours , we beg to subscribe ourselves , Your affectionate , grateful , and devoted friends and brothers , The Congregation of Strand ' Street , Dublin .
Untitled Article
796 Intelligence . —Strand Street Congregation , Dublin .
Untitled Article
Beloved Brethren , I feel most sensibly the affection and kindness I have uniformly experienced from you , since I had the happiness of being placed amongst you as one of your pastors . Were 1 to consider your present address merely a * an expression of personal attachment and approbation
from so enlightened and in dependent a portion of the Presbyterian body , 1 should esteem it as a distinction of which I may be justly proud . But I regard it in a much more important and valuable light , as implying your firm and unanimous adherence to those liberal principles which have been so long asserted and avowed by the ministers and members of this congregation .
Our predecessors and forefathers have uniformly maintained , through many successive generations , the character of inflexible attachment to civil and religious liberty , combined with undeviatiug loyalty to that incomparable form of government under which we dwell . Claiming to themselves the unrestricted exercise of the sacred right of private judgment in all matters of religion , and of that freedom of conscience which the
Son of God hath bestowed on all his followers , they have preserved uninterrupted harmony within the precincts of their own society , keeping the " unity of the spirit in the bond of peace . " Following , at the same time , the great rule of social duty , enjoiued by our Divine Master , " to do unto others as we would
that they should do unto us , " they have been ever ready to concede to all their fellow-Christians the privileges they claimed to themselves ; and being persuaded that the general church of Christ , at the last day , will be composed of the pious and upright of every denomination , they have never presumed to condemn or denounce those who conscientiously differed from them in their doctrines or
their worship . I trust that these principles will ever be supported and declared by the worshipers in this place . Especially in such seasons as the present , — when an unhappy spirit of contention has agitated the public mind to an unusual degree , *—1 fervently hope that all the members of our communion will niani-
Untitled Article
IRELAND .
Untitled Article
mr Armstrong's answer .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1828, page 796, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2566/page/68/
-