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portant of the means of their remedy and their prevention . But I must stop . I pray you to give your thoughts , and cares , and labours , to these great interests of our race . Your letters will cheer and strengthen me , and I beg that I may hear from you . Would that I could come and converse , with you . With great respect and affection , your friend , J . TUCKERMAN .
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Since human improvement advances in a perpetually accelerated ratio from the elaborate discoveries of one generation being presented in a simple and condensed form to the next , there is hope that Unitarianism , like every other embodying of truth , will grow to an earlier and a still earlier
maturity in every successive region into which it is transplanted . Unitarianism is in its infancy in Ireland ; but it does not therefore follow that its progress will be as slow as it has been in England . It has , and long will have , its difficulties from the oppositions of external force ; but these difficulties are easily surmounted in comparison with some which , having in any one place been once overcome , are overcome every where , and for
ever . The Porters of this age may be persecuted , and the Montgomerys reviled , like the Priestleys and the Lindseys of a former time ; bul though their sufferings may resemble , their labours are unlike those of the primitive worthies of a revived religion . They are spared the painful toil of separating the elements of their faith from corrupt admixtures , and may enjoy the reasonable hope , —a hope which would have repaid their precursors for all their endurances , —of witnessing the extensive reception of that truth
which , having been wrought out by others , it is their privilege to deliver in an exalted and purified form . They may now carry on their converts at once to the application of the principles which have been found and attested by the converts of a former age , and present , in an aspect of consistency and beauty , the faith whose constituent parts were once dispersed or obscured . Our travelled artists think it much to have overtaken , in different empires , the statues of grace , whose bond of sisterhood is only
• The Practical Importance of the Unitarian Controversy : a Sermon , delivered iu Strand-Street Chapel , Dublin , on Easter Sunday , April 3 , 1631 , on occasion of the First Anniversary of the Formation of the Irish Unitarian Christian Society . By W . J . Fox . London : Hunter . The Impartiality of God , Illustrated and Defended : a Sermon , preached in Eustace-Street Meeting-House , Dublin , April 4 th , 1831 , on occasion of the First Anniversary of the Irish Unitarian Christian Society . By Rev . H . Montgomery , A . M . London : Hunter .
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Sermons at the Anniversary of the Irish Unitarian Society . 669
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SERMONS AT THE ANNIVKRSARY OF THE IRISH UNITARIAN CHRISTIAN SOCIETY . *
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VOL . V . 3 C
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 2, 1831, page 669, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2602/page/17/
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