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*£&% TRUtTH TELLER.
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the usual sources of religious instruction—while parents are pouring light and knowledge into the minds of their children , and those who are yet unacquainted with that tender and blessed relation , devote some portion of their time and energies to the in . struction of the children of the poor , or to the superintendence ot their instruction by others , — -Books and periodical publications
have their duty to perform , their portion of . the master's work to accomplish , each according to their nature and capability . From these remarks it will be judged , that the Editor ' s 'intention is to continue the Unitarian Chronicle simply as a religious publication . There are abundant opportunities for the discussion of purely political topics ; and he intends / therefore * to exclude them , since many things must be excluded from his limited space , though no One can be more ready to acknowledge" than he , the
inseparable union between the political and religious condition of a country . Bad government has ever been a cause of pauperism and degradation , and they of vice and meanness of spirit . Political questions , in which the interests of religion are directly involved , ' are hot , ofcourse , iffte . iide ^' t 6 : W'e ^ clud 9 i 3 . ' ; . such as the question of the established church , tithes , church rates , and all other ecclesiastical impositions , negro slavery , infant slavery ,
national education , &c . These are topics which the Editor hopes will be occasionally brought before the notice of his readers in such brief form as is sTiitabletoiiis pages . His ' atBS ' is'tp ^ d voca ^ e the cause of truth and righteousness in a * spirit of love and of a sound mind . ' From this he will not be diverted . In pursuing this he doubts not to find both internal satisfaction , and outward approbation , tie commends himself to the kindness and candour of his readers .
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Speaking the truth in love . —Paul .
To the Rev . Thomas Arnold , D . D . Mead-Master of Rnbghtj School tyc . Sir , —In a publication of yours on the * Principles of Cliurch-Keform , ' distinguished by no small share of good sense , good feeling , and good taste . One passage , among other objectionable things , is found , in which , by implicaHon a £ least , youwilKhofti
from Unitarians the honourable title of Christians . In meeting objections to the plan which you propose for comprehending all the Christian denominations in the realm under the sheltering aid of the civil power , you at least remark , ( p . 31 . ) ' There remain the Quakers , the Roman Catholics , and the Unitarians , whose differences appear to offer greater difficulty . And un-
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98 THE TRUTH TELLER .
*£&% Trutth Teller.
* £ & % TRUtTH TELLER .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 1, 1833, page 98, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2611/page/2/
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