On this page
-
Text (1)
-
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
professed teacher of the religion of Jesus , which broke at once the spell of enchantment which had bound roe , which desecrated the temple of God , the temple not made with hands , in which we stood ; for the sounds told me that man was ungrateful , and that theological error could almos . t- _ mai ^ -the—mag-nifieenee—and
grandeur of nature , and that taught by creeds and not by creation , man could regard his Maker as a tyrant , and turn away his face and his heart from his Father ' s mercy . The sounds reached my ear in that teacher ' s address to the people collected on the margin of that lake , that all creation was under the wrath and
curse of an angry God , yea , that the infant of a few months and days old , needed as much to flee from the wrath of its Maker , and to seek a refuge from his viridictiveness , as the hoary-headed sinner whose hair had heen whitened by a century of years . I turned me from these words ofwoe ,
and I looked to theheaTiens , and the blue firmament seemed a beauteous canopy spread over the earth and earth ' s inhabitants by a father ' s benignity ; and I looked to the earth , and it smiled on me with its promise of abundance ; and I looked in the
peaceful waters , and they seemed to me theg'lorious mirror in which were reflected heaven ' s purity and earth ' s luxuriance ; and I looked on the little ones by whom I was surrounded , and I could not fyelieve ^ -no creed , no force of created man could make me believe—that those frames were
the dwelling places of iniquity and pollution ; and I could trace on them and on all no curse , but that , as at creation ' s dawn , every thing was good , every , thing was ., blessed , and the grateful overflowings of my soul
united , I trust , with the thanksgivings of nature to the Father of mercies , the God of consolation , of hope , arid of peace . ( Cheers . ) And in thankfulness to the eternal Father let us all joiu , that we have been emancipated from such bondage to
Untitled Article
creed idolatry . ( Cheers . ) It has been said by an eminent divine , that the Unitarians pay too much deference to human authorities in religion . The charge is absurd . Another charge made against us is , that we never rejoice in the beauties of nature ; bow unjust is this ! Calvin , indeedr paints"th ^ woTM ^ s ~ a"howT 1 ng ^ wilderness , but for us our hearts fill
with wonder and with gratitude at the lovely scenes around us , —scenes which prompt us to use every exertion to promote the good of humanity , and to advance the glory of God their Creator . When man loves God he loves his brother , he loves
mankind . When man is happy , God is glorified . Believing , as I do , this to be the object of the Unitarian Association , I have for this reason , and in order to promote to the utmost of rny power a warm feeling in its behalf , arrived , amongst you ; and I shall return back to the chiller
regions of the north encouraged with the kmd notice and approbation which you have bestowed = upon me , and determined to renew with greater diligence than ever , the efforts which I have made to emancipate the human mind from all bondage , civil and ecclesiastical , and to secure to the human race that glorious liberty which is their birthright and inheritance as children of the living God . ( Enthusiastic cheering . )
Mr . John Christie moved the appointment of the various officers of the Association for the ensuing year . ( See Committee ' s Report . ) Rev . Dr . Carpenter rose to second the resolution , and in doing so he wished to elicit from the Trustees
whether they conceived themselves bound , in -the event of printing a new edition of the improved version , to adhere to the existing version , or whether it was open to them to adopt any improvement if such could be suggested . Rev . Benjamin Mahdon said there could be no doubt that it was perfectly competent to them to adopt
Untitled Article
CORRESPONDENCE .- 205
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 1, 1833, page 205, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2617/page/13/
-