On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
KENT AND SUSSEX UNITARIAN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, j
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
Several of tile friends of the Association spent the evening together in an agreeable and edifying manner , and listened with much satisfaction to the interesting account of the religious experience of an elderly gentleman , who had been conducted by
a long course of cautious investigat-ion-lr'Oni-the > -g 4 oo . my-regions-of ^ 6 ab vinism to the pure apd cheering light of Unitarian Christianity , On Thursday morning , the Rev . T . Selby , of Lynn , read the Scriptures , and offered prayer , and the liev . J . Ketldy , of Ipswich , preached an excellent sermon from 1 Cor . xv . 24— £ 6 , On
the mediatorial and priestly office of Christ , and on the consequent reciprocal duties of Christians . The business of the Association was transacted in the chapel immediately after the morning service . The Report was read , and the substance of it ordered to be printed . It contains a very encouraging account of the progress of Unitarian ism at Ipswich
and Bury , whereTh ^ e ^ cause- had been for several ^ years in a very declining state . At Bury , the Calvipistic Dissenters confrdently expected , that the Unitarian Chapel would soon fall into their power . But the able and energetic minister who has succeeded Mr . Scargili , fyy persevering exertions , antf by a very extensive diffusion of tracts , has raised an
ardent spirit of religious inquiry , and revived the drooning interests of this Unitarian CHurcK . The introduction of a Reformed Liturgy of the Church of England is thought to have considerably promoted the interests of the congregation .
Muel ji interesting discussion took place in the chapel , and particularly respecting the most desirable manner of regulating the proceedings of the Annual Meeting , and it was unanimously resolved , that the congregation of the town where the
Anniversary was held , use their own discretion in arranging" the mode of conducting the business of the Society , fr was also resolved , that a petition
Untitled Article
be sent to the House of Commons , praying for relief from the burden of Church Rates , and other Ecclesiastical exactions . Thanks were voted to / the preachers for their excellent sermons , and to the officers of the Society . The next Meeting was appointed to be held at Yarmouth . At ^™ threiB ~ no ' tloc'l ^ nTt 3 ^ four gentlemen
sat down to a cheap dinner . The chair was ably filled by Thomas Robinson , Esq . of Bury . Several ladies entered the room when the cloth was removed . The afternoon was spent much to the satisfaction of all present . Many , interesting speeches were made , and one feeling
of Christian harmony and fellowship prevailed . And , when other engagements rendered it necessary that the company" should disperse , every one seemed to feel that it was ? good for him to have associated in this manner with his Christian bre- > thren of the same denomination . W . J . JB _
Untitled Article
CORRESPONDENGE . / 243
Untitled Article
The Twenty-first Anniversary of this Association was held at Canterbury , on Wednesday the 3 rd of July . The Rev . W . J . Fox preached from Jere ~ ftiiah vj . 16 . —* Stand ye in the ways
and see , arid ask for the old paths , where is the good way , and walk there | n _ and ye shall find rest for your souls . ' The preachexy from these words , took occasion to point out how greatly the Christian world had deviated from the way of Christ and the Apostles . The antiquity for to is
which we ' ^ re look not the anti - quity of this or that sect or party , but the uneorrujsted truth and pure spirit of the gospel . Deviations from the spirj-t of the gospel were chiefly clwelt
upon ; departures from the mental freedom which it makes known , and the pure morality which B inculcates , The secularisation of religion ; the union of Church and S : ate ; the connexion of riches ami honourswith
Kent And Sussex Unitarian Christian Association, J
KENT AND SUSSEX UNITARIAN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION , j
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 1, 1833, page 247, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2619/page/23/
-