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Untitled Article
remain , in defiance of general opinion ; or they are changed , to the demolition of the Bishop ' s argument . In no sect of Dissenters has there been so much variety of opinion as in the Church . Taken in itself , this fact would be high praise : but it ceases to be so , when we are reminded that
the very object of the Establishment is to ' avoid diversity of opinions . ' The failure is a signal one . It would be difficult to name a species or degree of heresy which has not found advocates , even in the higher ranks of the episcopal clergy . Nothing like this has occurred in any dissenting sect . Even those which allow the greatest latitude of individual opinion , preserve more ' uniformity in the public teaching of religion , ' than the Church which we are taxed to support as the pillar of uniformity .
When a new opinion springs up in a dissenting sect , if it be embraced by the majority , the creed of the sect itself is changed ; if onl y by a minority , they secede , or are excommunicated , and form a separate body . Now , in what does this differ from that which , on the introduction of a new opinion , takes place in the Established Church ? Was not that Church Catholic ? Did she
not adopt the tenets of the Reformation ? Are not all the dissenting sects which exist in the country , secessions from her communion ? Has not every one of them , except the Presbyterian , adhered substantially to the faith on account of which it seceded ? If the Presbyterian has undergone one great change , did not the Church itself undergo one great change ? Where , then , is the difference ? Why , in this ; that the Dissenter , when he ceases to think like his associates , is not bribed
with the public money to a hypocritical conformity . His mind is not subjected to an accumulation of corrupt influences . There is no pecuniary premium on insincerity . When lie secedes , he is not mulcted for the support of the worship which he no longer approves . He retail is relative position in society . If he was but a Dissenter before , he is a Dissenter still . This difference is
in favour of truth , and against the Church . With all its princely revenues , with all its political privileges , with all its power , and that not unused , of persecution , what has the Church preserved ? Not the relig ious attachment of the people . It has done less than any one sect towards retaining the representatives of the population once within its pale . Prom being the nation , it has dwindled down to a minority .
The change which the English Presbyterians have undergone , which is the only apparent exception to these remarks , is not so in reality . Anterior to that change , they had ceased to make a creed their bond of union . They allowed freedom of opinion , and it has been exercised by their successors . The Bishop has mistated this passage of theological history most egreg iously Although not named , the English Presby terians are the only class which can be meant in the following quotation : —•
Untitled Article
260 On the Bishop of London ' s
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1834, page 260, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2632/page/28/
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