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, ? v iWfomfollowing { Sermon ^ as co m pose ^ in ; th ©; usuabeourae © £ ithe ^ LttfhgKk P ^ 9 |^ al laWiirs . He waJt s «» i m uch struckJkynthje fe $ aylH 5 eHfH | igK jri ^ ls , iff ^ jMrnm are ^ , ^ W ^^ % *» $ i # J * iftA * ^/ Jf ^^ PFfie ^ fflffli-SSFftiW . ## l ? % fl * W JBmWffijW ^^^*^^^ : $ 97 AW $ ? #$$ '* 8 * ffWt on the hallowed name of Christian , and sp closely . associatei Protestantism 4 fWWobd . sfreading , that he deemed hiinSetf ImSifetftJflJ'tellfedroA'to' vft £ ' < fj& £ te tfie ^ utfetfrfd' uridefllett : Religion t # tt * Sa ^ ouir , ftrphi ' art ^ pdrtic ^ tfdtt W stitch tiiiotmities ; to show , tMf betievoPertfce is ' h&t tiiere&pb&dte ^ to TO& *
lignityv than is the spirit of the New Testametit to an antii-national JSsta * bushed Church ; to point the abhorrence of his hearers ^ not so ' much at the instruments of the evil deed , as against the system wfyjch ind ^ ed < anti au thorized the outrage ; and to utter his earnest and most solenxii protest against iisbemg foe a moinent imagined , that Christianity lends , tfie slislitpsi sanetioti to principles ^ nd conduct , as mucn at war with the ( doctrines and cotiU ri&ndm&iits of the Sacred Volume , as they are with eret ^ senttTmetit ofncltiim ifefteori ^ nd every feeling of comindh humanity ! ' ¦(>> ' ; »
* i ^ The ^ Sermon was delivered to the "Unitarian Christian Congregationiwitli which the Author esteems it his privilege and happiness to be connected , oil Sunday mornings January 18 . His hearers so warmly sytn ^ atliujeni in its views and objects , that they requested him to re-deliver , it in the evening ; ffif jl di ^ sb . to a large and deeply-attentive audience . In the cpurse o / $ he week ^ tne Au thor was repeatedly asked again to preach it , V ^^ P ^ pj ^^ jplb ^^ of his own congregation , and others unconnected with his religious
communion . He consented , provided a collection was made for the families of those who were shot on the melancholy occasion which called ^ orth the discourse ! The committee of his Society unanimously appointed a collection ibr that purpose ; and in the afternoon of Sunday , January 23 ,. the , Sermon ^ a ^ again preached to as lar ^ e an audience as could possibly be contained wijj ^ in ^ he ( walls of the building . Many hundreds could not get in , and eye ^ tf before the worship began , a notice had to be affixed to the chapel , that tWSermriii would W repeated , for the fourth time , the satire evejairtg / 1 iThe tfniafie ^^ manife sted' their detestation of injustice and crtitra £ ev attd fh&r b ^ tte ^ dlettt ^ wishesfdt the suflTerers in Ireland , by a handsonie ootttriViHlonti .
rg » if The Massacre at Rathcormac is but a single chapter in the 7 history of jnjagov 5 erne < i and injured Ireland . The mis-named National Church of that unhappy country , has been baptized in the blood of its unibj ^ unate inh ab itants . Instead of enlightening , it has made more dark ; instead of civilizing , it has brutalized ; the Bible has been associated with the sword , Protestantism with the tithe proctor , education with exclusiveness and bigotry , and the name of England with oppression . High time is it that such enormitfes SlfOiild ceasie . There must be no patchwork attempts at amendment :
tfoe root of the evil must be removed ; the abomination must be entirely a ^ pt- away ; univers al education must tak e its place ; well-directed and iU ^ ceasi ng efforts must be made for the enlightenment , the moral and social eWatjpjv qf t ^ e wWle people ; and the civil and religious liberties of every individual of every denomination , must be founded on a basis , which no iybigue ^ ho human force wil l be able to overturn , impugn , or pervert . '
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The Late Houses of Parliament * and Palatial Edifices of Westminster . By J . Britten * and E . W Brayley . No . I . Xne Antiquarian zeal , diligence ^ and attainments of the authors of tliia , W >^ fc , are ; W « il known- to the public The late fire gives additional interest l 0 itheir / fiubjeQt , ; at » ll times one of the most interesting to which iheir f ^ ise ^ fghes could )) ave been directed . Theplan ia both histanba ^ aTid || liQJbii ^^ UiriHil » rand ^ whet ) cditipl eted ^ will fdmi a ^ octav a voloni e ' Qf' 400 Qwfatjjmm ^ nesigra ^ ing ^ ® a ( far' w . we can judg& firotn the'first
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m& Critical Notive * .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1835, page 212, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2643/page/68/
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