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" During the whole of the journey * I pr...
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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.
' "C This Journey Employed Me ^Nearly Th...
•* _fifiddletoti , ...- ¦ „ . t € A populous _manufacturing _place , five miles and a half from _ISftoifi _^ _fCfcji I was anxious to have preachied in this town last y £ _af , but _£ cftifld _tiidt ' _'iltt _&' filia _^ n opening . A room Las since been opened _^ and worship is regularly carried on . I " preached here to a crowded audience . _"
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" During The Whole Of The Journey * I Pr...
" During the whole of the journey * I preached in 39 places , in 10 of whi _^ l _* I had never preached before . During the whole of th _^ _titpe since Whitsuii * . tide , I have travelled in the service of the Fund more than 1200 miles . Duriiig my long" journey my health was _several times _interrupted ; once I lost my voice by preaching" in the open air . I might have done more had my _strength been equal to what it was formerly ; however , I did what I could , and . thank God that he enabled me to go through with the journey without breaking a single engagement which I had _previously made ; and I reckon the past summer among the most useful ones wh _| ch I have spent as a _Missionary ,
" A Committee having been formed in Manchester , for the _establishment of a Fund for Missionary Preaching in the counties of Lancaster and Chester , soon after my _arrival in Lancashire , I received a message ffpm that Committee , through the medium of their _secretary , Mr . Jones , of Bolton _^ requesting that I would visit the different places where rooms had been opened for Unitarian worship , or where attempts were making to introduce Unitarianism , and then meet the Committee , and report to them what
places I thought they ought to take under their patronage , and give my opinion respecting any matters which I might think called for their attention as a Committee for a Missionary Fund , & c . With this request of the ] Vlanchester Committee I very readily complied . Accordingly , after having visited what places I could , I met the Committee , as had been previously arranged , in the rooms at Cross-Street Chapel , on Thursday , Sept . 5 , and made my
report to them respecting the different places which I had visited , that have not ministers , and are not capable of providing themselves with ministers ; the places where there appear to be openings for preaching $ such of tlie local preachers as I had been enabled to form a judgment of ; my views of what may be done in the two counties - , and such other matters as seemed to me
important to state . I was much pleased with the candour and liberality of the Committee , the zeal they manifested in the cause , and the whole of their proceedings , which I had opportunity of witnessing . A Sub-committee was appointed to examine in detail the expenses which the carrying on the cause in different places will involve . The Manchester Committee consists of the ministers of the two counties , and some other gentlemen . If the plan now
contemplated be fully carried into action , with united zeal and perseverance , great and most interesting effects may be expected to result from it . " My views and prospects respecting the success of the Unitarian cause in the North West , expressed in my papers communicated last year , have been confirmed by what has since takea place , and what I have observed during the late journey . Nothing is necessary but for all the friends of the cause to unite heart and hand , in the adoption of popular measures , in steady , zealous ,
and persevering exertions ; and Unitarianism in a few years will be , the preponderating system in Lancashire . There are already a number of zealous local preachers ; young men of good sense , piety , and no mean talents ; and it may be confidently hoped that their numbers will increase . In bfrief . the people are beginning to take the cause into their own hands , and to rely on their own exertions for its promotion ; this will gain them the assistance of others .
This being the last long Missionary tour of which I am likely to have an account to give to the Committee , I cannot conclude } these papers without expressing the sense I fe _^ lof the obligations I am tuuler to the gent lemeii who hav _« fornaed the different Committees , for their _^ _uJvi _^ e , support , ami _t'ouutenance , in the different labours in which I have been _engaged as a Mis-
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1823, page 13, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/smrp_02061823/page/5/
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