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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.
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the beginning of this letter the Doctor sets in opposition to Sulpicius . RICHARD MARTIN . p . S . If you think proper to insert this letter in the Repository , I shall soon forward another relating to Dr . P . ' s History of Opinions among the Primitive Gentile Christians .
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prompted the thought , how useful to such places ; would it prove were the ministerial character , in a degree , to be blended with the medical one . The indispositions to which humanity is subject , would derive additional alleviation , could the minister , whilst administering comfort to the depressed mind , likewise impart , the usual remedies for the afflicted , diseased body . Not with a view to make the medical
knowledge subservient to the pecuniary advantage of the village minister , ( though in neighbourhoods where the income is so small that it can hardly maintain one , there might be occasional trifling assistance obtained from the more affluent , in consideration of additional attendance on themselves when in
ill health , and particularly in default of a medical resident , which in the country is not uncommon , ) but where the muchlamented fact exists , that in some very distressed neighbourhoods many , perish for lack of medical , timely advice , through the inability to pay for it . What balms of consolation would arise
to an anxious minister in a village or hamlet , to be enabled to prescribe , with the confidence and ability of a physician , for the relief of the body as well as for the troubled mind , may be more easily conceived than described .
Competent ministers in places to which I . refer , would be treasures greater than gold , and would be resembling , indeed , their great Master , who went about continually doing good to the souls and bodies of men .
Objections may be stated to this union of characters , ( but of less weight as it applies to distant parts of the country , and who can tell where he will be situated as a minister ?) but , on some consideration , I think the advantages preponderate . Under this conviction , permit me to suggest , that the students designed for the ministry amongst the Unitarians should likewise study medicine . Even as fathers of families
hereafter , in remote places , they would find it conducive to their own and neighbours' comforts ; but as connected with the poor , the diseased and the distressed of their future congregation
or village , they would reap , in the advice or assistance- given , a harvest of consolation , inexpressibly delightful and abundantly useful . Such instruction and course of lectures might be ,
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On Students for the Ministry learning- the Medical Art . 407
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Brighton , Sir , June 21 , 1821 . npIHE accounts riven in the Repo-JL sitory of the Unitarian congregations by an Unitarian Traveller were amusing , but he appears to have fallen into some mistakes ; and really it is
not very surprising that mistakes should occur relative to the state of our congregations , when our chapels are hardly discoverable ; many of them being in dark alleys or by-places . I have often wished that the words
" Unitarian Chapel" were affixed to them all . This , I believe , some old Unitarians dislike ; but I expected to find the " new Unitarians" approve the plan . Passing through Brighton , where I had heard that a famous chapel had been erected , I looked for a building with the above description and found none : but I found one with a Greek
inscription , which , however correct , could not , I thought , benefit the unlearned inquirer . To try the experiment I asked the coachman , what that
chapel was . He said it was built by a new party of Christians , whose name he forgot ; but it began with an M . A little way on the road he observed , he recollected ** what those folks were
called , " it was Monotheom ; but that he knew nothing about them . A gentleman behind us -said they were an odd set ; that they did not believe , as he was told , in Christ , or in the Devil ,
or angels , or future punishment : to which the coachman rejoined , he had heard they were very blasphemious * Here the conversation dropped , but I beg to submit to you , Mr . Editor , and to your intelligent readers , whether this and all other Monotheon chapels should not be intelligibly described . NO GRECIAN .
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^ m , June 30 , 1821 . HE experience of a twelve years ' Tresidence in a very populous , but extremel y poor neighbourhood , has
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1821, page 407, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2502/page/27/
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