On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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
of prayer and the laying on of bands , Acts vu 6 f 8 , Elders were ordained ia Lyatra , Ieoniuin and Antioch , by iWting and prayer , eh . xiv . 23 . Tiro o thy wa& ordained by the laying- on of the hand * of the Presbytery , 1 Tim . iv . 14 . From which accounts I infer
that some religious service accompanied the appointment of public teachers in the purest age of the church . It has been argued that these times were distinguished from ours by the supernatural powers which the aptotles were empowered to confer . The emblematic act of this communication
of gifts was the laying on of hands . So that , if this part of the service be omitted , the act of prayer remains , together with the personal instructions—certainly neither less necessary nor less decorous for us who
acknowledge the same Father in heaven , and who are but frail beings without any help , in an arduous office , but what we can derive from human sources . The letters which Paul wrote to his |
younger fellow-labourers , Timothy and Titus , are admirable specimens of apostolic instruction , sufficient almost in themselves to justif y the imitation of such a practice in all after times *
How long miraculous powers were continued in the church , is not essential to the present question . As soon as they ceased , of course the qualifications for preaching the gospel would be acquired in a different way ; and this change of circumstances would naturally introduce correspondent changes both in the manner of
preparing and appointing ministers . If the spirit of the practice is preserved , we shall best consult its utility by adapting the manner of observing it to our own time and country .
The preceding remarks will , I trust , sufficiently establish one of my former observations , that a public religious service , at the introduction of a young man into the ministry , is beneficial in
its tendency , and eminently scriptural in its practice . How far it is calculated to serve the caurfe of religion , is a question which mi g iit well deserve a separate consideration . As the followers of Christ , and a branch of his universal church , I
cannot but regard it as highly becoming our profession to distinguish such im important connexion as the union * f a mmieter and a congregation , with
Untitled Article
a special devotional service , neither overlooking the spirit not the letter of the Apostle ' s exhortation , " ift every thing , by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving , let your requests he known unto God / ' While the general use of this service among Unitarians would tend to remove the
charge of religious indifference which has been brought against us , we might , by making it rational and public , strenuously oppose those superstitious additions which still accompany k in many of our churches , and in time introduce a form of Ordination or
Inauguration , or any thing else that it may be called , in every way reasonable and acceptable to the general body of Christians . FRANKLIN BAKER .
Untitled Article
Clapton , Sir , Jane 14 , 1825 . f ^ HERE are two very different JL questions , each important to Unitarians , which appear , so far as I have any judgment of them , to be now set at rest by the discussions in your pages .
The first , and by far the most important question , as a consistent adherence to principle is to be estimated above the security of property , respects the late attempt to revive among Unitarians the ceremonies of
Ordination , which they had suffered to fall into disuse . That such an attempt was well designed cannot be doubted , from the respectability of tlie young minister who proposed himself to be ordained , and of those who lent the assistance of their talents and
characters to the success of the project . Yet I question whether such a project would have been entertained in the 19 th century , by Unitarians , or , indeed , by any other Protestant
Dissenters , if the Nonconformists in the 17 th century , had not separated from the Episcopal Establishment under Presbyterian , rather than under popular influence . I refer not to such as
the modern misnamed Presbyters , like my friend Dr . Kippis , or that eminent person to the collection and illustration of whose writings I have cheerfully devoted several of ray later years , but to the priest writ large of Milton ; to such as Baxter and Bates . These , and indeed all the English Presbyters of their day , iijte those of the Norttera
Untitled Article
348 Mr . Mutt on Ordination Services among Dissenters : ioith
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1825, page 348, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2537/page/26/
-