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NORWICH OCTAGON CHAPEL BROTHERLY SOCIETY.
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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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which has been life to Unitarian Christianity in the New World ? Here is an answer to those who , estimating p rinciples by numbering- adherents , hav boldly and arrogantly decried our sentiments , on the ground of their alleged unpopularity . It has been long known by
persons who could look with an unprejudiced eye on the members of our community , that while generally the intelligence and morality of the Unitarian body in this kingdom would su ffer in comparison with no other religious connexion , more than a proportional share of moral and intellectual : distinction existed amongst us in an unobtrusive , yet not inert nor useless form . Whatever doubt
could be entertained of . this a few weeks since , the calm arid deliberate judgment of our countrymen has removed for ever in the choice which , in instances more than our relative numbers would justify us in expecting , they have spontaneously made of members of our bady to represent and maintain their interests in the great council of the nation . And
independently of the honourable testimony thus borne to the eminence of Unitarians in moral worth and mental power , is there not in the fact to which I have adverted a promise of better things to come , and a ground of encouragement ? Is not our social position improved since we , who not many
years ago bore th e brand-of th elaw and the brand of society , are adr mitted to an honourable participation in making the law through th © high estimation in which we are held by society ? And in this improvement of our social position , who . does not see that our sQciaLJnJuenfie . is . increased ? Both to encounter prejudice
and disarm opposition , to renovate what is worn out , and to extend what is sound and vigorous , we have received an increase of power to which every passing 1 year will , in my ' opinion , bring great accessions . Nor can I disbelieve , that principles which have thus triumphed in civil policy will be de «
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feated in the warfare of religious truth , but rather must I think that our countrymen , by adopting our political opinions , have given us a , real though silent pledge , that at no distant day they will signify attachment to our religious creed .
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UNITARIAN CHRONICLE . 51
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Sir , —In the hope that it may be interesting to some of your readers , and stimulate them to adopt or improve upon the plan developed , I subjoin a brief history of the rise and progress of a society , which has
gradually acquired considerable importance in connexion with the above chapel . I fear it is too true that the Unitarians of Norwich have rather lagged behind their brethren elsewhere , in the establishment of useful institutions for the education and improvement of their poorer
members . Tnere has been an excellent endowed day-school , under the direction of trustees belonging to the Octagon Congregation , for more than a century ; but this circumstance rather tended to retard , than to forward the establishment of a Sunday-school , until the year 1822 , when one was at
length formed under the especial auspices of the late Dr . Thomas Martineau ; which , there being so good a day-school to commence operations upon , soon -became firmly and respectably established , and has since gradually extended itself to about seventy boys and as many givls .
Jn the following year , 1823 , and under the same auspices , a Vestry Library was set on foot , which , by means of several valuable . donations , soon comprised the collective works of Lardaer , Priestley , Paley , Lindsey , Jebb , Belsham , and others , besides all the most esteemed books
and tracts on Unitarian theology and Christian morals , and the current Unitarian periodicals of England , Scotland , and America , amounting to about 60 Q volumes ,
Norwich Octagon Chapel Brotherly Society.
NORWICH OCTAGON CHAPEL BROTHERLY SOCIETY .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 1, 1833, page 51, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2607/page/19/
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