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Untitled Article
1 ( dissent ) has no security whatever for the permanency or consistency of its own doctrines or discipline , even from year to year . It is well known , that , in many parts of the kingdom , places of worship , which were endowed , more than a century ago , with a competent provision for ministers , who should preach the doctrines commonly known bv the name of Calvinistic , have now , with hut few exceptions , been converted into schoois of Unitarian or Deiatical opinions . * ( p . 34 . )
We know of but one place of worship , and that was a recent and unendowed building , having become a school of € Deistical opinions . ' That was made so by the well-known Robert Taylor , who probably is now , and who certainly was then , a clergyman of the Church of England . Of no sect but the Established sect , and of that only because it was established , could that individual have retained his memberships still less his ministerial character , under such circumstances . The existing * schools of Unitarian opinions ' are either of Unitarian erection or of Presbyterian origin . The Presbyterian holders of the chapels have passed over from Trinitarianism to
Unitarianism , retaining ( as was natural , during a gradual and almost imperceptible progress ) the buildings which their forefathers erected and endowed . It is not true that those chapels were ' endowed with a competent provision for ministers , who should preach the doctrines commonly known by the name of Calxinistic * Many of those endowments were founded by Unitarians , or other heretics , whom the law would not allow to
endow their own opinions ; and who , therefore , endowed what ffas better , —freedom of opinion . Most of the remainder are equally unrestricted as to faith . If there be a few , in which the trust deeds specify the tenets to be taught , and those tenets Calvinistic , they are very few iudeed ; probably not half a score in the whole kingdom ; and they assured ) " ought not to be retained anv loncrer than until the pro ^ iaimants be legally
indicated . So that this solitary case , when the facts are rescued from the Bishop ' s mystification , still shows their superiority of dissent in preserving that which it was intended to preserve , whether of faith , which is the general rule , or of freedom , which is Ae exception . After laying down a broad and universal proposition , his proof turns out to be a single case , unfairly chosen and unfairly stated , and evaporating as soon as it is explained .
But we have uniformly protested against Ecclesiastical Reform Wing made a question between Dissenters and Churchmen . It ^ a great national question in which Churchman and Dissenter are alike interested . It is a question of the comparative utijity of the way in which an immense amount of public property 13 applied , and the way in which it might be applied . The ri ght settlement ot that question would remove all the Dissenting grievances ; but what the Dissenters have , some of them , been educed to call their ' practical grievances' might be removed
Untitled Article
Defence of the Church Establishment . 2 & 1
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1834, page 261, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2632/page/29/
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