Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

Review-Service at Ordination of the Rev. J. J. Tayler, B. A. 501.

the keeping up of this and other old forms, after the opinions and spirit which gave rise to them have been entirely exploded, which we think of some weight. Actions speak a more powerful language than words, and the fact that certain forms are observed by us, will be far more extensively known than our renunciation of all those peculiar views with which such forms have been for ages connected.

Such publications as that before us will, however, tend greatly to remove this objection, as far as relates to Ordination, and on this as well as other accounts, cordially (though tardily we own) we hail its appearance.

Those who wish to see the question of the expediency of a religious service on occasion of the settlement of a minister candidly discussed, will be gratified by the perusal of the Pre

face.

66

The address on behalf of the congregation, by Mr. Geo. W. Wood, contains an interesting testimony to "the laborious studies and successful progress" of the young minister who is principally concerned in the service. His reply to this address is brief and manly. But we think he has been too much alarmed at the idea of giving a confession of faith;" especially when he declares it to be his firm belief, so "far as he has hitherto inquired," that "Jesus was commissioned by God," &c. When a minister is undertaking the charge of a Christian society, after a long course of preparatory studies, we cannot see the necessity of his qualifying in this manner his declaration of belief in the divine authority of his Master. That we ought to hold ourselves open to conviction upon all subjects, and endeavour to add to our stock of wisdom every day of life, we readily admit; nor can any truths be believed except "so far as we have inquired" into their foundation. But we are apprehensive that some amongst a mixed audience might understand such a qualification respecting the truth of the gospel, to imply that it was a matter of considerable doubt and uncertainty.

Mr. Wellbeloved's charge is grounded on 1 Tim. iv. 16: "Take heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them, for in doing this thou

shalt both save thyself and them that hear thee."

warmth and seriousness of practical In simple elegance of style, and in exhortation, we are not aware that it is excelled by any composition of this kind. But we had rather our readers should arrive at the same conclusion with ourselves, by means of our extracts, than our commendations,

vailed, for which no authority can be "An opinion has very generally preproduced either from reason or Scripture, that ministers of the gospel are required to be more holy and virtuous than others; or, as it might perhaps be more accurately represented, that the people are not required to be so holy and virtuous as their minister. This opinion has, I fear, been encouraged for no very honourable purposes; on the one hand, sanctity beyond the common reach; and to obtain the reputation of a degree of

negligence and vice. But both we and on the other, to obtain an excuse for our people are to walk here and to be judged hereafter by the same rule, with this difference only, that of him to whom much has been given, much will be required.' The same apostle who exhorted Timothy to take heed to himself, charged those over whom Timothy prenished them with a variety of important sided to walk circumspectly; and furduct in every rank and station in life. precepts for the regulation of their conOf all who take upon themselves the name of Christ, without distinction, it is required that they depart from iniquity, and be a peculiar people zealous of good works; and to all who have the knowledge of God, the precept of Christ is equally addressed, Be ye perfect, even as your Father who is in heaven is perfect; while to all the same motive to a holy life is proposed, that without holi

[ocr errors]

ness no one can see God.

doubted, that so far as our circumstances "It cannot however be denied or may be in any respect more favourable to the attainment and the continual advancement of piety and virtue, than those of persons necessarily much devoted to worldly pursuits, a corresponding degree of excellence will be justly expected both by mankind and by him who appointeth

to us our lot: nor can it be denied or

doubted, that we, who are peculiarly engaged in the service of God, are called fulness over ourselves in respect of many to exercise a strict and constant watchminor virtues and decencies of conduct; to take heed to ourselves as to many things, which though in themselves they

may not be unlawful, yet may in us be neither expedient or becoming. There is a general gravity of sentiment, of speech and of deportment, which the world most justly expects to observe in us, and which will naturally accompany a due sense of the nature of our office. The profession to which we have devoted ourselves is a serious profession; it leads as to be daily conversant with serious things; it often carries us into scenes of a most serious character-the chamber of sickness and of death,-the house of mourning and of woe. As watchmen for the souls of our brethren, as well as for our own, it brings us under an awful responsibility. Such a profession must require a suitable decorum of conduct; a decorum which even the gay and the profligate understand and approve, and which he who conscientiously engages in that profession, and duly takes heed to himself, will better understand, and most cautiously preserve. It cannot well be brought under distinct rules; if it could, on this occasion I am persuaded it would not be necessary. I fully believe, my dear brother, that you well know what it implies, and are determined that no violation of it on your part shall bring the slightest discredit upon our holy religion, cause the ministry of the gospel to be blamed, or afford any sanction to the irregularities of the thoughtless and the profane. For the sake of your own gratification or amusement, you will not indulge yourself in any of those things by which others may, in the scriptural sense of the term, be offended, and your use. fulness in any degree impeded or diminished. The habitual cheerfulness of a holy and a virtuous mind, will not degenerate in you into levity and frivolity; nor will the liberty which rational views of Christian faith and practice encourage, be in any degree or in any instance perverted by you, so as to cause the way of truth to be evil spoken of."-Pp. 29

32.

He is peculiarly happy in enforcing the importance of watchful circumspection on the part of Unitarians, as the city "set upon a hill :"

"They who disapprove your principles, you may be assured, will narrowly watch your conduct. Study well those principles, bear them constantly in mind, act steadily upon them, as ever in your great task-master's eye,' and you need not fear, you may court the inspection of those who spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus.' They may then see that what we deem pure Christianity leads to purity of heart, to uprightness

of conduct, to entire devotedness to God, to zeal in the service of man, to a superiority to the world, to a conversation in every respect becoming the gospel of Christ. You will then make it manifest that it is not necessary to regard God as a stern, inexorable ruler, in order to be devoted to his fear-or to be in earnest in exhorting others to obey his will; that it is not needful to think degradingly of human nature, in order to possess true humility of spirit, or to be faithful in calling sinners to repentance. You will shew them that a deep veneration and an ardent love of Jesus, is consistent with what you hold to be the scriptural doctrine of his person and his office; and that the ground on which you expect pardon, acceptance and eternal life from God, is as favourable to genuine humility and self-abasement, as it is to unremitting vigilance in the discharge of all the duties of life."-Pp. 41, 42.

With respect to the necessity of enforcing moral duties by motives derived from the gospel of Christ in preference to reason and philosophy, he observes, with great beauty:

"The great duties of life may, undoubtedly, in many instances be discovered and enforced independently of revelation; and you, my young friend, are not unacquainted with the admirable lessons of virtue which were inculcated in the Porch and in the Grove, by those who knew nothing of Moses and the prophets; and who lived long before the Sun world, dawned upon the benighted naof Righteousness, the true light of the tions. Yet why should we to whom the oracles of God are committed, and who live amidst the full blaze of heavenly truth, refuse to apply to the source of all wisdom, or to avail ourselves of this clear and perfect light? There is not any duty incumbent upon men in any age, in any station, in any circumstances, concerning which the Scriptures are altogether silent. They supply us in every case with the most weighty precepts, they set before us the most impressive and encouraging examples, they offer to us the most pow erful aid, they propose the most efficacious motives, and they enforce whatever they command by the most impressive sauctions. Quit not such guides and such helpers, therefore, I beseech you, to put yourself under those who with all their knowledge were yet in lamentable ignorance, and with all their light were often bewildered in the thickest darkness; but uniformly maintain the honourable character of a Christian teacher. Let every duty you recommend be founded on Chris

Review.-Wright's Essay on Christ Crucified.

tian principles, and supported by Chris. tian sauctions; and never let any one depart from this place, uncertain whether he has been attending in the school of a philosopher, or in a Christian temple; whether he has been listening to a Heathen moralist, or a disciple of Christ.”— Pp. 44, 45.

In p. 46, the author remarks, we think somewhat inadvertently, "you will justly consider as your duty not to exclude from your public instructions, the principles of Christian truth." He refers to doctrinal and controversial preaching. But we would suggest to him whether his words may not be interpreted to imply, that a Christian teacher ought to be sparing in the introduction of "the principles of Christian truth" into his discourses. We are aware that a candid reader of the context will readily understand the meaning.

We recommend this discourse to every minister of the gospel. What ever be his age or station, we think that his devout feelings may be kindled and his Christian zeal animated, as well as his taste gratified, by the perusal of it.

Mr. Hutton's discourse to the congregation is founded on 1 Thess. v. 12, 13:"Know them which labour among you, and are over you in the Lord, and admonish you; and to esteem them very highly in love for their work's sake; and be at peace among yourselves." Of this affectionate, judicious and spirited exhortation, we regret that our extracts cannot be more copious. On the value of the Christian sympathy of his flock in animating the frequently desponding spirits of a minister, he remarks,

As a servant of Christ, indeed, he is bound to love aud labour for you at all seasous, even when the sky lowers, when indifference freezes, or contempt blows chilly upon him. It would be his duty, I doubt not it would be his endeavour, to do so. But your minister, my friends, is a man; like other men he feels-he cannot help feeling-the difference between heat and cold; he acknowledges the warm and genial influences of friendship, that sun of the social system; and, whatever exertions he may make to maintain the internal glow, he is apt to droop and languish when its beams are withdrawn. Even with all his efforts to prevent it, unkindness and neglect, though they should not altogether paralyze, will

503

inevitably enfeeble the energies of his heart. It is love which best keeps love alive. The light and heat that cheer and gladden the universe proceed from many suns mingling their beams: let all save one be extinguished, and the faint and sickly lustre it will yield will scarcely be worth preserving. Placed in the midst of an affectionate people, the faithful something to animate and cheer. minister of Christ sees on every side The holy love, the sacred friendship that glows in his own heart, is reflected back again from every heart around him, and from every eye he catches the kind expression that gives a brighter lustre to his own. He speaks with confidence because he perceives that his sheep' know his voice, and count it not as the voice of a stran

ger. He speaks with fervour because he is assured that they hear him gladly and are disposed to follow, from affection as well as prudence, in the good and pleasant path in which he desires to lead them. Brethren, rest assured, if your pastor be a man of human feelings, of a kindly and benevolent nature, as I believe he is, your attachment will warm his heart and invigorate his hand. In his case as in your own, the words of the wise man will be verified, As in water face answereth to face, so the heart of man to man:''As iron sharpeneth iron, so doth a man the countenance of his friend."-Pp. 62, 63.

We are much pleased with the devotional services, by Mr. Robberds and Mr. Tayler, sen., by which the engagements of the day are introduced and concluded.

G. K.

ART. III.-Christ Crucified: an Essay,

in Three Parts. I. On Christ's Dying for all Mankind. II. On the Value and Efficacy of his Death. III. On the Moral Uses of his Death. By Richard Wright, Unitarian Missionary. 12mo. pp. 86. Eaton. 18. 6d.

THE death of Christ is of supreme

Timportance in the scheme of

Christian redemption, and the mode in which those numerous passages of scripture that relate to it are interpreted, determines the character of every theological system. The subjeet is shewn to be difficult by the various hypotheses that have been framed for its explanation. This is in a great measure owing to the figurative language of the New Testa

[ocr errors]

ment, and to its perpetual reference to the rites and ceremonies of the Old Testament. To understand these figures and analogies requires more patient examination than readers in common are disposed to give. The sound of scripture is often very differ. ent from its sense. It is, we conceive, by the mere sound of the Bible that the systems, presumptuously and ridicuously called "orthodox," impose upon the ignorance, the prejudices, and the superstitious fears of the multitude, and especially on the subject of the death of Christ, which they represent in such a manner as to obscure, if not extinguish, the pure and merciful character of the Father Almighty, and to pervert the scheme of Christian redemption into an awful tragedy, or at best a tremendous mystery.

Mr. Wright has added to his many and great services to the Unitarian cause, by this seasonable and judicious attempt to explain the scriptural doctrine of "Christ Crucified." The title-page expresses the plan of the Essay. Under the general heads are numerous sub-divisions, well defined and ably filled up. The third Part, which is, in the language of divines, an improvement of the subject, is a happy exposition of Dr. Young's sentiment, that "the best morality is love of Christ."

The "Essay" will find its way, we doubt not, into all the catalogues of our Unitarian Societies for the distribution of books; and if it be as generally read as we wish and anticipate, it will bring out of the prison-house of slavish systems, many a mind that is now "sitting in darkness and in the shadow of death."

[blocks in formation]

craft may, and if we do not mistake, we have here a case in point.

It appears that there is a small Society at Saffron Walden "professing the doctrine of Free and Sovereign Grace," that is, avowing honest Calvinism, with its crowning tenet of Reprobation. The minister of this people is son of Mr. Player, who was, until lately, deacon of Mr.W. Clayton's congregation of the same town. Without deserting his own religious friends, the father attended occasionally upon his son's preaching. In consequence, he received the following letter, the first and the last on the subject, from his spiritual guide:

66

Saffron Walden, July 11, 1822.

"SIR, "As this is the last communication I purpose ever to have with you, and as I wish to furnish you with materials for penitent reflection, when those corrective visitations shall come upon you, which, if you are a partaker of grace, will most certainly overtake you, I shall place your sin in order before you, and forewarn you, from the sacred page, of approaching calamities.

"You have for thirteen years past re

ceived from your pastor uninterrupted, tokens of affectionate regard. disinterested, laborious and expensive Your

children too, some under circumstances of mental and moral trouble, and some in the hour of death, have been gratuitously attended; as they were also bap tized and buried without the customary expressions of respect on your part, required by 1 Cor. ix. 9-11, or without the expression of regret for inability, which, as I should have declined all other recompence, should not have been with

held.

"Since your elevation to the office of Deacon, an event I unfeignedly regret, you have insidiously injured the interests of the cause you should have sustained; you have attempted to restrain your minister from delivering the whole counsel of God, and since a disorderly faction, or a company of Antinomian heretics has arisen,-which they are you best can tell -one or the other they must be,-you have not only attended yourself with very considerable regularity, but have used your utmost influence-feeble, indeed, through God's mercy it has proved-to sanction this Society of persons, for whom I have at least this kind of respect, tently, and not as yourself, in the lanthat they have acted openly and consisguage of the old proverb, holding with the hare, and running with the hounds."

Review-Butcher's Prayers for the Use of Families.

"For the last six months my conduct to you has been directed by Rom. xvi. 17, 18, and 2 Thess. iii. 6, and 14. And now, Sir, as I design (unless you resign that office you so unworthily hold, and dissolve that connexion with our church you have so justly forfeited) to take measures which you may deplore, I shall in my final testimony assure you, that injuries done to the cause and ministers of Christ, will not be unvisited; that you and your posterity, as they already have, will be yet severely noticed by Him who has said, 'Vengeance is mine, and I will repay and it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God, who is faithful to the threatenings as well as the promises of his covenant.

"O may these dispensations produce a sincere repentance through the purchased influences of the Spirit of Grace; for you still share in my prayers, though I believe I am not the only minister, nor is ours the only church, which have ample reason to bewail your conduct to them.

"I remain, Sir, with deep regret for your lamentable failures, your wellwisher, but no longer your pastor,

[blocks in formation]

Although Mr. W. Clayton excommunicated this more Calvinistic brother, Mr. Player would not withdraw, and therefore the congregation, properly trained to spiritual obedience, have proceeded to re-fulminate the anathema of the pastor.

Is it possible that a Dissenting Minister can seriously believe that he is authorized by the New Testament in demanding Christening and Burial Fees? Can it be that any body of Dissenters will permit their preacher to lay it down as a sin" for a mem

[ocr errors]

505

denouncing calamities for this highest of all blasphemies against his posterity also? If young gentlemen educated for the ministry amongst Protestant Dissenters are thus allowed to act the Pope, that denomination will become the laughing-stock of their neighbours, and the more independent members of their body will be obliged to fly to the Church of England to enjoy religious liberty.

ART. V.-Prayers for the Use of Families and Individuals; including a Prayer adapted to each Discourse, in Three Volumes of Sermons, by the same Author; and also Forms suited to Particular Occusions. By the Rev. Edmund Butcher. 8vo. pp. 318. Sherwood and Co. 8s. 1822.

Tthe legacy of the pious author

HIS work may be considered as

to the religious public. It was scarcely given to the world before he was called to his reward. This circumstance has, we confess, led us to regard the volume with peculiar interest, and may, perhaps, influence our opinion of its merits; though every one that knew the late Mr. Butcher will admit

that few persons were so likely, both

from constitution of mind and habits

of life, to excel in devotional compo

sitions.

There appear to us to be ble in written prayers; simplicity, three qualifications principally desirafervour and a judicious conformity to the language and idiom of the Scriptures: and these will be found in the "Prayers" before us. Some expressions may be thought too colloquial for public use, but these may not be felt to be too familiar for the closet or the domestic circle. Few corrections, at most, would be necessary to for private devotion, but also for the make the volume serviceable, not only

any

"two or three" who may

ber of their congregation to hear any one preach but himself? Must not this letter be a forgery, a letter hurl- use of ing awful threatenings against a Chris- gather together in the name of Christ tian, to whom no immorality is im- to worship the Father. puted, for disobliging a minister, and

[blocks in formation]
« AnteriorContinuar »