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Liturgy in all, and that of real devotion in those of Unitarians, made them quite offensive to persons accustomed to the Church service, I strongly feared I should be obliged to follow Milton's example, and abstain from public worship. Wishing, however, to satisfy myself by personal observation, I went, soon after my arrival in this town of Liverpool, to one of the Unitarian chapels. The effect which the service produced upon me was recorded in my private journal as soon as I returned to my lodgings; but the passage is too long to be inserted here. Suffice it to declare, as I do in the most solemn manner, that I never enjoyed a more devout and sublime impression than I received there. My almost constantly repeated attendance has not weakened the effect of the truly sublime Unitarian worship with which I have become acquainted. I have since attended divine worship in another chapel of the same denomination; and the original impression has been confirmed. Sunday, which owing to the constant struggle of my mind at church, and the frequent internal rejection of passages in the Liturgy, was formerly to me a day of pain and suffering, is now one of enjoyment. The admirable combination of beautiful hymns, with prayers no less beautiful, and a sermon, in which I have hitherto never failed to find instruction and support to my religious feelings, all contribute to make me enjoy the service of the Lord's Day. I must add, that I have never joined congregations in which attention and devotion were more visible in all, including the numerous charity children who attend the service. It is a great misfortune that the spirit of Orthodoxy stands like "a great gulph fixed" between Churchmen and Unitarians. Could impartial good men "come and see," though they might remain attached to their opinions, they would be certainly delivered from a multitude of most uncharitable prejudices.

I conclude by protesting against the supposition, that the following little work is intended as a defence of Unitarianism.

In it I certainly make use of my Unitarian views for argument and illustration; but I do that incidentally, and almost exclusively, in the last Letter. Unitarianism is not in want of any new defence; nor would I waste my time in entering upon a question through which every one may find his way, provided he chooses to examine candidly what is already within the reach of every one I shall not, therefore, consider myself bound to answer any Anti-Unitarian observations which may be directed against me. I do not fear that my declining a controversy, for which my constant ill health particularly unfits me, may injure the cause of Unitarianism. I beg leave to refer any champion of Orthodoxy, who may be inclined to stand in defence of the Athanasian doctrine, to try what he can do against the works already in existence. I particularly refer controversial divines to "A VINDICATION OF UNITARIANISM, and SEQUEL," by the Rev. James Yates; and to the recent work of Professor Norton, of Cambridge, U. S., entitled "A STATEMENT OF REASONS FOR NOT BELIEVING THE DOCTRINES OF TRINITARIANS CONCERNING THE NATURE OF GOD AND THE PERSON OF CHRIST."

Liverpool, June 20, 1835.

J. B. W.

CONTENTS.

LETTER I.

A HISTORY of the Inquisition worse than useless if not preceded by
a true definition of Heresy...

Some latent error in the usual phrase Christian truth..
Only true sense of the phrase Christian truth......

....

True meaning of the word Heresy, as used among Christians.. Question on which the necessary existence of some degree of interference, like that claimed by the Papal Inquisition, or the absence of that claim, depends..

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5, 6, note

Protestantism, on the basis of Orthodoxy, untenable
Unanswerable arguments of the Roman Catholics against such Pro-
testantism

....

......

Unanswerable arguments of the unbelievers against that Protestantism
If Christ and his Apostles, by saving faith, understood Orthodoxy,
Christianity cannot be true..

Proofs that such was not Christ's and Apostles' meaning of faith....
True meaning of the word faith....
No judge of Orthodoxy appointed....

Union of Christians not dependent on unity of abstract doctrines....
Obvious means of establishing unity of doctrine on abstract points, if
Christ had intended it, as the bond of his disciples...

6

78

9

10

11

12

ib.

12, 13

13, 14

15

16

......

Natural sources of error connected with the only essential condition of
Christian communion

ib.

Paul's notion of Heresy: exposition of part of 1st Cor. iii..

17

17

What must men agree upon to be Christians...

What kind of men are excluded by St. Paul and St. John..... Acceptance of Christ as supreme religious guide, the original condition of Christian communion....

LETTER II.

Theological writers who do not follow the scholastic phraseology, in constant danger of being misunderstood.....

21

Passions which disturb the judgment of the generality of people attached to some theological system...

2253

Main argument of Letter I collectively stated
Call of the Gospel made to the will....

Essential difference between such a call and one made upon the under-
standing, especially in relation to the interpretation of language....

Unadulterated Christianity in perfect harmony with the nature of our

moral being.

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28, 29

30, 31

ture

The established orthodoxies of the Christian world prevent our knowing
the sense of the Scripture according to a successive and compa-
rative experience of the various generations of Christians......
What the Church of Christ might be if its growth had not been per-
verted by Orthodoxy....

Orthodoxy has placed the world in a worse condition for peace and
charity than it was before the Gospel.....

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34, 35

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....

Difficulty of uprooting errors arising from misapplied texts of Scrip-

.....

ture

The 3d chapter of 2d Epistle to the Corinthians explained.... 50, 51, 52

....

Page

54, 55, 56

58, 59

.......

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The notion of saving Orthodoxy necessarily intolerant
Steps by which the apostolical condemnation of dissension was trans-
ferred to dissent

.....

Historical traces of early toleration among Christians..
Organized tyranny of the Bishops which soon followed..

74, 75, 76

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70

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84

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