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Intelligence.-West Riding Association.

truth. The chairman proposed that Mr. Turner should examine the accounts and report thereon, when the certificate, of which a copy follows, was drawn up and signed :

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and great changes in the religious views of its members. It has never altered its name, and perhaps on some accounts it may be better that it should preserve its original appellation. That appellation, however, it must be confessed, but very imperfectly delineates the real complexion of the meeting, the members of which are nearly all professedly Unitarians, as the term has been explained by Dr. Priestley. The meeting appeared to afford peculiar satisfaction to every one present: the cause of truth and religion was the predominant impression upon the mind, and it was accompanied with every kind and good-tempered feeling of the heart. If there are times when it may be said that "righteousness and peace have kissed each other," the present would seem to have been an occasion when a salutation of a similar nature had taken place; for piety, friendliness, and cheerfulness, appeared to 91 11 6 have met in very pleasing union.

We, whose names are underwritten, being ministers and others present at the opening of the New Unitarian Chapel at Thorne, having examined the account of monies contributed by the members of the society there, and hitherto subscribed by others, and also the sums expended by them in the building of their plain, but neat and convenient place of worship, beg leave to submit to the Unitarian public the following general statement, and respectfully to recommend the case of their friends at Thorne to public notice; not doubting that the debt at present upon the chapel will in no long time be liquidated.

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To be provided for 230

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Nathaniel Philipps, Sheffield: W. Turner,

Newcastle; N. T. Heineken, Gainsbro'; P. Wright, Sheffield: Richard Astley, Halifax; John Beattic, Elland; Henry Turner, Bradford; Joseph Hutton, Nottingham; George Kenrick, Hull; F. W. Everet, Sheffield; W. Jevons, Altringham; John Thomson, Halifar; Samuel * Martin, Hull; John Fox, Sheffield.

Subscriptions received at Thorne,
June 28th, 1816.

Rev. W. Turner, Newcastle,

George Harris,...

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If ye love me, keep my commandresting, impressive, and improving ments." Nothing could be more intethan this discourse: the style of its composition was simple, elegant, manly, and forcible; the manner of the preacher solemn and impressive. It has sometimes been complained, that piety seems not in very close. union with Unitarianism: the Sermon of Mr. Robberds would sufficiently redeem the cause from this reproach: never did there appear a more happy and engaging alliance.' To enlarge is to endanger an encroachment upon delicacy of feeling in that quarter where it is our last wish to give offence: where the eulogium is most due, it is sometimes the least desired, and that we are assured is the case in the present instance. A viclation, however, would be done to our The Meeting of the Dissenting Mi- feelings not to advert to one idea upon nisters of the West Riding of Yorkshire, which the preacher very beautifully as they have been wont to term them- enlarged - the decisive advantage selves, took place at Halifax on the which the Unitarian view of the cha 6th of this month. This is a very racter of Christ possessed over every ancient association, and has undergone other system for the fulfilment of that in the course of its progress, consider-, love which is considered by all as due able fluctuations in point of number, to the blessed Saviour. Every other

Benjamin Marden,

-John Kentish,

N. T. Heineken,

Samuel Martin, Esq..

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Association of the West Riding of
Yorkshire.

VOL. XI.

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system distracted in some degree the celing of regard. Calvinism utterly confounded the whole thing, or if not that, it did worse, for whatever of love it conferred upon Christ, it neces sarily stole from the Father. Two of the persons of the triune Golhead, the Father and Son, were ever placed in opposite scales, and as the one rose the other inevitably fell. It was in contemplating a being who in every respect was made like unto his brethren, who was tempted as those brethren are, yet without sin, who was familiar with the same emotions of the heart, felt a similar influence from the objects of life, was as alive to scenes of pleasure, and as sensible to those of suffering, yet, throughout the whole, was perfecily pure, resigned, and firm, that we could both understand and feel the principle of affection that was due to the Saviour of men: beholding him " a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief," yet "made perfect through suffering," we contemplate a definite and engaging object of regard-we understand the nature of the sacrifice, what it must have cost, and how to value it, and prompt do we find ourselves ready to confess with an apostle, greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.

There was another idea most happily adverted to by the preacher in connexion with his subject, not indeed as a matter of certain belief, but of pleasing probability, viz. that the blessed Jesus might be still present, though invisible, with his churches, and might be at that time a witness to their expressions of regard, and their earnest wish to shew their love agrecably to the test he had prescribed, by keeping his commandments. The very mention of the circumstance seeined at once to warm the heart, to spread a more than common sanctity over the place, to impart to the countenance of the speaker, and of many others, that animated irradiation which intimates an almost actual vision of the revered personage the mind was contemplating. These and similar thoughts were brought forward upon the subject, and rendered the whole discourse a most interesting service. We have to regret that we do not recollect the words of the preacher, and therefore can only very imperfectly convey those sentiments,

which, being beautifully clothed, and solemnly and earnestly delivered, very deeply affected the audience.

At the close of the service, the business of the Tract Society lately esta blished in the West Riding of Yorkshire came to be considered, and the Rev. T. Jervis, of Leeds, being called to the chair, the Secretary to the Society (the Rev. H. Turner, of Bradford), proceeded to read the first Annual Report (and stated the following particulars) which gave a very encouraging account of the progress of this Society, during the short period that had elapsed since it was first instituted., It was stated that at the last annual meeting of the association, &c. held at Leeds, June 8th, 1815, it had been resolved to institute a Society for the Distribution of Religious Tracts, in the congregations of the West Riding, and that at a subsequent meeting at Elland" in September, (See M. Repos. Sept. 1815) the Rules of the Society had been agreed upon, and ordered to be printed: since that time printed copies of the Rules and Catalogues had been widely circulated, and that local Tract Societies had been formed in the following places; York, Leeds, Wakefield, Bradford, Halifax, Elland, and Lidgate. The Secretaries appointed in those places had communicated with the Secretary to the Tract Society, under whose care the Depository of Tracts was placed, and had reported the number of subscribers, and the amount of donatious, and the following is an abstract of the affairs of the Tract Society. The rate of subscription was fixed at a penny a week, or 4s. 4d. a year: the number of subscribers reported from the different local societies 330: the total amount of donations £26. 5s. 6d. the total number of the Tracts sold from the Depository 1243. Most encouraging accounts had been received from vari ous quarters, of the acceptableness of the institution, and of the good which, it had done, and was likely to do. It has been regarded as an acceptable opportunity of supplying a deficiency which had been fong felt in our Socíeties, of the means of obtaining a more general and exact idea of the grounds" and principles of rational theology, And from the variety of useful works of a strictly practical nature, which it affords the opportunity of procuring, it will doubtless be the means, under

Intelligence.-Yorkshire Tract Society.

the blessing of God, of a more general was acting in the same cause.

diffusion of the spirit and practice of the Christian life. But truth and virtue are natural, though not inseparable companions, and never thrive so much as when they are cultivated together. This is what it has been our endeavour to connect, in the formation of this Society, and it is hoped that it is one of those institutions, of which there are so many in the present day, highly tending to the moral and religious inprovement of mankind.

The report was ordered to be printed, additions to the catalogue proposed, &c.

On this occasion, certain speeches were made, particularly one by Dr. Thomson, of Halifax, to which we are truly sorry it is not in our power to do justice. One particular point which the Doctor dwelt upon should certainly be noticed, viz. that the Tract Society had fully redeemed its pledge. Its catalogue of books, though in some respects not all that could be wished, arising from circumstances that could not be avoided, was yet of a nature to do ample justice to every promise it

had made.

It possessed those Tracts it is true which gave a very clear view of Unitarian sentiments; and this, from the nature of the Societies which had joined together, might be expected to be the case; but it also possessed those which were separate from any doctrinal tenets, and" which were purely of a practical nature, while it was open to any recommendation of "Tracts, of other views, which its members might bring forward. In a word, every applicant might be accommodated agreeably to his wishes. The Doctor intermingled with the subject of discussion many interesting thoughts. Contemplating the progress of truth, as it had advanced in the North, he glanced his imagination back to the time of Wickliffe, that day-star of reformation, who, he believed, was born in the county of York. A Priestley, too, was born not far distant from the spot where his friends were then meeting. This reformist would become a yet brighter star. He was hourly gaining the ascendant with an increasing Justre. The mists of ignorance and error were gradually departing, and permitting the pure fight of the gospel to be seen and felt. The Tract Society

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Here

the speaker could not but contemplate
with satisfaction the idea that he had
been the first promoter of this Institu-
tion. No father could view the suc-
cess of his child with more anxiety.
He breathed the wish that if his name
were destined to be hereafter repeated,
it might be in connexion with the.
West Riding Tract Society. May it
be that the latest posterity shall own
the parent and the offspring! The
name of Thomson is worthy of the
purest cause of benevolence and truth
that can be associated with it. The
Doctor also took up in a peculiarly
interesting manner the idea which the
preacher had advanced of the possible
presence, though invisible to mortal
eye, of the blessed Jesus, and under
that impression begged to call to mind
the nearly last injunction of their mas-
ter to his disciples, "Feed my sheep,
Feed my lambs," and again"
"Feed
my sheep," a command so reiterated
yet discriminating, that it would seein
to indicate that provision should be
made in the Christian church, both for
the mature and the young. In this
point of view, the Tract Society very
strikingly met the injunction, and the
blessed Jesus might be now supposed
to be casting his smile upon it.

After the business of the Tract Society was over, an adjournment tookplace to the Talbot Inn, where a dinner was provided for the occasion, to which 68 gentlemen sat down—24 ministers and 44 lay brethren. After dinner, many toasts congenial with the objects of the day were given by the, Chairman, the Rev. R. Astley, which produced very animated speeches, Accounts were imparted of the pro-, gress of Unitarianism in various places, particularly in Scotland, by the Secretary to the General Association of the North, in Rossendale, Thorue, S lby and Huddersfield, by the different ministers, whose labours in these places had been pleasingly bles ed. If, in the ardour of feeling, a more sanguine colouring might be occasionally imparted, than the stubborn and slow progress of change may at present justify, still that much is doing is beyond. a question, After every deduction the most suspicious and sober-minded calculation, can exact, there is suffi cient cause for congratulation, and for rejoicing in the assurance that the great docune of the Divine Unity is

gradually advancing, till at length it
shall be the one Universal Faith.
This at least is the polar star of our
erced, that to which we believe the
great lawgiver of the Jews pointed,
and to which the founder of the
Christian faith as clearly pointed.
And we have no doubt that although,
like the polar star of the natural firma-
ment, it may at present be but dimly
seen by some Christians, yet that ere
long it shall be as clearly viewed as a
star of the first magnitude in the
brightest night, and prove, in con-
nexion with those pleasing hopes of
the gospel to which it is attached, a
safe guide to all who are sailing the
ocean of life, to the blissful shores of
eternity.
Wakefield.

T. J.

Kent and Sussex Unitarian Association. The fifth Anniversary of the Kent and Sussex Unitarian Association, was held at Maidstone, on Wednesday the 10th instant, when it is but justice to Mr. Aspland to observe that his truly excellent discourse excited a very lively interest in the minds of his auditory, and that it is sincerely hoped that he will yield to the warm expression of their wishes in favour of its publication, and thus enable them to derive the full benefit from his generous la hours, by its extensive distribution. The service commenced with an appropriate prayer by Mr. Harris; while the principal part of the devotions, by Mr. Holden, presented a beautiful delineation of the universal beneficence and tender mercies of our heavenly Father, with a most fervent expression of gratitude and obedience. The annual report of the proceedings of the Committee, which has been appointed to superintend the distribution of Tracts, and to direct their attention to whatever relates to the general interests of our associated body, was read at the close of the service, and was followed by the reports and communications from the several congregations, some of which have chosen committees from their respective subscribers, denominated District Committees, which maintain a correspondence with the general Committee, through their Secretaries. Nearly 2000 small Tracts have been distributed during the last year; upwards of 1000 of which' consist of practical publications, by the Christian Tract Society in Lon

don, and the remainder are immedi ately directed to the promotion of rational views concerning scripture doctrine, with exhortations to consis tency of conduct in all who are convinced of the strict Unity, the unrivalled supremacy, and the spontaneous and universal benignity of GoD.

The melancholy case of Mr. C. Herbert, who has lately been warned out of his school, on which he depends for the subsistence of a family of eight children, for his integrity in maintaining the divine Unity with the plain and inestimable truths connected with it, was laid before the Society, and as he possesses considerable merit as a teacher, and is particularly desirous of inculcating just and generous views of religion and virtue upon the minds of children, it is hoped that should any opening of this kind be afforded, or indeed should any source by which an upright man skilled in the arts of writing, arithmetic, &c. may provide, or be assisted in providing for a numerous, and sull increasing family, reach the knowledge of any of cur Unitarian friends, or of the friends of liberality and humanity in general, who may be acquainted with his case, they will not fail to communicate the particulars either immediately to Mr. Herbert himself, or through the medium of some friend. There is evidently no object of our unanimity so pressing as the endeavour to remove or alleviate those sufferings or inconveniences to which a friend may occasionally be subjected, from a conscientious adherence to his principles.

From the communications of several of our friends from different parts of the counties, it appeared that the spirit of inquiry has been making considerable progress. Our Battle Secretary observes that it is become almost universal: men begin to think concerning religion, and are no longer content to rest in an implicit faith. This, therefore," he observes, "is the time to exhibit Christianity to their view in its native purity and simplicity, that they may see its excellence and be convinced of its truth, and that its effects may appear in their character and deportment.in life." scarcely less pleasing account was presented in the narrative of a friend from Dover, whose exertions have been a principal means of establishing a con

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Intelligence.-Etern Unitarian Society.

ference in the General Baptist Meeting-house of that place, by which no small degree of attention has been excited to the great question at issue between Unitarians and their opponents. Our Secretary for the Maidstone district observes that "we have every evidence of the number of Unitarians being much greater than it appears to be; the extreme difficulties, the force of fashion, and a false shame, deter many from expressing their belief of the sublime and despised truths of Unitarianism." He acquainted the Society with a plan which has been adopted at Maidstone for conveying religious instruction to children in a language and manner adapted to their tender capacities. The boys on one part of each Sunday, and the girls on the other, are taken apart from the congregation to be familiarized with the leading principles of religion, and the plainest practical admonitions.

The Society adopted some resolutions with a view to the more prompt dispatch of its business, and to the keeping up of a more perfect intercourse between its branches, as it is hoped that every step which tends to engage us in the mutual pursuit of the common objects, will contribute in every point of view to increase the advantages of our Association.

With an expression of the deepest regret at the horrid persecution of which our Protestant brethren in the department of the Gard, have so long been the unoffending and unprotected victims, a vote of thanks was unanimously passed to the Committee of the Dissenting Ministers of the Three Denominations, for their unwearied exertions in their behalf; to Mr. C, Perrot for his Christian intrepidity in encountering every hazard and every difficulty to arrive at the first sources of information, and for the luminous report by which he has established the dreadful detail of ferocious cruelties and merciless oppression; and to Sir Samuel Romily for the able, manly, and Christian-like conduct, which he has shewn in pleading that cause in the British House of Com

mons.

The company afterwards adjourned to the Star Inn, where 134 persons sat down to a plain dinner, a larger puinber than had assembled at any previous meeting of the Society. Several appropriate sentiments were given

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by the chairman (Mr. Aspland) which he prefaced with some interesting remarks, and which drew forth observations from several persons present, The company being composed of both ladies and gentlemen, the inconsistency of the marriage ceremony with the general principles of Dissenters, and especially of Unitarians, became the subject of some animated discussion, and perseverance in applications to Parliament for release from this ceremony, as the only legal bond of union, was strenuously recommended. The utmost harmony prevailed, the company in general appearing impressed with the obligation, as well of imitating their master in his entire devotion to the will of his Father and his God, as in his brotherly-love and charity. May these social meetings in which we sit down to one table, as the worshippers of one common and only God and Father, in obedience to one Lord, be attended with the happy cflect of diminishing our attachment to all sublunary distinctions, remembering that, as the disciples of Christ, we must strive to be distinguished by those qualities of the heart and life which it was his sole object to incul cate upon mankind of every rank and condition, and by our proficiency in which, alone we can attain to distinc tion in his heavenly kingdom! THOMAS PINE,

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Eastern Unitarian Society.

The Yearly Meeting of this Society was held at Ipswich, on Wednesday and Thursday, the 26th and 27th of June. On Wednesday evening Mr. George Harris of Greenock introduced the service by prayer, and reading the Scriptures, and Mr. Fullagar of Palgrave preached from 2 Peter i. 10. "Wherefore, the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling and election sure." On Thursday morn ing Mr. Scargill, of Bury, introduced the service, and read the Scriptures; Mr. Toms, of Framlingham, prayed; and Mr. Thomas Rees, of London, preached from Isaiah xl. 25. "To whom then will ye liken me, or shall I be equal? saith the Holy One." It is much to be regretted that Mr. Rees declined complying with the wish of the Society to print a sermon so admirably adapted to expose the pernicious

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