LETTER XIX.
Reverend Sir,—If I have caused you some dissatisfaction, in former Letters, by my endeavors to establish the innocence of those whom you were laboring to asperse, I shall afford you pleasure in the present, by making you acquainted with the sufferings which you have inflicted upon them. Be comforted, my good father, the objects of your enmity are in distress! And if the Reverend the Bishops should be induced to carry out, in their respective dioceses, the advice you have given them, to cause to be subscribed and sworn a certain matter of fact, which is, in itself, not credible, and which it cannot be obligatory upon any one to believe—you will indeed succeed in plunging your opponents to the depth of sorrow, at witnessing the Church brought into so abject a condition.
Yes, sir, I have seen them; and it was with a satisfaction inexpressible! I have seen these holy men; and this was the attitude in which they were found. They were not wrapt up in a philosophic magnanimity; they did not affect to exhibit that indiscriminate firmness which urges implicit obedience to every momentary impulsive duty; nor yet were they in a frame of weakness and timidity, which would prevent them from either discerning the truth, or following it when discerned. But I found them with minds pious, composed, and unshaken; impressed with a meek deference for ecclesiastical authority; with tenderness of spirit, zeal for truth, and a desire to ascertain and obey her dictates: filled with a salutary suspicion of themselves, distrusting their own infirmity, and regretting that it should be thus exposed to trial yet withal, sustained by a modest hope that their Lord will deign to instruct them by his illuminations, and sustain them by his power; and believing, that that peace of their Saviour, whose sacred influences it is their endeavor to maintain, and for whose cause they are brought into suffering, will be, at once, their guide and their support! I have, in fine, seen them maintaining a character of Christian piety, whose power....
I found them surrounded by their friends, who had hastened to impart those counsels which they deemed the most fitting in their present exigency. I have heard those counsels; I have observed the manner in which they were received, and the answers given: and truly, my father, had you yourself been present, I think you would have acknowledged that, in their whole procedure, there was the entire absence of a spirit of insubordination and schism; and that their only desire and aim was, to preserve inviolate two things—to them infinitely precious—peace and truth.
For, after due representations had been made to them of the penalties they would draw upon themselves by their refusal to sign the Constitution, and the scandal it might cause in the Church, their reply was....
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“Those who have read McCosh’s great work on the Divine Government, will not wait for any favorable testimony to any thing that comes from his pen, but will regard his name on the title-page as a sufficient voucher for all that is to follow. The present work fulfills any expectations, even the highest, that could have been awakened by the preceding one. It is alike comprehensive in its range, accurate and minute in its details, original in its structure, and devout and spirited in its tone and tendency. It illustrates and carries out the great principle of analogy in the Divine plans and works, far more minutely and satisfactorily than it has been done before; and while it presents the results of the most profound scientific research, it presents them in their higher and spiritual relations.”—Argus.
The first volume commences with John Robinson, the first New England Pastor, and extends to 1770; and the second volume from this period to the close of 1855.
These volumes contain sketches of about three hundred Congregational ministers, including every one who has been considerably distinguished, with contributions by a large proportion of the most prominent clergymen of different denominations, as well as from many of the most distinguished statesmen now on the stage. In all cases in which there is any person living to testify concerning the character, there are original letters of personal recollection; and in all other cases the author has appropriated what has been written and published by the cotemporaries of the subjects who could speak from actual knowledge. These volumes contain the most complete, as well as most interesting history of this branch of the Christian Church that has yet been published.
A series of the choicest productions of the great Divines of the seventeenth century, such as Jeremy Taylor, Bates, Beveridge, Bishop Hall, Butler, Howe, Baxter, Leighton, and others. The volumes will be in neat 12mo form, large type, and uniformly bound in cloth.
“From the first page to the last, we read this beautiful and impressive story with increasing interest, and do not hesitate to commend it to every family and Sunday-school library in our land. It bears internal evidence of being the work of a finished writer, who, endowed with a sensitive temperament, and bereft in early infancy of a dear mother’s tender sympathies and care, felt deeply the cold indifference of those who could not appreciate the chords of a mind so delicately strung.”—Christian Observer.
These sketches interest the mind with historic truth made winning and lively by a style of beautiful simplicity.
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“This is a work for the minister, for biblical scholars, and for all who can appreciate the mature results of thorough study and sacred learning in the lucid exposition of a very interesting portion of the Word of God. It is not a hasty production, but an elaborate commentary, giving in a condensed style, with great clearness, the precise meaning of every passage in this rich Epistle, exhibiting, as understood by the author, the glowing thoughts that warmed and kindled the affections of the inspired Apostle while composing it.”—Chn. Observer.
“The Author, by his learning, taste, and skill, is eminently qualified for the responsible work of an annotator on the Holy Scriptures. In his Notes, he combines the marrow and fatness of many commentators with his own ideas, and associates his comments with a Harmony of the Gospels, in a very impressive manner.”—Zion’s Herald.
⁂ This volume completes Dr. Jacobus’s Commentary on the Gospels—Vol. I. being Matthew—Vol. II., Mark and Luke—Vol. III., John. The volumes are all uniform, price $2 25 for the set.
“This volume we regard as a substantial and highly valuable contribution to the biblical literature of the country. The prophecies which form the subject of it, are the more interesting from the fact that they were the last which were delivered previous to the Messiah’s advent. The work is not so critical as to be above the popular mind, while yet it shows a familiar acquaintance with the rules of Scripture interpretation, and is evidently the production of a mind at once well balanced and trained to thorough research.”—Argus.
“This is an eminently learned work, and is designed especially to aid in a critical investigation of this portion of Scripture, while yet there is no ostentatious display of erudition, nor any thing that approaches an affectation of originality. The introduction is at once clear, concise, and comprehensive. In the body of the work, the author gives us rather the results of his inquiries than the processes by which he arrived at them. His analyses show much patient labor, as well as accurate discrimination.”—Puritan Recorder.
“Few and far between, and among the richest gifts of God to man, are such great and good theologians as John Owen. * * * It is mentioned as a matter of thankfulness that Dr. Owen was led to concentrate all his rare endowments and vast resources on the exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews.”—N. Y. Observer.
“A work of great learning and skill, pervaded with a truly Christian spirit.”—Evangelist.
“Of the general character of this work, it is sufficient to say that it brings out in a felicitous and concise manner the meaning of the text, without connecting with it any extended practical remarks. It contains not only the whole of the sacred text, as many commentaries of that day did not, various readings also, together with parallel passages; and though it never transcends the capacity of an ordinary English reader, yet it evidently comes from a rich store-house of biblical learning. It disposes of difficult passages, not by gathering all the opinions that have been put forth concerning them, but by stating the writer’s own mature judgment, with the grounds on which it has been formed. The notes are generally brief, condensed, perspicuous, and easily remembered.”—Puritan Recorder.
“It is becoming more and more the standard commentary of the Church. Christians of all denominations, and of all grades of intellectual attainment, find it their refreshment, their food, and their pleasure to peruse it steadily, and in so doing they can reap a great reward. We knew, some years ago, a lady in humble life, more than sixty years of age, who borrowed the folio edition of Henry’s Commentary, and keeping it always open on her bed, was accustomed to run to it whenever a single moment of leisure offered itself; so that, by patient continuance in well-doing, even at that late period of life, she traveled through the successive volumes, to her own great spiritual and intellectual improvement; and in her latest hours, when on her dying bed, she expressed her gratitude for the opportunity which she had thus enjoyed of becoming better acquainted than ever before with the meaning of God’s Holy Word.”—Observer.
The Family Expositor; or, a Paraphrase and Version of the New Testament, with Critical Notes and a Practical Improvement of Each Section, by Philip Doddridge, D.D. Royal octavo. $
The late Bishop of Durham (Dr. Barrington), in addressing his clergy on the choice of books, says:
“In reading the New Testament, I recommend Doddridge’s Family Expositor, as an impartial INTERPRETER AND FAITHFUL monitor. Other Expositions might be mentioned, greatly to the honor of their respective authors, for their several excellences; such as, elegance of exposition, acuteness of illustration, and copiousness of erudition; but I know of no Expositor who unites so many advantages as Doddridge; whether you regard the fidelity of his version, the fullness and perspicuity of his composition, the utility of his general and historical information, the impartiality of his doctrinal comments, or, lastly, the piety and pastoral earnestness of his moral and religious applications. He has made, as he professes to have done, ample use of the commentators that preceded him; and in the explanation of grammatical difficulties, he has profited much more from the philological writers on the Greek Testament than could almost have been expected in so multifarious an undertaking as the Family Expositor. Indeed for all the most valuable purposes of a Commentary on the New Testament, the Family Expositor can not fall too early into the hands of those intended for holy orders.”
“The author of this work could scarcely have selected a subject better adapted to his own peculiar genius, than this which he has here chosen. He has treated it at once philosophically, practically, and spiritually; has evinced a profound insight into the mysteries of human nature, the nicest discrimination in respect both to intellectual and moral qualities, and a deep sympathy with the sublimity and tenderness, the joys, and griefs, and hopes of the exalted character he commemorates.”—Puritan Recorder.
“This delightful memoir of a great captain in Israel will be hailed as a valuable addition to the religious biography of our country. The literary execution of the work is equally creditable to the talents and taste of the author, and the most ardent admirers of Dr. Mason will admit that while a spirit of fulsome eulogy is avoided, there is ample justice done to the memory of a great and a good man.”—Pbn. Banner.
“We have rarely heard of a more remarkable instance of the triumph of talent and energy over circumstances the most adverse. He began life struggling with the evils of poverty, and the baleful influence of an intemperate father. A dangerous fall from a ladder, when he was a mason’s boy, rendered him hopelessly deaf. Being considered unable to support himself, he was put into the workhouse; and after a series of vicissitudes which would have overwhelmed an ordinary boy—at one time working as a shoemaker, at another as a barber’s apprentice, and by various shifts managing to toil along his rugged pathway—he at length, through a kind Providence, struck the highway on which he afterwards traveled successfully to distinction and usefulness.”—Presbyterian.
“The subject of these memoirs, was generous and noble in his natural disposition, in all his intercourse with his fellows. As a soldier he was brave, and as an officer skillful and prompt; but all these things were eclipsed by the ardor and devotedness of his piety. Among the soldiers in the Crimea he spent his leisure hours, in ministering spiritual consolation to the sick and dying in the hospital. In the lives of missionaries which we have read, none have proved by their works a better right to be called a missionary than he.”—Witness.
“This is certainly a rare specimen of female biography. The subject of it was among the most gifted and cultivated of her sex. The Word of God was not only the light, but the food of her soul; and the enjoyments of heaven seem to have been in no small degree vouchsafed to her before she left the world.”—Puritan Recorder.
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“The author presents this work in the hope that it will be found adapted to enlighten the minds of the young in some of the great subjects of Scriptural instruction.... The author has been long impressed with the feeling that neither commentaries nor sermons have yet made that simple and practical use of the fullness of Scripture truth for which it is adapted—perhaps he might say for which it is designed. The young mind certainly can be interested in the word of God, as a book full of attraction as well as full of truth. Whoever can be made in any degree the instrument of leading to this result, by bringing out to view the real attractions of Scripture, confers so far an invaluable benefit upon others.”—Extract from the Preface.
“We have seldom met with a more admirable volume of Sermons than the one now lying before us. * * * The subjects are varied, but in all there is the same clearness, and fullness of Gospel truth. * * * We can assure our readers that there is a freshness and power pervading the work, which is most delightful to find in this age of flimsy sentiment and idealistic abstractions.”—Banner.
“There are no religious works which have had, next to John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress,” so extensive, increasing, and continued circulation, as those of Richard Baxter. ‘The Saints’ Rest’ is eminently a favorite with Christians, and has been richly blessed. The volume in general use is an abridgment, well executed, of the original, and is not as much as one-half of its compass. However well condensed, an abridgment can not retain and exhibit all the merits of the original, and very many of the lovers of the smaller volume will hail and embrace the opportunity of obtaining the original work, in the present neat and acceptable form.”—Christian Intelligencer.
“The Ethics are of the loftiest standard, breathing a pure theology, and informed by a sound psychology, and presented in a form of compacted logic. It is a tonic for both mind and heart to read these able expositions of the moral system of Christianity. * * * To those who think, it will be found a dish of strong meat, the inward digestion of which will give vigor to both the mental and spiritual man.”—Watchman and Observer.
This new Memoir of the Christian, the patriot, and philanthropist, is from the pen of a gifted American lady, and will be read with intense interest by all classes of readers.
“Few names are so extensively known in the Christian communities of Great Britain and the United States as that of William Jay. His ‘Morning and Evening Exercises’ is in the great majority of Christian families. The Autobiography is written in a style of great simplicity and pleasantness. The reminiscences by Mr. Jay of prominent individuals with whom he was well acquainted—as John Newton, Richard Cecil, Robert Hall, William Wilberforce, and others, are graphic and entertaining, and replete with anecdote.”—Christian Intelligencer.
“This is a delightful work. The autobiography is a simple story of his life, in letters addressed to his children, beginning with bricklayer boy at Beckford’s Abbey, whose sweet face attracted the attention of Cornelius Winter, and led to the bringing out of the ‘boy preacher,’ and ending with the venerable patriarch of Bath, whose name and writings were known and loved all over Protestant Christendom.”—Watchman.
“As an autobiography, this will do to go along with that of Hugh Miller.”—Journal.
“This edition of the Exercises is in four large 12mo volumes. It is remarkably well printed in large, clear type, and on clear, white paper, so that the old and those of weak sight can enjoy the good things prepared for them by one of the most pious and best writers which the world has produced.”—Christ. Advocate.
“By all sincere Christian women, the world over, this volume will be regarded as a spiritual treasure.”—Presbyterian.
“It would be a work of supererogation, at this late day, to dwell on the peculiar excellences of Paley’s treatise on the Evidences of Christianity. It is not probable it will ever be superseded. Its learning, its exactness, its wonderful clearness of thought, its logical force, are incomparable. * * * * * * * The American editor has fortified the points in which Paley has failed, and, by his additional matter, has unquestionably furnished the best, as well as the safest edition of Paley extant.”—Presbyterian.
“The Editor of this work, we hesitate not to say, is a man of extraordinary intellect and acquirements, and he has done what it may safely be said that few are capable of doing, has given additional attraction and value to Paley’s Evidences of Christianity. The introductory article, entitled ‘Claims of Divine Revelation,’ could never have been the production of any other than a master-mind.”—Puritan Recorder.
“As one of the impregnable defences of the historical verity of the facts of Christianity, the work of Paley stands unrivaled and complete. * * * The notes and additions of Prof. Nairne make it more valuable than any edition hitherto published. The labors of Chalmers, Hill, Wardlaw, Campbell, Alexander, Hitchcock, Miller, Birks, and many others, are here put under contribution.”—Presbyterian of the West.
“‘The Footsteps of St. Paul’ is the title of an able and instructive work, presenting a consecutive history of the life, labors, and teachings of the great Apostle. It interweaves, in the narrative, all the direct disclosures of the Acts, the incidental intimations of the Epistles, all the outside information extant, and many conjectural statements derived from a comparison of different parts of Scripture. But he has written it in an animated and graphic style, and imbued it with a fine spirit. It leaves a strong impression on the reader’s mind. It is copiously illustrated with maps and engravings, and is every way a scholarly performance.”—Evangelist.
“The Carters have published a multitude of good books, but, unless we greatly mistake, this will be reckoned among the best of them.”—Puritan Recorder.
“This admirable little volume illustrates and applies some of the precious utterances of the blessed Saviour, in language chaste, simple, affectionate, and urgent, enlightening the thoughts, exciting the affections, subduing the passions, guiding the soul, like the star of Bethlehem, to the meek and lowly Saviour.”—Watchman.
“A precious volume of religious truth most pleasingly and scripturally presented for the comfort and edification of the people of God.”—Observer.
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“The young men of our land have in this book a rare treasure. Every page is fraught with instruction of momentous interest. No young man who would prepare for the life that now is, and for that which is to come, should fail to read it.”—Advocate.
“A gem of no ordinary worth. * * * We may briefly describe it, and this because we think its title fails to do so, as a Treatise on Prayer, founded on the instances of prayer recorded of, and by, the Apostle Paul. It is searching, devotional, practical, and profitable.”—Christian Annotator.
“The mind that does not rise from this memoir excited and mightier for God, has a heartlessness and apathy none will covet.”—Halsey.
“Most cordially do we recommend it as a gift to young ladies who have passed their sixteenth birthday.”—British Mothers’ Magazine.
“The story is simple, but beautiful in its simplicity; while here and there we meet with passages of exquisite grace and pathos. It has our hearty recommendation.”—Commonwealth.
Being a Synchronical arrangement of the leading events of sacred and profane history; subdivided into periods, embellished by pictorial illustrations, and accompanied by a concise Introductory Sketch, and copious notes. Folio. $1.50