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the Rev. W. Turner , Jun. , MA., Lives of the eminent Unitarians 13 1 Browse Search
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the Rev. W. Turner , Jun. , MA., Lives of the eminent Unitarians, Samuel Chandler (search)
rest and security led them to deprecate so formidable a calamity. In 1748 Mr. Chandler took a part in the controversy on the questions between the Church and the Dissenters, which were raised into activity at this period by the appearance of Mr. White's Letters to a Dissenting Gentleman. Our author's pamphlet is entitled, The Case of Subscription to explanatory Articles of Faith, as a qualification for Admission into the Christian Ministry, calmly and impartially reviewed. It contains an aon, and it was mainly in consequence of his exertions and interest that it was established. In 1768, four volumes of Dr. Chandler's Sermons were published, according to his own directions in his last will; and in 1777, under the care of the Rev. N. White, his successor at the Old Jewry, A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of St. Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians, with doctrinal and practical observations; together with a critical and practical Commentary on the two Epistles to the Thes
the Rev. W. Turner , Jun. , MA., Lives of the eminent Unitarians, Dissenting Academics. (search)
, from whose very brief prefatory notice of the author the preceding particulars have been derived. The sermons shew him to have been an Arian of the same school with Peirce, Chandler, and other liberal divines among the Presbyterians of the earlier part of the last century; and they are productions not unworthy to be ascribed to one whose chief study was that of the Holy Scripts tures of the Old and New Testament; for which he was eminently qualified by a penetrating understanding, critical skill in the learned languages, and a good acquaintance with history and antiquity. Besides Mr. Willets, Messrs. Hawkes and Blyth, of Birmingham, Fownes of Shrews. bury, Turner of Wakefield, Bond of Stand, White of Derby, Harrrison of Lancaster, Moore of Abingdon, and Ward of Yeovil, are known to have been pupils of Dr. Latham. All these, and doubtless many others, adopted antitrinita-rian opinions as the result of the liberal and unfettered system on which their education had been conducted.
the Rev. W. Turner , Jun. , MA., Lives of the eminent Unitarians, Micaiah Towgood. (search)
wn merits, but required to be bolstered up by giving renewed currency to a gross delusion. In the same year appeared Mr. White's Mr. White was a clergyman of the Church of England, who chiefly made himself known by this and some other publicatMr. White was a clergyman of the Church of England, who chiefly made himself known by this and some other publications in the controversy between the church and the dissenters. He also published an answer to the Free and Candid Disquisitions, and a tract entitled The Protestant Englishman guarded against the Arts and Arguments of Roman Papists and Emissaries. connexion with the great cause of religious liberty—of free and unbiassed inquiry after religious truth. The reply to Mr. White, entitled The Dissenting Gentleman's Letters, contains as complete and satisfactory a view as is any where to be met wito blacken or depreciate the character of his opponent. Passing over without notice the invidious remarks with which Mr. White had filled his first letter on the lives of dissenters as compared with those of churchmen, which he justly regards as