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no other effect than to demoralize the human mind, and degrade the understanding of man, has given me so perfect an insight into the economy of that Court, that I feel myself bound thus publicly to notify you of my intention to retire from St. Mary's Church, until it breaks off all connexion with it.

"If you declare yourselves independent of the Court of Rome, and insist upon the right of electing your own Bishops and pastors-if you consent to the free circulation of the Scriptures-if you consider yourselves on an exact footing with the Greek Catholics; and will denominate your Church, The American Catholic Church, I shall feel a pride in being your Pastor." T. Repertory.

Renunciation of Universalism.

From a letter published in the Hartford Christian Secretary, it appears, that the Rev. C. Crosman, who has been for several years Pastor of the New Universalist church at Norwich (Con.) has publickly renounced his sentiments. After a few weeks absence (says the letter)" he returned to his flock last week, and in a publick print announced his intention to preach on the subsequent Sabbath. On the day appointed he officiated, and after the close of the afternoon's discourse, he publickly renounced the doctrine of Universal Salvation; and stated in clear and impressive language, that, for the last nine months he had laboured under strong feelings of doubt and uncertainty, respecting the correctness of the doctrine which he

had professed to believe, and to preach, and that after diligently searching the Scriptures-praying frequently and fervently for a right understanding of them, he had come to the conclusion, that the doctrine of Universal Salvation was falla cious, and eminently dangerous to the immortal souls of those who place their trust and confidence in its efficacy.

Interesting Donation.-A Society of Cherokee females at Creek Path, a few days since transmitted to the Treasurer of the United Foreign Missionary Society in New-York, nine dollars and ninety-five cents, in aid of the mission among the Osages. The Cherokee woman who made the motion to appropriate the money in this way, observed to the Society, "The Bible tells us to do good to our enemies; and I believe the Osages are the greatest enemies the Cherokees have." N. Y. Observer.

DONATIONS TO RELIGIOUS AND CHARIT-
ABLE INSTITUTIONS.

(In the month of August.)

To the American Bible Society, $2,323.

To the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign missions, (from July 13, to August 16 inclusive,) $3,429 20, and $1000 to the Everest Fund.

To the United Foreign Missionary Society, including collections, $1,174 16. To the American Education Society, $205 49.

Ordinations and Installations.

Aug. 9.-The Rev. JOHN KEYS, (installed,) over the First Congregational Church and Society in Tallmadge, Portage county, Ohio.

Aug. 29.-The Rev. T. W. P. GREENWOOD was inducted into the ministerial office, at King's Chapel, Boston, as colleague with Rev. Dr. Freeman. The official part of the induction was performed by Dr. Freeman and his Vestry. Sermon by the Pastor elect.

Sept. 1.-The Rev. WILLIAM CASE, over the Fourth Society of Saybrook, Con. Sermon by the Rev. Mr. Porter, of Farmington,

Sept. 1.-The Rev. AARON Warner, over the Second Congregational Church in Medford, Mass. Sermon by the Rev. Dr. Porter, of Andover.

Sept. 2.-The Rev. PHINEAS BAI

LEY, Over the Congregational Churches in East and West Berkshire, Vt. Sermon by the Rev. Calvin Noble, of Chelsea.

Sept. 7.-The Rev. WILLIAM CHESTER, (installed,) over the Presbyterian Church in Hudson, N. Y. Sermon by the Rev. Dr. Chester, of Albany.

Sept. 8.-The Rev. THOMAS S. STONE, over the Church in Andover, Me. Sermon by the Rev. Benjamin Tappan, of Augusta.

Sept. 8.-The Rev. STEPHEN OSTRANDER, over the Reformed Dutch Church of Oakhill, Durham, N. Y. Sermon by the Rev. Cornelius Bogardus, of Bern.

Sept.15.-The REV.EBENEZER PLATT, as Pastor of the Church and Congregation of Middlesex, in Darien. Sermon by the Rev. Mr. Andrews, of Danbury, Con.

Diew of Public Affairs.

FOREIGN.

SOUTH AMERICA.-A Treaty of Alliance defensive and offensive is said to have been concluded between Mexico and Colombia; to which all the other Spanish American States are invited to accede and form a general league. The Treaty contemplates a general Congress of Plenipotentiaries from each of the confederated States, to devise means of cementing their alliance; to serve them as a council in great emergencies; to interpret their treaties when controversies arise, and to act as arbiter and mediator in their disputes and differences.

Iturbide arrived in the Mexican Territory on the 14th of July, in disguise and on the 16th was recognized and apprehended. He was taken before the Congress at Padilla on the 17th, and on the following day condemned and shot; in pursuance of the decree of the General Sovereign Congress of the 28th of April by which he was proscribed and outlawed whenever he should present himself in the territory of the federation. The Government has generously decreed an annuity of $8,000 for the support of his wife and children on condition that they leave the country.

SPAIN, Very recent information from Gibraltar furnishes some reason to believe that the Constitutionalists are again ready to rise in a simultaneous struggle throughout Spain. A body of 4 or 500 exiles who had been secreted in various places on the coast, formed a union and landed on the 4th of August at Tariffa, where they were joined by the garrison and by numbers from the interior. Another body of 700 left Gibraltar on the night of the 7th on a similar expedition. In Madrid also, a struggle is said to have ta ken place, in which many French were killed. A strong force sent from Cadiz to attack the Constitutionalists in Tariffa were repulsed with a severe loss.

DOMESTIC.

In noticing the arrival of Gen. La Fay. ette, in our last Number, we proposed to try. As our limits forbid any thing like give a brief sketch of his stay in our coun a detailed account of his movements we postpone the subject for the present, intending, in a future number, to give a summary of the most interesting particu lars of his reception at the various places which he visits..

Answers to Correspondents.

S.; P. N.; J. P. W., and Silas, are received. W. L. may expect some notice of his communication in our next Number.

We have to acknowledge the receipt of a communication from an unknown correspondent, with the signature of B. G. This article, which is very long and apparently of a philological character, is accompanied by a letter wherein it is "distinctly made known" to us, that the writer is " utterly unwilling" that his manuscript should be "abridged or altered in any respect," but that it is to be printed " as it is" or "immediately returned." Now as we might have some rhetorical scruples about the correctness of a figure or the use of a word; and more especially, cousid ring the length of the article, some benevolent regard to the patience of our readers, we feel it our duty to inform B. G. that we shall not presume to apply our humble criticism to his production, but shall cheerfully return it according to his direction.

B. G. is the signature of another correspondent, who requested that it might be affixed to no communication of which he was not the author. If writers will have the goodness to consult the indexes of former volumes they may avoid adopting signatures already appropriated.

THE

CHRISTIAN SPECTATOR.

No. 11.]

NOVEMBER 1. 1824.

Keligious Communications.

On "The Moral and Religious Improvement that may be derived from Natural Beauty and Sublimity."

THERE is no part of the day better fitted for devotion, than what passes between the setting sun and the close of evening twilight. The sober aspect of all things at the hour of departing day-the gloom of darkness, and, above all, the profound stillness, which, at this season, reigns over every object, are well fitted to awaken contemplation, and lead the mind, as it walks abroad, to thoughts of death and eternity.

I much delight in these evening rambles, and am sometimes filled with astonishment and pleasure, when I discover how all objects around me are shadows of heavenly and divine things. The earth with its scenes of grandeur; and the heave ens shining with stars, lead, by assos ciation, to the more glorious beau ties of the new earth and new heav ens; the departing light, the fading splendours of evening, and the fleeting vapours and exhalations, are so many mementos to remind us of the transient nature of all things below; and in the light clouds of the sky, as they are seen dissolving in air, or vanishing in the shades of night, we discover beautiful emblems of earthly joy and mortal happiness.

[VOL. VI.

new associations. In this manner, one may find fountains of instruction springing wherever he treads.

Yet it is wonderful how men, that are in the pursuit of happiness, neglect and undervalue these sources of high enjoyment. Many will look in wonder upon the castles and other grand edifices built by the art of man, and yet find no pleasure in the rocks and mountains piled by the hand of the Almighty. They will admire a description in poetry, or a view in painting, and pass by unnoticed those scenes of grandeur in the earth and heavens, in which are seen all the finishings of divine workmanship, and of which the first are only a faint and feeble imitation. They admire the copy but neglect the divine original.

It is easily observed that the works of nature, lovely as they are from their own inherent sublimity and Beauty, become wonderfully more so when God is realized as their author, and benevolence as their end. Without this consideration, all their splendour is but dimness; and the man who can give to these objects of Creation no other interest than the impression their forms and colours make upon his senses, is much like one who is gazing upon a well formed Countenance without discovering in its features intelligence or goodness.

But he who can discern wisdom and intelligence shining through all things, who can see in them the moral beauty of this origin and end, and who is accustomed, to use the poet's 71

A mind thus disposed to reflection, may make almost every natural scene an occasion of either raising new and uncommon views of things, -or of strengthening familiar truth by Vol. VI. No. 11.

beautiful imagery," To look through nature up to nature's God," will no where find himself away from enjoyment. He can always cast a smiling look over the earth and heavens, and experience a delight that repetition will never make old, in tracing the perfections of the Divine Being in any, even the smallest of his works. To such a man the dews will drop wisdom, and every bough, plant, and vine, offer the pleasant fruit of instruction.

Next, therefore, to the word of God, we ought to study his works. In them, if we view them aright, we shall see not only sublimity and beauty in their most perfect forms, but also new proofs of benevolence, and new displays of goodness. From every object of the varied landscape, or shade of the changing seasons— from the brightness of day, or silence of the night-from the mountain, or the stream, will be gathered an influence fitted to religious thought, and to the sweet contemplations of a mind that hopes to dwell on high, in that land where there is no need of the sun to give light by day, or the moon to give light by night; where every echo is praise, where every air is the breath of love, and where waters of life flow down from the heavenly hills.

A SERMON.

Psalm viii. 4.-What is man that thou art mindful of him?

THIS exclamation was uttered by the devout Psalmist upon beholding the wonderful works which God has created. When I consider thy heavens the work of thy fingers, the moon and stars which thou hast ordained; what is man that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man that thou dost visit him? For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels,

I have always considered it as a part of the system of Divine Providence, as well as a proof of divine benevolence, that, while he has made earthly pleasures unsatisfactory that we may not rest in them, he has so abundantly provided for us, in his own works, fountains of rational pleasure and improvement. Viewed in this light, we might expect them to be what we find them, more and more improving and delightful the better we are acquainted with them; while most enjoyments lose their relish by being often repeated. There is something so consonant between the emotions of natural and moral beauty, that the mind accustomed to take pleasure in both, soou establishes a connexion between them. It associates ideas of moral excellence with every pleasing object of nature, and will find its love of virtue awakened, whenever these associations are put in motion. There is something to such a mind in a second hast crowned him with glory and rene azure sky, that seems to reflect the image of virtue. The cloud, the mountain, the rainbow, and the cat aract, are objects that have in their view, besides their natural gracefulness and beauty, an associated purity and excellence beyond them. While, therefore, these associations give a new charm to the objects themselves, we shall find our contemplations of moral excellence rendered more pleasing by the emotions we feel on surveying scenes of sublimity and beauty. For this reason, these are the most improving, as well as the most refined and innocent of our pleasures.

honor. Thou hast made him to have dominion over the work of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his feet. How exalted and bow devout must be the views of the man who could write such a passage! He surveyed the works of the great God, with an eye that could mark, and a heart that could feel the display of his glorious attributes; and his tongue was ready to proclaim the high praises of that gracious being who had put all things in subjection under the feet of his frail creature

man.

That we may be led to something of the same devout views of the

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I. What is man? This is one of the two most interesting inquiries that a mortal can make. For him to know what himself is, may perhaps be considered of equal importance as to know what God is. With out some knowledge on both of these topics, he can neither know that he needs salvation, nor the terms on which God will save him.-What, then, is man? The answer must be drawn from the declarations of Him that made him, and may be confirmed by his own observation.

God

1. He is a feeble creature. declares that he made man of the dust of the earth. His origin is low, though his Maker is divine. His race is not eternal nor self-existent, as he might vainly imagine, it left to a state of total heathenism. Ile is but a creature. And he is frail. He cometh forth like a flower and is cut down; he fleeth also as a shadow and continueth not. And to declare how feeble he is of himself, God says, he is crushed before the moth. He is unsubstantial as the mist of the morning. For he is as a vapor that appeareth for a little while, and then vanisheth away. Such is man-so frail and feeble. Of himself he has no strength-not even sufficient to sustain himself in existence. Yet,

arm.

2. He is an arrogant and self-confident creature. He is as presumptuous on his own might as though he possessed an independent existence, and could control events by his own He speaks of what he shall do, as though he were not subject to the control of another; and when his object is achieved, he says, mine own arm hath gotten me this; and by my might have I done it. When God sees fit to prosper his designs and suffer him to go forward in the acqui

sition of wealth, or the grasping of honors and earthly dominion, his heart is lifted up with pride-he becomes vain-glorious-his desires outstretch his achievments-his presumption equals his desires—and he presses onward in his giddy career, not dreaming, that, the next breath, the Almighty may blast him to nothing. The mighty man glories in his might-the rich man glories in his riches-the wise man glories in his wisdom; but they give not God the glory to whom alone it belongs. They consider not that what they have gained, is by a borrowed strength, and is continued by the slighted goodness of the high possessor; nor do they think how dependent they are for all they hope and all they crave.

3. Man is a miserable creature. As he cannot of himself gain the good things which he covets, so neither has he the power to enjoy them when the rich bounty of heaven pours the profusion into his bosom. The man may have riches, and may feast himself on dainties, and yet his soul be meagre and sad. He may surround himself with dazzling splendour, and yet find all his envied pomp but the ghost of pleasure. Or he may hoard his treasure with the vain promise that he will one day say to his soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years, take thine ease. His day of ease will never come. He can make to himself no heart to enjoy what his hand has gathered. He may be born to the sceptre of a mighty kingdom; or he may wrest it from the hand of its lawful heir, and may cause nations to bow down before him. But he may yet be an anxious, a restless, a wretched man, unable to draw the least enjoyment from all the pomp with which he is attended, and all the power that waits on his word.

In these things, proud man is inferior to the brutes that perish. The beast that grazes the field, or that prowls the forest, eats to the full of the meat that his Maker giveth him

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