- Title
- Home and Foreign Journal, March 1853
-
-
- Date
- 1853
-
-
- Volume
- 2
-
-
- Issue
- 9
-
-
- Editor
- ["Ellyson, Henry Keeling, 1823-1890"]
-
- Creator
- ["Southern Baptist Convention"]
-
Home and Foreign Journal, March 1853
Hits:
(0)
VOLUME II.
RICHMOND, ffrUlCII 1853.
NUMBER!);-
PUBLISHED BY THE BOARDS OF DOMESTIC. AND
РОИЕШ
MISSIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION.
,I)AUD of DOMESTIC MISSIONS,
MARION.
Л1.Л11ЛМЛ,
MARCH 18.13.
Ab opportunity to alii Domestic Missions.
riic I!-iptist ohuroh in Alexandria propoies ta be on» of
. my churches to give 3-50 a year for two years to tbo
. ,.,lof Doiuestio Missions. Tbia will give us altogether
additional. But unlaaa ohtiroliea qomo forward
aptly nnd signify their acceptance of this offer, the whole
,il bo lost. If wo aro to havo s Board of Domoatfij Mis-
at all. it ought to be supported, and muoh more liber-
supported than ever it has beon. This proposition nt
i.-e taken up. will save the expense of agencies and enable
,
•„
aid New Orleaua and California. Wo earnestly re-
„.,t Pastor* to lay tbia subject Mere tlipi^5hB№l)M»*fd
they will pray onf it «Wilt da know the reaalt. We
,i.,ld be glad to got the risings of twenty ehnrohoa before
middle of April.
. Why the Marlon Board
It it doing a work that no other Board con accomplish.
•,ny cburohea give liberally to support Domestic Missions
bin tbo bounds of their own aasociations and conventione,
vinia baa resolved to raise $10.000 for missions within
Slate. One Aasoc tation raises 83, MH). In another
association has just appropriated 81,400. Many
• this way, each Stale might provide for its own
But hero is the difficulty. Take, what
small but wealthy associarion lies adjoining
a largo and poor tract of onnutry, settled
ho are poor, and each of these association.,
ns only within their own bounds. Tbo
ion will easily raise money, but perhaps
sra in their botiuds and few destitute regions
■the money is bsrdly wanted — and half the
association are not drawn out. While licit
here are many poor preachers not half <1«-
ulling, for want of means of support— and
regions destitute. Suppose now these two as-
,o unite, things could be etjnaliref: Tbe wealili
ih and the labors of ministers among the destitute
,o brought together, and hath associations would gain
. The money of rich avoceWons will do twice
ад
igood and the labors among the poor, doubled.
.ularge the view and you
«ее
at coco the need there is
л
Board of Douiostio Missions of the Southern Baptist
'.veution. The older States possess wealth— the newly
Ting States are in great
таги.
Tbo Uih) o( emigration,
mi Vrgifila'ttairitY’l’arolmns to foils, Arkansas, Mis-
'.-i, Florida and l.ouisiana, is immense. The character nt
•a States is forming. The old States must help the new.
■ro is no doubt indeed but all the money raised cun bo
■oded and will do much good in the Slates whore it is
od, but comp red with what might he done by occupy,
the prominent poiuts of iuOucnoe in the growing States
ie South West will do almost nothing.
ims of the growing I'ltle» of the South West on the
older Slates.
i . Tboro never baa been a country Bottled so largely by
Baptist population sinoe the world began. • In Virginia
■ te is one Baptist member to every sixtocn inhabitants;
'Orth Carolina I in 20, South Carolina 1 in 15,
Кеп¬
ку
l in 14, Georgia 1 io 13, Alabama 1 in 10, Misaisaip-
1 in 20, there are no other States in tho Union (except
■ little State of Rhode Island which has I iu 20)— nono
-ie world that hive an equal proportion of Baptists,
ns for instance in Delaware the proportion is 1 in 273-
it is from these States that Texas, Arkansas, Missouri,
isiuna and Florida are being settled. Those who emi-
wo go from the midst of Bap iat families and aro p-s*
1 in!
Conversion of Homan Catholics.
From tlm time of the Erst fifty years of tho Ucfornutlpu,
till within a. few yean, np conversions of conasquouee from
Roman CaiholicUm to Protestantism took place. Christiana
da/nirsd of ever seeing a Papist converted. Now it is
plain that more than 2, 090,000 have been converted in this
country. In Ireland through Bible renders a great move,
mont is going on. And in Canada the Gruude Ligne Mis-
stun, originating in Madatuo Feller, preseuts more of tl)e
freilmeia and eiiuplioity of primitive piety than almost any
Million of which we lure ever read. The Memoir of Dr.
Cute and Mrs Cote and History of the Mission, recently
published by tbo American Baptist Publication Society, tuay
encourage us to greater efforts among the Roman Catholics
% following is a sketch of the erigiu of the Mission:
iMviatne. Feller beorie a resident at Omnife %m„!n
October, l$3t). She immediately opened a school with
twelve children, belonging to families that had left the
Uoaiisbehnrob. Boon the needier increased to twenty, aid
it was sustained iu spile of tho opposition oud clamor "of the
prieats. It was a season of arduoua yet delightful effort.
At nine iu the morning, the children assembled for instruc¬
tion, wbiob was continued until uonn, resumed a: two P
Й,
and closed at five. Nut content with the labor of instruct-
tug tho children in tho day, sho ojumeil an evening schi
for adults, with twelve scholars; in addition to tbo rogul
pupils, a considerable number attended Urn conclude
exercises, which consisted of the reading of the Airiptur
familiar conversation <m tho passage rend, and prayer,
interesting were, these exercises, that they were often p:
luuged till midnight, and were eminently effectual
lightening the minds of die pour Canadians.
These engagements, together with visits to those in iljj
neighborhood who wore willing to listen to tho tlospi , and
kind attention to the sick, severely tasked tlm’ energies ft,
the miaiionarira during Ibe winter. Ill the following dimly
1837, the hear being insup|mrtaldo m (lie' garret, tho exeri
cisos were conducted in a turn. Ahout that time the Re$
J. Githinur, then Pastor of tho Baptist Church at Montreal*
visited tlm Station, and being deeply affected by the iucottf
venieneus and pritaliniis endured by Madame Feller, uodore
took to provide some suitable accomodations. As a torn
purary measure u small house wai erected, obiclly by uioaq1
of contributions from Christian friends at Montreal, Chain;
pbiiu. and l’lattsburg, which wns ready for occupation [f
the month of Otobcr. That building served for a dwelling,
a sebnol-lio'iw, and a place of worship', till the mission bouse
ms eoiuinencod in the fall of 1838.
A small eliurch, organised in .June, 1837, and eon listing
at lirst of six uiembeis, numbered in September sixteen
communicants; and besides those onnv'erW, many «bowed
favorable dispositions in.regard to tlie gospel,
«о
that tbo
missionaries began to be very much encouraged. , 1
The hour of trial, however, was drawing uigli. The lire , .
of pereccutioB wus won to be kindled agaiust them,
they were to
1ц8да&»,дЬ&."1№.1Ь’*|"ЬЗу.ь-
. uAn'llfimr
•‘■‘la fb3’iKnlrai''of'Gotolar, the mffukirabte'
тюгголНИ
in
Canada broko out. Tbo Catholics around Ornr.do Ligne,
long incensed by the preaching, tho school, and the success
uf these devoted missionaries, and supposing that tbo law
could nu longer punish their violence, took ndvanmgo of tho
reigning confusion, and commenced a series of niuligiiant
outrages. Mr. Roussy was deliberately shot at, but was
provideuiinUy preserved. A mob assembled nround the
house of Mudnuio Fuller at night, to the number of several
hundreds, who with frightful yells and horrid imprecations,
ordered the niissio- aries to leave the country, threatening
ro set lire to their dwelling, nnd murder them, if they Hiould
refuse to omu|>ly. In the same manner they went to the
liousos of all wlm had renounced Popery, and commanded
them either to abandon their new religion or tlieir country,
under pain of lire and sword.
Such disorder prevailed in tho country, that tho preem¬
inent could afford them no protection: and lienee, after ii-
i and prayerful consideration, they unanimously resolved
... '.It ....I
Л..
. .1.. rf-Is-.J U<\|. .L.
jgTIie religions Progress of oirr Country too tardy.
.e following remarks are from tho Chronicle of Phils-
ua. The views expressed aro just and weighty,
low very speedy is tho progress which our countrymen
leaking in all that pertaius to tbo life we now lire In
?.rab I Tho increaso of our population, tbo enlarged
it’es for communicating with remote portions of our
bnd, and with all parts of tbs world, and Ibe more
ra) diffusion of intelligence among all classes, are sub-
of surprise mid gratulatioa.
it while tbo borern of orcry American swells wit's joy
|Towof the rapid and stately steps his loved country is
fg iu intellectual, «cirntiSo, and commercial progress,
Christian patriot cannot but feel tbo pressure of u-
'WciW'l-, jfbiG L-e feffeetl upon tbo fact, that in
ioni advancement, his favored country Is far, very far
phipd what is demanded' by her onward strides towards
.biker 'tatioiial greatness. Tbo history of tho world ostab-
:s no fact ,
того
clearly and certainly than it does, that
py is that people that is in such a ease; yea, happy is
stifle,1’— and only that people — "iibore God is tbe
:jlle eitylafter oity, and village after villago aro rising
•'«
older of the new .States; and whilo hundreds of thoti-
'j of foroigaete, with thqir papal and infidel errors aro
ttag the eontrclling power in these States, littlo Is Jo.
■.’bring these hundreds of thousands snd there oities
Ihges under tho elevating and purifying influences of
ispel I Alas, how muoh more rapid is the progress of
dates' in more worldly enterprise than in religious ad-
out'
while within a few years past, the vast ares com-
Calitornia, Oregon and Now Mexico, havu been nd-
i Our national domain, bow email tho progress which
n m:\do towards supplying that nddod Territory with
’4DS of grace !
Гщшо
cause of Domestic Missions, the churches of this
hind Ire not doiug what ilod, by the wonderful develop.
jfvti.vatlSf bis providence in Ainetioa is requiring. More
“#«t be appropriated to this Cause.
tn give ap all, and flee to the United Stales. “On the
first of November, '' siys Madnme Feller, “ will» shucking
гмчг]д,
we set on’, sixty in number, on our way to Chain,
plain, (X. Y.,1 where wo hoped to find our city of refuee
llur poor friends were only able to take with 'hem their
small husreage: all their crops remained behind, nnd were
lost to them. Thev were nil wirbout money those alio had
onlv a cow were obliged to sell it in order tn pay 'lie en¬
trance duty at the American emtmn house. To human
view, noildne could be mere <ad and mi-enlilc thsn this
•ed in favor of their sentiureuts beyond tbo emigrants to ' fugitive bond, but to tbe Christian cyo, it bad its bright
aide, as it was for tho namo of Jesns that it was roduood to
laud heretofore settled by man. If ever Baptists sent
-nmuriea to aid a young nnd enterprising nntiou they
old now.
.. The prospects of these Territories. The lands aro
'C of thorn the most, fertile in the world. They will soon
deosoly populated. If the increaso should go on at
i-ent rates they may contain 10U,0U0 millions in 150
nuch n pitiable condition.”
The inhabitants of Champlain provided with gregt libe¬
rality for the urgent wants uf these persecuted Christians,
nnd were especially kind tn Madame Feller and Mr. Roussy.
At the expiration of two nioniln they returned. All
tlieir dwellings bud been preserved, but tho deepest poverty
awaited them,
:«
tlieir crops end furniture had been mostly
carrii -.1 off nr destroyed. Stiff as the infiuenoo of the
sjratay School Convention at Richmond. Va.
% tst onr brethren will bear in mind tbo convention
f Bnptk.s, for conference or tho nubjuot of Sunday sehoola,
whiclffijV been called to meet iu Richmond, May Hlih,
‘'^legates from tbo south and aoutji west attending
erg Baptist Convention at Baltimore, will find it
>ad, umdoubt. gob, highly .groltiUe, to atop . in
!0*НйпФ’тг?Р‘^го'гг
lug,, and wo bope that all who can will make their arrange¬
ments to do so.
California. V ,
The following extract of a letter from the..Nevr York
Recorder was written at San Francisco, jnstafter the burn¬
ing of Sacramental •’ ; '
By the lire at Sacramento, all the churches but one were
deal toyed. Among tlioso burned was tho church edifice
belonging to the Baptists, and as most of the members are
personally sufferers, the blow is a heavy one to the church.
Brother V, ’heeler, who is their pastor, had succeeded id eo-
coriog tho confidence and affection of tbe community. The
house had jest been enlarged to accommodate the increasing
ouugrcgatiou, and again it had filled up with regular atten¬
dants on his ministry «bca this disaster came upon tbcrai
But they aro not dishear'ened, and have already commen¬
ced vigorous efforts to rsiso the funds necessary to enable
them to rebuild, • , V f ' .
The publication of a denominational paper has been Com¬
mence! in this State. An attempt
»аь
made to start it
under tho.coutrol of n committee of the Association, qhioli
fail ng, the pecuniary responsibility has been assumed by a
few brethren; and the lSantist pastors of tho Stale have
been invited to lake Ibe editorial control of its columns in
connection tiitli Hon. E,
.Г.
Willis, of Sacramento. Some
havo consented to do so, and it ii Imped that all will cor¬
dially unite iu an effort, tbo only object of which is to bind
together vud at lengthen our denomination iu this prosper¬
ous end growing Slate. Tho need of sneh a paper has long
been felt, and if God prospers the endeavors of thono United
in this enterprise, tbo 11 l’acifio Banner”" will be niado tho
exponent of Baptist principles, and
и
co-workcr with tho
churches in building up our denominational interests in this
portion of our ianJ.
Tho prospects of onr denomiusllon in this city aro en¬
couraging. The First Baptist Church labors under great
disadvantage from want of a good house of worship; the
edifice in which they meet, having boon erected soma years
ago, is exceedingly frail, nnd most nn[ repossessing in ap¬
pearance. Still they have an interesting congregatkm, and
they will make in effort in tho spring to put up suchh'n
Imeso os they need.
Tho Second (or Pine Street) Church has a very neat and
comfortable bouse, bill it is too small to Bccouar.odato all
who
«яок
to worship there, and for many weeks past they
havo been obliged to fill tho aisles with benehet every Sab-
bub evening, while yet numbers bare been compelled to
leave, enable to obtain a «eat. Should things coulinuo ss
tlioy are, tbo church will either enlarge their present edifice,
or make arrangements for building a larger homo iu tho en¬
suing spring.
It is a subject of profound regret to many here that nei¬
ther of the brethren in yonrcily to whom tbo invitation was
extsudod, felt disposed to
сото
to this city. Every thing
that cun ho accomplished or gained by tbo ministry any¬
where can ho hero; and
оно
of llin«o brethren, had ho res¬
ponded favorably to the invitation, would, with God's bits-,
sing, hare accomplished more foi the cause of Christ In
throe years than be can liopo to do, oven jno bis .prejenb
important field J
ад
sgorp of toir«.^.'0uc.'i‘gt|nlalion,OTt-|.
drawnWler influence of' no i'«Uellectiial
those whose energy, and enterprise, and wealth coosfltutij
tho moving forces in moiety and noting on them, a
prcaober of commanding talon! would interpenetrate society
with his influence, and necmnplisU immense good. Nor
would this have to bo done nt
и
personal sacrifice, for if
anywhere tho faithful ami able minister is esteemed and
rewarded, it ii in this State. May wo not hope that sonio
ono of those brethren will jot fool it to bo his duty to
“come over nnd help us!”
Tlm number of our Baptist ministers has been decreased
by the defection of Rev. .1. W. Oapen, he having embraced
sentiments at variation with those hold by onr denomina¬
tion. His change of views, tlmu'di very sudden, wxv ren¬
dered levs strange ta those upon the s|«t.
Apjslolle Succession.
Tho absurdity of tho claim of n continuous and unbroken
«uceesvion in the line of bishops, is thus donioitslratod by
ТЬотап В.
Macauly, the historian •
Extreme obscurity ovei bangs the history of (he middle
ages, and the facts which lire ilisoornobln through that ob¬
scurity prove that the CLureli was exceedingly ili-rcgulated.
We read of
«сея
of the highest dignity opeuly «old; trans¬
ferred backward and forward by popular tumult; bestowed
sometimes by a profligate woman on hrr paramour; some¬
times by a wntlike earnn on a kin
«пап,
still a stripling.
IVs read of bishops of ten years old; of many popes who
were mere Isiys, and who rivalled tbo ft antic disaolutencss
of Caligula; nay, of
и
female popo. And though this last
story, once believed in
Питре,
lias been disproved by tin
strict reeearrhcs of modern criticism, tlm moat discerning of
those who reject it have admitted that it is not Intrinsically
improbable, in our own inland it was tbo complaint of Al¬
fred that out a single priest, south of this .Thames, and very
few of tho north, could road cither Latin or English. And
this illiterate cltrgv
«
zeroised their ministry suihltt a rude
and half heathen population, in which Dannh pirates', 'an.
Christened, or christened by tho hundred on the Held of
battle, were mingled uitli a Hoxon peaianlrj scarcely bet.
ter instructed to religion. \V« are, therefore at a loss to
conceive bow any clergyman cun feel confident that bis' or¬
ders have come down correctly. Whethe r ho bo really a suc¬
cessor of the spostles depends on an immense number of
such contingencies, as three : Whether, under king- Ktbel-
wolf, a sit pid priest might not, while biptixing several
scores of Danish prisoners who had just mado 'heir option
betwoen tho font and the gallows, inadvertently omit ta
perform tbo rtto on one of these gracclosi proselytes !
Whether, in the seventeenth century, an impostor who had
never received consecration, might net hare peeved
Ыоие'и
off as a bishop on
и
rude tribe of Scots ! Whether a lad
of twelve did really, by a ceremony huddled over when ho
was too drunk ta know what he was about, convey tbo epis¬
copal character to n lad of ten I
Since the first century, not lus, in all probability, than
one hundred thousand persons have cxerciscJ the functions
of bishops, That many cf tbo«o hare not been bishops by
apostolical succession is quite certain, llooxcr admits
that deviations from the general, rule havo been frequent,
■"“.•O' *UU mere a low linemans ,m viuumvwe, prupeiiy eiioiau
«о шоп.
■-- ----- e — ■ ~ • (aK6 tbi» subject at no auiani uay. uu uit
шеии шив,
tcd1 with 4 boldness worthy of his high and atatesoianhxe
'be whole so well oondensed uud valuable a votuino wo , given, wav literally redeemed. While
а»
around
гевш
were ^ each chri<li,n
мк
bimself the question, “Lord what intellect, pronounces tactn tahare been often Justifiable.
'0 seldom «ecu. Tbe price at which it i« put is
«о
low, pillaged, and all who refused “ lh®. ®f?T ” .'y,
„
M wilt thou have me tudo!” AndUt it be reuiemberoJ, too, «There may be,”
муз
b»,< * eomctimes very last .and suffi-
I! [f
а:м
, q . .
*ЛЛГ1
. I
» я
t ! n «„ontfi f sf
,ап,У»
were cruo^y ta,<cn
рг*яеТ1егч,
by tho kind pro ^ *a done ia departwent of Christian benevo- | reason to nlloir ordination mdo without ft bishop.
It Will take & sale of 1000 copies before the expense of ;[ |U
ш1як)|1
femily and preperty were
ШИоиЛсМ.
J “
ц>[
u don, V ,\’0w is the time to plant the ' Where the ohorch most needs have some ordained, and
'•■'rag will bo paid for. It is a work, nowever, that not u
ьеп ,[,0
disturbance ceased, they wire enabled to be of
,»и|
of [ho cr0J‘ in lheM new territories. Men and 1 neiibsr bath nor
сап
have possibly
а ЬЬЬор И
ordain, ia
,v
«тегу
Baptist minister, but every liapti«t family ought essential service tn great numbers of the Canadians, iy .„„„„rated to this purpose now, will accomplish j JUch neccuity the ordinary institution of God hath given
poison. There it in it nothing seotionali Itb.long.lo their testimony before the magistrates ttay.«r
«Ш
h*.«fl«. ‘ ' " . .
. . . ,, , , was a gratifying increase of lulhwncf to tw
шмылп.
n <r _ _ _
Whole denomination and does honor to tho Indus rj, in. £|h
( Ц
^ ^
ы ы
liuW or
„„
m, er¬
ect ln-1 heart cf it. excellent author. 1! 0 hope that not C|)nm> CJme l0 AI jdaoae Feller, entreating her with tear 1
Onr Pecuniary Affairs.
The Treasurer recently reported that the receipts for
tho present year, an far, were f 1,809 in advance uf tlm
same period last year. The increaso i« ohiofly in AWinma,
and a low States not before contributing largely. Frqm
several Staten, the amounts sent in so lur, arc uot equal ta
those of former years. We know that in some case» this
is only delay. Bin the rapidly Increasing liabilities of our
Board render increased receipts from tho churches essen¬
tial. Never was the cause of domostio missions so essen¬
tial to tlm progress of our denomination, or our prosperity
as a nation. Wo closo by extracting from an alio edi¬
torial in llto South Western Baptist:
It i.in very suggest ive fad in the great nnmmission which
nur Saviour gave
«>
his Apostles, to "preach the goape! to
every creature,” that they were to “ begin it .leninism.”
This 1 tidetiTy shows that pa I riot ism is a Christian duly.
While our benevolent regards aro to extend to tlm
whole world, tlm want» of our own conntry are first to be
met, Without going into a detail of the many reasons
which sustain this important duty, wo may bo permitted to
alltido to the single oiiovideriition, that a pure Biblff reli¬
gion is the vital element which is to preserve and perpetu¬
ate onr free and Imnpy form uf government,
WdU, •• bow «ball tlioy preach except they bo sent!"
Tho Rmlixiug rapidity wllh which nur territorial limit* are
enlar/ging— tho swarms of foreign immigrants, from almost
ovary nation on the north, who are annually deluging onr
shore
ь—
the rapid increaso and peculiarly migratory cha-
mote r of our own population — oooiplri at this juncture ro
invest the Domestic Misaionnry enlerpriio with on impor¬
tance It never before pomeasod. A country extending front
ncea/t to ocean— a population made up from almost every
“ Minin, nnd kindred, and tongue, and pec pie, under tbo
whole heaven"— appeal to mjr sympathies In tones of irte-
sistible eloquence. Ke"cr before wan our Domestic Mis
aion Board placed in eue,b a high moral poeilion. Will our
Wh|° e“^‘“ “e BOt idl° l0^'* jSi." bnd
Ыеп
Waiderably weakened b, the political
’ 44,unot b" «bbwherc, bat men ot cntcrpr.se, 0 ten of ^ #f (he )W,
„
,hc
“Ш10П
and of weftllh. !Wi wdoso familiei will lake tbo | i<)n cabled, in the npirif of Chrieiiun kiiidnew, to
el in the world’s progress and whoso descendants will oc- protcot some uf their own worst enemies from the rctribu.
I
У
the first stations in tho world and in tho church. |
-Ы
inabfo the Board ta meet , li.se responsihilitie, ?
w hocror first takes possession uf these van and fertile emitted
МИ
Mtbert„
„,0„а
then,, A nd that we may bo encouraged in our efforts to evsn-
-•'ODS relig'cnsly, will hold a away there ta distant gene- i ,^lible7l0 lbc prMohing of the 0o8,*l. ” - - - ^ “* -
1
,,1в-
Tbe Papists aro struggling for ilia ascendency. | Tho ,jb(lrJ (|f |bc rrw0mled with incrensed auo-
’ the people are eminently favorable to our nontimenK 1 ceJJi ,],ir;ng |||8 year 1833— Mr. Roussy being natively
WC hold our ponce, enlargement and deliverance will 1 engaged in preaching nt various stations, ami Midair e Pel-
4
в Ьу
0,W"’ fu' ™ i4 lboat biVWD S(C“ :
Ил
Kir oWii".» 'IgMnS oni .ruLlm, ! furnUh«l ta
wo .hall dwindle nnd be consumed. , . |h ,,.,itblKirhcwj beenn.e the scene of revel, .'«.nary .
»«•
“pOAea, but we 1
Tk American Baptist Register.
'his v&lunble work lies before us. It contains
geliie our own country, we nood only look nt tho history
0/
onr operations North and Booth, for the past few years.—
Within the last twentv years, the American linj.tist Home
Mission Bociety has been instrumental in gathering and or.
llur in the ganis ing seem hundred and eighty-five churches, hciidea
. .. j •. i....r.._11|3iied to- Imnured» of weak churches col
ttemeelvei. — the diwolution cf our
and their neighborhood beren e the aceno 0 reretmmnar, , ^ ^ ^ ^ L
operations. A i.rourinent leader of the insurgents, w J , beon abu„a,ulj, bleat in their ««ration*.— Many weak
always cliertshej deep bostdffv to the mission, sent . b d Ute b^„ a„i,.cd-.)ih«ra have been constituted
more I of armed horsemen to make Mr. Roussy a pris. m r, anu ,|uc,.,_ol,a ,|,e Miwionary has been aent out
i.late
i bring him to the camp. Through the appeals -if M I ^ V jJbtutoncighborhoods.-Theeeencoerngen.cnts
*04 heart cf it» excellent author. Wo hope lhatnnt
„шв
t0 MsJaeie Feller, entreating her with tear., It !.3 .reinreJent's^ an' earir div ' ta‘be
"W
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49,000 copies will bo acid. It can new be sent ■ to
4»
b« influence to deliver tbeir aons and hiubandi Isoms
,Ье *{ф«вась€«
Smthttn Bap. Convention,
of lent met, aoJ
шу
give place. And therefore we
«•
not euopljr without exception t<*
пгвв
a lineal descent of
po*or from the apostles, by continued euccessioa of buaofi
ш
mty ciTectual ordinition.” There can be iitile doabt
wb think, that tbt «u9Mfiio8« if it
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tfita
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