known here by means of the Geneva Catechism, is one of their favorable and happy distinctions. Their love of peace is certainly another. And another is, the consistent fidelity with which they have adhered to the principles of the Reformation, and carried perpetually forward that glorious work, when nearly all Christendom beside had come to a stand; — having abolished subscription to a creed, and possessing a translation of the scriptures, which, instead of being slavishly bound to it, they seek to improve and perfect by frequent revisions, and a catechism and liturgy which they are ready to alter whenever they find they can make them better. In these things the church of Geneva is an example to the christian world. May it have grace to continue faithful, and may the other churches have grace to imitate its fidelity.
I have thus, gentlemen, briefly sketched a few of the impressions which you have requested me to put on paper, as the substance of a communication to the Association. I wish they were more worthy of your attention. Such as they are, they are very cheerfully and respectfully submitted
By your friend and servant,
HENRY WARE, JR., For. Sec'y A. U. A.
AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION,
1831 32.
PRESIDENT,
Rev. AARON BANCROFT, D. D. of Worcester, Mass.
VICE PRESIDENTS,
Hon. JOSEPH STORY, Mass.
Hon. JOSEPH LYMAN, Mass.
Hon. CHARLES H. ATHERTON, N. H. Hon. STEPHEN LONGFELLOW, Maine. HENRY WHEATON, Esq. N. Y. JAMES TAYLOR, Esq. Penn. HENRY PAYSON, Esq. Md. Hon. WILLIAM CRANCH, D. C. MARTIN L. HURLBUT, ESQ. S. C. Hon. SAMUEL S. WILDE, Mass. Hon. SAMUEL HOAR, Jr. Mass. REV. TIMOTHY FLINT, Ohio.
DIRECTORS,
Rev. JAMES Walker, Rev. SAMUEL Barrett, Rev. EZRA S. GANNETT.
Rev. HENRY WARE, Jr. Foreign Secretary. Rev. ALEXANDER YOUNG, Domestic Secretary. HENRY RICE, Esq. Treasurer.
Communications respecting the payment of subscriptions or donations may be made to the Treasurer, Kilby Street, Boston. Negotiations for tracts should be conducted with the General Agents, Messrs Gray & Bowen, 141 Washington Street, Boston. All other domestic correspondence may be held with the Domestic Secretary.
A.
AGE, the present, favorable to the spread of pure Christian- ity, 101, sqq. Circumstances of the social condition of, ib. Improved habits of thinking of, 104. State of information of, 109. State of feeling of, 114. American Unitarian Association,
Reports of for the Sixth An- niversary, 285, sqq. Receipts of for 1830, 31, 286. Expen- ditures of for 1830, 31, 287. Increased influence of, 289. Tract department of, ib. Min- istry to the poor in Boston, under the care of, 291. Con- nexion of with the Boston Sunday School Society dis- solved, 292. Appropriations of for preaching in Maine, Vermont, and other States, ib. Antiquity and Revival of Uni-
tarian Christianity, 221, sqq. Arianism, account of in the 4th century, 231.
B.
BELSHAM, how regarded by Unitarians in England, 312. Boston, ministry to the poor in,
291.
Boys, poor, of Boston, between se- ven and fourteen years of age, who cannot read, 252. Who are not in the grammar schools, 254. Who are truant from the schools, 255. Between fourteen and sixteen or seven- teen, who have no regular employment, 258.
British and Foreign Unitarian Association, anniversary of in 1829, 310.
Burnside, S. M. Esq. remarks
of at the annual meeting of A. U. A. 305.
C.
CARPENTER, Dr Lant, on the beneficial tendency of Unita- rianism, 137, sqq. Changes of opinion among the Orthodox, 299.
Children, how regarded by Uni- tarians, 37.
'Children of wrath,' what Paul
meant by, 169, sqq. Children of the Poor in Boston, claims of, 249, sqq. Classifi- cation of by the Minister at Large, 252, sqq. Male, be-
tween seven and fourteen years of age, ib. Female, of the same age, 258. Number of, growing up in ignorance and exposed to moral dan- ger, 258. Male, between fourteen and sixteen or seven- teen, who are without any regular employment, 258. Christianity, pure, the prospects and claims of, 101, sqq. Uni- tarian, antiquity and revival of, 221, sqq. Conscience, Orthodox plea of replied to, Controversy, religious, the direc- tion it has taken, 296. Effect of to bring the several sects of Christians nearer to a coinci- dence of opinion, 305. Church, the Christian, its nature explained, 27.
18.
DOCTRINAL Sentiment in Eng- land described, 315. Dublin, Ireland, Unitarianism in, 320.
EARLY Religious Education, the importance and method of, 37, sqq.
Education, what is understood by the word, 40. Early, moral and religious, importance of, 41, sqq. Method of, 55, sqq. England, state of Unitarianism
in, 311. Controversial preach- ing, how regarded in, 314. Ephesians 11.3, explained, 469, sqq.
Epistles, Paul's, causes of ob-
scurity of, 181, sqq. Essay for the understanding of
St Paul's Epistles, 181, sqq. Europe, Prof. Ware's Report of
Unitarianism in, 308, sqq. Exclusionists, history of, 4. The reasonings by which they de- fend their conduct replied to, 6, sqq. Exclusive System, what it con- sists in, 3. Who began it, 4. Its progress among Protestants, 5. Fallacy of the arguments by which it is supported ex- posed, 6, sqq. Evils of, 31. Explanation of the words, By nature children of wrath,' 169, sqq.
6
F.
FEMALES, education of, 46. Follen, Prof., remarks of at the
annual meeting of A. U. A. Fundamentals in religion, the hackneyed plea of the Ortho- dox about, answered, 8, sqq.
G.
GENEVA, state of the church in, 321. Progress of Unitarian- ism in, ib. Girls, poor, in Boston, between
seven and fourteen years of age, who cannot read, 258. Who are growing up in igno- rance and exposed to moral
Method of religious education,
57, sqq.
Ministry to the poor in Boston,
291.
Minister at large, Mr Tucker- man, seventh Semiannual Re- port of, 249, sqq. Montgomery, Rev. Henry, on the importance and method of early religious education, 37, sqq.
Mothers' influence in education, 44.
329
pects and claims of pure Christianity, 101, sqq. Parents, Christian, address to, respecting the religious edu- cation of their children, 74, sqq. Paul, Locke's Essay for the un- derstanding of the Epistles of, 181, sqq. His style and tem- per, 183. Periodical publications, Unita- rian, increase of the number of, 294. Piety at Home, 205, sqq. Poor, children of, 249, sqq. Preaching, controversial, how
0.
OFFICERS of the A. U. A., for 1831-32, 326. Orthodoxy, false and gloomy views presented by, 156. Changes in, 299. Orthodox, their notions of fun- damentals in religion examin- ed, 8. Their plea of con- science by way of justifying exclusiveness, replied to, 17. Their distinction between ec- clesiastical and civil penalties considered, 20. Their violent measures in the Canton de Vaud, 323. Orthodox party, the, approaching the liberal party, in respect to the doctrines of the trinity, atonement, and original sin, 305.
regarded in England, 314. Prejudice, on, by Samuel J. May, 85, sqq. Its sources 1. An uneharitable temper, 89; 2. Ignorance, or a partial edu- cation, 91; 3. Caprice. Its effects-1. It throws a veil over truth, 34; 2. Destroys social happiness, 35; 3. Unfits the character for heaven, 96. Priestly, how regarded in Eng- land by Unitarians, 312.
R.
REFORMATION, School of, at South Boston, account of, 266. Religious education, early, the importance and method of, 37, sqq.
Religion, practical, advancement of, 301. Report, Mr Tuckerman's Sev- enth Semiannual, 249, sqq. Sixth Annual, of the Treasurer of A. U. A., 286. Sixth An- nual, of the Domestic Secre- tary of A. U. A., 289, sqq. Of the Foreign Secretary, 308. Reports of the A. U. A. for the
Sixth Anniversary, 285, sqq. Revival of Unitarian Christian- ity, 234, sqq. Revivals, how regarded by the Ex. Com. of A. U. A., 298.
S.
PALFREY, John G., on the pros- SAVIOUR, the, opinions of Eng-
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