The English Church in the Eighteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 807 pages of information about The English Church in the Eighteenth Century.

The English Church in the Eighteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 807 pages of information about The English Church in the Eighteenth Century.

One, therefore, of two things must be done as a duty both to the old and to the incoming members.  Either much must be left optional to the clergy, or to the clergy acting in concert with their congregations, or else, as was before said, the National Church must find scope and room for its new members, not as a mere throng of individuals, but as corporate bodies, whose organisations may have to be modified to suit the new circumstances, but not broken up.  When it is considered how highly strict uniformity was valued by the ruling powers at the end of the seventeenth century, the ample discretionary powers that were proposed to be left are a strong proof how genuine in many quarters must have been the wish to effect a comprehension.  The difficulties, however, which beset such liberty of option were obvious, and the opponents of the bill did not fail to make the most of them.  It was a subject which specially suited the satirical pen and declamatory powers of Dr. South.  He was a great stickler for uniformity; unity, he urged, was strength; and therefore he insisted upon ’a resolution to keep all the constitutions of the Church, the parts of the service, and the conditions of its communion entire, without lopping off any part of them.’  ’If any be indulged in the omission of the least thing there enjoined, they cannot be said to “speak all the same thing."’ And then, in more forcible language, he descanted upon what he called ’the deformity and undecency’ of difference of practice.  He drew a vivid picture how some in the same diocese would use the surplice, and some not, and how there would be parties accordingly.  ’Some will kneel at the Sacrament, some stand, some perhaps sit; some will read this part of the Common Prayer, some that—­some, perhaps, none at all.’  Some in the pulpits of our churches and cathedrals ’shall conceive a long crude extemporary prayer, in reproach of all the prayers which the Church with such admirable prudence and devotion hath been making before.  Nay, in the same cathedral you shall see one prebendary in a surplice, another in a long coat, another in a short coat or jacket; and in the performance of the public services some standing up at the Creed, the Gloria Patri, and the reading of the Gospel; and others sitting, and perhaps laughing and winking upon their fellow schismatics, in scoff of those who practise the decent order of the Church.’  Irreconcilable parties, he adds, and factions will be created.  ’I will not hear this formalist, says one; and I will not hear that schismatic (with better reason), says another....  So that I dare avouch, that to bring in a comprehension is nothing else but, in plain terms, to establish a schism in the Church by law, and so bring a plague into the very bowels of it, which is more than sufficiently endangered already by having one in its neighbourhood; a plague which shall eat out the very heart and soul, and consume the vitals and spirit of it, and this to such a degree, that in the compass of a few years

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The English Church in the Eighteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.