Farewell Discourses, Delivered at South Place Chapel, Finsbury, London (Classic Reprint)

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FB&C Limited, Jan 21, 2018 - History - 196 pages
Excerpt from Farewell Discourses, Delivered at South Place Chapel, Finsbury, London

It is a long distance that the Church had wandered from the sense of primitive baptism, when its potency was supposed to be conveyed by sprinkling an infant's head. That! May seem'to us an unimportant thing now; but baptism was an expression of the reasonable belief of man that each individual needed moral his demerits were his own, his merits his own; and the' anabaptists took a brave step away from the superstition that man can inherit the sins or be saved by the virtues of another.

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About the author (2018)

Moncure Daniel Conway was born on March 17, 1832 in Falmouth, Stafford County. He was an American abolitionist, Unitarian clergyman, and author. He graduated from Dickinson College in 1849, studied law for a year, and then became a Methodist minister in his native state. In 1852, thanks largely to the influence of Ralph Waldo Emerson, his religious and political views underwent a radical change, and he entered the Harvard University school of divinity, where he graduated in 1854. Here he fell under the influence of "transcendentalism", and became an outspoken abolitionist. After graduation from Harvard University, Conway accepted a call to the First Unitarian Church of Washington, D.C., where he was ordained in 1855, but his anti-slavery views brought about his dismissal in 1856. From 1856 to 1861 he was a Unitarian minister in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he also edited a short-lived liberal periodical called The Dial. Subsequently he became editor of the Commonwealth in Boston, and wrote The Rejected Stone (1861) and The Golden Hour (1862), both powerful pleas for emancipation. In 1864, he became the minister of the South Place Chapel and leader of the then named South Place Religious Society in Finsbury, London. His thinking continued to move from Emersonian transcendentalism toward a more humanistic "freethought". Moncure Conway's title's include: Life and Papers of Edmund Randolph, The Life of Thomas Paine with an unpublished sketch of Pain, Solomon and Solomonic Literature and My Pilgrimage to the Wise Men of the East. He passed away on November 5, 1907.

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