[ CHAPTER 1 ] - ( CHRISTIAN LEADERS OF THE 18TH CENTURY ) - { PT. 6 }
[ CHAPTER 1 ] - ( CHRISTIAN LEADERS OF THE 18TH CENTURY ) - { PT. 6 } - The curse of the Uniformity Act seemed to rest on the Church of England. The blight of ease and freedom from persecution seemed to rest upon the Dissenters. Natural theology, without a single distinctive doctrine of Christianity, cold morality, or barren orthodoxy, formed the regular teaching both in church and chapel. Sermons everywhere were little better than miserable moral essays utterly devoid of anything likely to awaken, convert, or save souls. Both groups seemed agreed on one point, and that was to let the devil alone and to do nothing for hearts and souls. The weighty truths for which John Hooper and Hugh Latimer had gone to the stake, and for which Richard Baxter and dozens of Puritans had gone to jail, seemed laid on the shelf and completely forgotten. When this was the state of things in churches and chapels, it can surprise no one to learn that the land was flooded which unbelief and skepticism. The prince of this world made good use of his opportunity. His agents were active and zealous in promoting every kind of strange and blasphemous belief. _______________________________________________________
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