The Duty of the Church in Relation to Sunday Schools [pp. 377-393]

The Princeton review. / Volume 4, Issue 3

Duty of Church, c. cond coming of Christ, in the display of Millennial glory, as an event near at hand. French and German philosophy predicts a new religion and new social state, as the grand result of all preceding changes. The wisdom of the philosopher will doubtless disappoint him-the faith of the Christian may, as it respects the precise time, but cannot in the end. "Nevertheless, when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?" ART. IV.-THE DUTY OF THE CHURCH IN RELATION TO SUNDAY SCHOOLS. M.EN often come slowly to the adoption of the principles of the merest common sense, even in the doctrines and duties of religion. How much Christianity has lost whilst its disciples have been dallying in hesitation about obeying the simplest instincts of duty, we believe to be incalculable. They never ponder so deliberately, and with such cautious progression, as when an effort is proposed to take advantage of the very postulates of reason in promoting the triumph of the Gospel. The strongest illustration of this most anomalous fact is furnished by the history of the Church in regard to its efforts to control the education of the young. For it is no late discovery that the mind of childhood is susceptible of permanent moral impressions. No theme can claim a more venerable prescription to the last honours of triteness than this. And if the world are really ignorant of the connexion of early education with the destiny of the individual, it is for some other reason than the want of common fame to proclaimn it: fbr it has been set forth in all conceivable forms, from the Proverbs of Solomon to the distich of Pope, and from the staring apophthegm of the copybook, to the rant of the college rostrum. It is thus that the great truth has been suffered to evaporate, even since the dispensation of the Gospel. The praise of education has echoed from the pulpit too, in good set phrase, but the Christian world slumbered upon the sermons until the Archbishop of Milan showed that the subject was capable of some practical inferences. But even this hint, like many others from that 377


Duty of Church, c. cond coming of Christ, in the display of Millennial glory, as an event near at hand. French and German philosophy predicts a new religion and new social state, as the grand result of all preceding changes. The wisdom of the philosopher will doubtless disappoint him-the faith of the Christian may, as it respects the precise time, but cannot in the end. "Nevertheless, when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?" ART. IV.-THE DUTY OF THE CHURCH IN RELATION TO SUNDAY SCHOOLS. M.EN often come slowly to the adoption of the principles of the merest common sense, even in the doctrines and duties of religion. How much Christianity has lost whilst its disciples have been dallying in hesitation about obeying the simplest instincts of duty, we believe to be incalculable. They never ponder so deliberately, and with such cautious progression, as when an effort is proposed to take advantage of the very postulates of reason in promoting the triumph of the Gospel. The strongest illustration of this most anomalous fact is furnished by the history of the Church in regard to its efforts to control the education of the young. For it is no late discovery that the mind of childhood is susceptible of permanent moral impressions. No theme can claim a more venerable prescription to the last honours of triteness than this. And if the world are really ignorant of the connexion of early education with the destiny of the individual, it is for some other reason than the want of common fame to proclaimn it: fbr it has been set forth in all conceivable forms, from the Proverbs of Solomon to the distich of Pope, and from the staring apophthegm of the copybook, to the rant of the college rostrum. It is thus that the great truth has been suffered to evaporate, even since the dispensation of the Gospel. The praise of education has echoed from the pulpit too, in good set phrase, but the Christian world slumbered upon the sermons until the Archbishop of Milan showed that the subject was capable of some practical inferences. But even this hint, like many others from that 377

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The Duty of the Church in Relation to Sunday Schools [pp. 377-393]
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The Princeton review. / Volume 4, Issue 3

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