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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63314 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63314)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Reasons for joining the Norfolk & Norwich
-Protestant Association, by William Hull
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Reasons for joining the Norfolk & Norwich Protestant Association
-
-
-Author: William Hull
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2020 [eBook #63314]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REASONS FOR JOINING THE NORFOLK &
-NORWICH PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1840 John Stacy edition by David Price.
-
-
-
-
-
- REASONS FOR JOINING
- THE
- NORFOLK & NORWICH
- PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION
-
-
- IN
-
- A LETTER
-
- TO A CLERICAL FRIEND.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY THE REV. WILLIAM HULL,
- MINISTER OF ST. GREGORY’S. NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- NORWICH:
- PRINTED BY JOHN STACY, OLD HAYMARKET.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MDCCCXL.
-
-
-
-
-A LETTER,
-&c.
-
-
-MY DEAR SIR,
-
-You have not stated the nature or the grounds of those _scruples_ which
-prevent your immediate adhesion to our recently-formed association;—nor
-will I attempt to conjecture what they may be; especially since you avow
-your cordial approbation of every well-timed effort in defence of our
-Protestant faith and liberties against the malignant aggressions of
-Popery. I am not able to imagine any substantial objection on the part
-of a truly Protestant mind.
-
-Believing, as I firmly do believe, that our National Church is founded on
-truth, and that the _Protestant ascendancy_ involves the temporal and
-spiritual welfare of the people of these realms,—believing also that the
-agents and emissaries of Popery have, for a series of years, been
-actively employed in embroiling the affairs of this kingdom, with an
-ultimate view to the restoration of the popish priesthood, together with
-their dark superstitions and inhuman despotism,—believing that new and
-unwonted energies must be called into action, in defence of our national
-religion, or that, by secret undermining and open assault, “our holy and
-beautiful house where our fathers worshipped” will soon be levelled with
-the dust, “and all our pleasant things laid waste,”—I hail the formation
-of the Protestant Association as a propitious event, and deliberately,
-from the religious conviction that I am in the path of duty, enrol my
-name as a member.
-
-In stating thus freely my own forcible impressions, I disclaim any
-intention of impugning the motives of those who are not, equally with
-myself, convinced of the expediency or utility of this association.
-Whatever may be the ground of _your_ hesitation, I have entire confidence
-in the purity and integrity of your principles.
-
-Nevertheless, allow me to say, with deference, that your indecision, in
-this case, does not for a moment cause me to waver in my own convictions,
-since I cannot but suspect that your doubts originate in an imperfect
-conception of the perils to which our religion and our country are
-exposed. Were these dangers of less appalling magnitude, I also should
-have strong scruples against this or any similar association. They are
-justifiable on no other ground than that of absolute necessity. They
-bring with them many incidental evils.—They lead into collision adverse
-parties, and produce impassioned controversies; they create evils which
-no man can be right in abetting, even indirectly, but with a view to ward
-off others which are more injurious to the public welfare. Besides
-which, no man of feeling would rashly hazard the obloquy which will be
-cast upon him by his opponents in this age of low-minded invective and
-scurrilous defamation. Nor is it a small evil to lose the favourable
-regards of upright and conscientious persons who take an opposite view of
-the exigencies and the duties of the times. For myself, I have no sickly
-ambition for this species of martyrdom. I sacrifice with painful
-reluctance the esteem of the wise and the good, from whom it is my
-misfortune, at any time, to be separated by conflicting opinions and
-irreconcileable interests. But there are occasions which call for higher
-duties than those of conciliation or friendship,—when private affections
-must be merged in a holy patriotism, and when the strength of our
-principles must be proved, not by the extinction of our finer
-sensibilities,—God forbid!—but by their yielding, with whatever
-bitterness of grief, to a commanding sense of DUTY. I am strongly
-impressed with the conviction, that such an occasion presents itself in
-“this day of _trouble_, and of _rebuke_, and of _blasphemy_.”
-
-Far from having my own apprehensions allayed by the numbers of those who
-are insensible to the pressure of great and imminent danger, my fears are
-awakened by nothing so much as by that very consideration; by no other
-fact am I so deeply convinced of the extreme necessity of supporting the
-Protestant Association, as one means, among others, of diffusing
-information, and thus arousing in our countrymen a spirit of determined
-resistance to Popery, corresponding with the power and the artifice of
-that unrelenting adversary.
-
-The policy of the Papists has ever been, to the last degree, subtle,
-profound, and unscrupulous,—varying with the changeful phases of society,
-and adapting itself with fiend-like sagacity to the peculiar character of
-individuals and of nations. But never did that policy show itself more
-triumphantly than in the late rapid march of Popery towards a paramount
-dominion in this kingdom; and in the skill, the cunning, the profound
-strategy by which it has covered its progress, lulling into false
-security the people of this betrayed and devoted country.
-
-I lay comparatively little stress on the number of converts openly
-professing themselves to be proselytes to Popery: the report may be
-exaggerated or it may not. I am not startled, as some are, by the
-increase of popish chapels, monasteries, and colleges. I fear nothing
-from the open teachers of popish doctrine, nor would I enter into a
-_fiddle faddle_ controversy with a Jesuitical priesthood, who are not
-bound by the laws of honourable warfare, and who, when defeated in
-argument, always take refuge in their insolent assumption of
-_infallibility_. The naked dogmas of Popery carry with them their own
-refutation. They originated in the dark ages of barbarian ignorance and
-public confusion, when the Roman empire had been swept by the northern
-hordes, and savage warfare left no leisure, no disposition, to cultivate
-those departments of knowledge which expand and invigorate the human
-mind. Popery can never make converts in an enlightened nation like
-England, but from among the most feeble in intellect or sordid in
-character, the uninstructed vulgar, nervous women, or intellectual
-profligates. True, she has advocates both subtle and learned; but they
-are men who were cradled in her errors, and whose early discipline and
-youthful associations—designed for the suppression of the manly mind—have
-combined, with the interested motives of after-life, to fix them in her
-faith. I give no credit to the more notorious of popish agitators for
-sincerity in their _religious_ attachment to the cause they serve.
-Popery is their stepping-stone to distinction and power. They laugh in
-their sleeve at that lucrative fable while they derive power, as
-political incendiaries, from the distresses and _superstitions_ of an
-abject people.
-
-But while naked Popery is simply despicable for its absurdities or
-detestable for its intolerance, I fear every thing from the unwearied and
-versatile genius of _Romish policy_, which, without having proselyted to
-the popish faith Protestant England, has contrived, by a series of
-manœuvres, so to dislocate the frame of British society, that instead of
-combining to crush, as they might easily do, the common foe, Protestant
-is arrayed against Protestant, while the only party really to be dreaded
-by all, is looked upon without suspicion and without fear. If the
-present course of events is suffered to proceed,—while one class of
-Protestants is tamely looking on, and another section is actively and
-zealously employed in seconding the designs of the papacy,—I see no
-impossibility that is to prevent the entire power of the State from
-falling, at no distant period, into the hands of the popish faction. And
-what use they will make of that power is not a matter of difficult
-conjecture. History is _not_ “an old almanack,” unless to fools and
-desperadoes; and history denounces papal intolerance in characters of
-horror and of blood.
-
-Allow me to repeat it,—for this is the very gist of the argument,—from
-naked and avowed Popery little was to be feared; but from Popery carrying
-on its wily projects through the means of _Protestant agency_, or, under
-Protestant colours, conducting a piratical warfare, every thing is to be
-dreaded. And this is exactly the way in which we are now assailed.
-
-If you look to the STATE, you behold the ministers of a Protestant Queen,
-who are sworn to uphold the Protestant religion, bound hand and foot by
-popish demagogues and traitorous agitators, and impotent to carry any
-great measure against the assent of their masters, who can on any day
-effect their dismissal from office. Their policy is entirely popish.
-The Privy Council is thrown open to popish intrigue; the army is largely
-recruited from the popish peasantry of Ireland; popish bishops are
-appointed and salaried by government in the colonies; the popish faction
-holds the balance of parties in the Commons house of Parliament.
-
-The aspect of the CHURCH is scarcely less alarming. The “Oxford Tracts”
-are said to represent the sentiments of a considerable number of our
-devout clergy and laity. Of these very remarkable productions, enforcing
-the practices of a superstitious devotion, and denouncing, with a
-papistical jealousy of free enquiry, every manly exercise of the human
-mind, when religion is the subject of investigation, it is sufficient to
-say that they have been read with grief and astonishment by many of the
-most sound divines of the Anglican Church, and hailed by papists with a
-sneer of triumph. For the principles of the Protestant faith, they are
-by far
-
- “Too ceremonious and traditional.”
-
-And, if the spirit of servile superstition which some of these tracts
-breathe,—if the gloomy intolerance they sanction,—can be shown to
-harmonize with the doctrines and usages of our Church, _dissent_ needs no
-better vindication. Happily these noxious principles are the growth of
-another soil; but they who embrace them are not far from the worst dogmas
-of Popery. They are already in the vestibule—a few more steps will carry
-them to the altar of that desecrated temple. It has been suggested, and
-the suggestion is not at variance with Christian courtesy and candour,
-that these Tracts have originated in a Jesuitical conspiracy to pollute
-the stream of orthodox truth at the fountain head. Looking only at the
-_internal_ evidence, the suspicion is fully justified. At any rate, they
-prepare the way in a manner most satisfactory to the Papists, for a close
-alliance with the apostate church, whose spirit and whose errors they so
-nearly resemble. They are indefensible as the productions of Protestant
-divines.
-
-Perhaps you will pronounce this opinion arrogant and harsh, considering
-who are the writers. But in a case such as the present the public have a
-right _to judge the work itself_, _independently of the __writers_, of
-whose individual characters few readers can be supposed to know any
-thing. I judge as one of the public,—I look at the “Tracts” apart from
-their authors, and my conviction is, that no personal worth, no amiable
-qualities, no piety, no erudition can vindicate the estimable authors of
-these “Tracts” from having done, with whatever purity of intention, great
-injury to the Protestant cause. Here is Popery, indirectly at least,
-promoted by the professors of a university, whose name has hitherto been
-regarded as the symbol of pure orthodoxy. The times are fearful when the
-whisper goes forth, even among the most devoted friends of the
-church—“_Popery at Oxford_!” From another section of churchmen, scarcely
-less danger is to be apprehended: they are smoothing the way for popish
-ascendancy. I mean those whose _ultra-liberalism_ embraces every
-interest but that of their own communion—whose latitudinarian candour
-regards with complacency every erroneous form of doctrine or worship, as
-if, all that we tolerate we were bound in duty to approve,—who look with
-special favour on every deviation from the sound orthodoxy of the
-church,—who hail _every irregularity_ as a commendable exercise of
-freedom,—and who reserve their censures and their frowns for those who
-conscientiously adhere to “_the good old way_.” By this anomalous order
-of churchmen—the growth of modern days—all the assailants of the sacred
-cause are held in honour for their presumed freedom from prejudice,—all
-its defenders are condemned as mercenaries or bigots. Of this
-description of persons, it may be presumed, many are prepared to sit
-down, quite at ease, under the _mild_ sovereignty of the papacy. Their
-special predilection for that _persecuted_ race of patriots and
-Christians, who are agitating for an Italian despot and the Holy
-Inquisition, is only preparatory to their own sworn allegiance to Rome,
-the moment that haughty power obtains dominion and can command
-submission. They are waiting for the flood-tide. To say the least, the
-men whose liberalism can rejoice in Popery, can have no motives for
-becoming martyrs to Protestant truth and liberty.
-
-And now let us look at THE COUNTRY AT LARGE. Judging from the tone of
-our popular literature, and from the spirit of the public press, which
-can only subsist by responding to the sentiments of the day, I cannot but
-think that infidelity and profligacy abound to an alarming extent among
-the reading classes. The Protestant church, it is plain, can have no
-hold on the disciples of Voltaire, of Hume, of Gibbon, of Paine, of
-Byron. She will never compromise her pure morality. In the bosom of the
-Mother of Harlots they may revel with impunity: _confession_, and
-_absolution_, and _extreme unction_, will reconcile them to her
-ascendancy. Among the paradoxes of the human mind, none is more common
-than the junction of profane scepticism with credulous superstition,—the
-impious reviler of the Bible making his last peace with heaven by taking
-his _viaticum_ from a popish priest. Popery is the religion for all men
-who would indulge the hope of heaven, after doing their utmost to convert
-the present world into a hell of impiety and crime. Already they are in
-political alliance with the man of sin.
-
-But there are others of less discreditable character than these, from
-whom the Protestant cause derives no aid in this day of trial. I mean
-that large class of easy, worthy, unsuspecting persons who have imbibed
-unguardedly the sentiments of modern liberalism, without its malignity,
-and in ignorance of its designs. They see Popery only in the mild and
-subdued form which it puts on while restrained by the usages and the laws
-of a Protestant community. They find nothing in their popish neighbours
-but what is humane and social, and, perhaps, intelligent, honourable, and
-devout; and, reasoning from what they see and hear themselves, they give
-credit to the idle tale that POPERY is REGENERATED,—that the lion is
-become a lamb, and the serpent a dove,—and that, under the future reign
-of the Papacy, no longer perfidious, intolerant, sanguinary, no materials
-will be supplied for another “Book of Martyrs”—let it therefore take its
-unmolested course!
-
-Add to these, many persons of aristocratic rank and fortune, whose
-principles are wavering, and who, on supposition that the Church of
-England must fall a prey to the motley gang of modern revolutionists, are
-prepared rather to side with Popery, which is essentially aristocratical
-and monarchical, than with Protestant dissent, which is plebeian,
-levelling and democratical. They know that the pretended liberalism of
-Popery means nothing more than that “_she stoops to conquer_;” and they
-will prefer her custody of their titles and estates, to that of a
-national convention of chartists or roundheads.
-
-And now, my dear Sir, if this is not a mistaken view of things, we are
-led to an appalling conclusion. If the popish faction, ever vigilant
-while others sleep, should succeed, by a _coup d’état_, in grasping the
-power of the Executive government, they have so stealthily and
-successfully prepared for the event, that a large mass of the professedly
-Protestant community would hail their accession to power; other important
-bodies would be so far neutralized as to offer no resistance; while the
-portion of our church and nation who remain “faithful among the
-faithless” will have to maintain a conflict for truth and righteousness,
-under circumstances of fearful inequality. I need not suggest what the
-power of the state _can do_, when wielded by men of unscrupulous
-principles, and devoted to their cause with the zeal of a morbid
-superstition.
-
-I do not say that this catastrophe is inevitable; but it is not
-impossible. The mine is prepared although it may not be sprung: but if
-the match should be applied, the explosion will be far more tremendous,
-and the desolation more complete, than even the “Gunpowder Treason” would
-have caused, if Providence had not detected that most foul conspiracy.
-The authors of that crime would have fallen, at once, victims to popular
-indignation; but the conspirators of the present day will have secured
-themselves from instant destruction by previously tampering with the
-public mind, and corrupting its principles. They have already carried
-Popish objects by Protestant agents; and when the real combat is at
-length to be fought, _pro aris et focis_, the dupes of their insidious
-policy will find themselves unarmed or in confusion on the field of
-battle.
-
-We may smile at popish miracles—the chapel at Loretto—the blood of St.
-Januarius—the healing art of the Abbé Paris—and all the low trumpery by
-which the pretended vicar of Jesus Christ stoops to deceive and destroy:
-but here is a master-stroke of policy, all but really miraculous,
-displaying not less of satanic skill than malice, and at sight of which
-the stoutest of British hearts may for a moment quail. The events of
-these times will supply our posterity with the most humiliating page in
-the history of their country—Great Britain, invincible in arms,
-disorganized and convulsed by the infernal arts of the Jesuits!
-
-These dangers must be met by extraordinary measures of defence. If the
-government did its duty, not a Jesuitical institute would be suffered to
-pollute the land: these agents and subjects of a foreign power would not
-be allowed to tamper with the peace and the liberties of England. But,
-deserted by the government, itself enslaved by an ignoble faction, and
-powerful only for mischief, we must look to our own resources, and, among
-others, to the _Protestant Association_. I see nothing in its
-constitution or principles to justify the fear, that it may not hopefully
-look for the blessing of Almighty God upon its exertions. It has not
-been instituted by a section or party in the church. It overlooks minor
-distinctions, and enrols among its members persons of every shade of
-sentiment or opinion, who are willing to make a common cause on behalf of
-our venerable church and our holy religion. The moment it is made the
-instrument of party, let it fall! The name of the Noble Lord who is its
-president, is a pledge that its objects are truly British; and the clergy
-and laity who are its members, can have _united_ for no purposes less
-holy than the preservation of that sacred light which Popery had
-extinguished—which the reformers re-kindled—and which, by God’s grace,
-shall never again be put out in England.
-
-In looking at the aspect of the times, I am not sanguine in my hopes, nor
-do I yield to despondency. It is ours to do our duty, and leave the
-consequences with the Great Arbiter of human destinies. If we are
-disappointed in our efforts to save our country, we shall have the
-consolation of having made a stand under circumstances which required
-some degree of moral courage, and a lively faith in the God of Truth,
-whose servants we are, and in whose cause it will be no dishonour to
-fall.
-
-In the mean time, it is a reflection not to be evaded, however painful to
-indulge, that great national guilt could alone have reduced us to the
-embarrassments and perplexities of these times—times of degeneracy so
-rapid and infatuation so blind, that to this tormented kingdom may be
-applied the fearful description of the historian of the Roman empire:—
-
- “Labente deinde paullatim disciplinâ, velut desidentes primo mores
- sequatur animo; deinde ut magis magisque lapsi sint; tum ire cœperint
- præcipites:—donec ad hæc tempora, quibus _nec vitia nostra_, _nec
- remedia pati possumus_, perventum est.”
-
-And now, my dear sir, I have acted upon my own convictions of duty in
-thus plainly stating my motives for upholding the Protestant Association:
-judge them as severely as you please. They have at least this claim to
-calm consideration: they are the reasons of an individual whose personal
-interests and prospects would have dictated another course of action, but
-who deems it his greatest happiness to have his fortunes blended, “for
-better or for worse,” with that hallowed cause in which Latimer and
-Ridley and Hooper and Cranmer died.
-
- Yours faithfully,
-
- WILLIAM HULL.
-
-_Eaton_, _Dec._ 10, 1839.
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE END.
-
- * * * * *
-
- NORWICH:
-Printed by John Stacy, Gentlemen’s
- Walk, Old Haymarket.
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REASONS FOR JOINING THE NORFOLK &
-NORWICH PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION***
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Reasons for joining the Norfolk &amp; Norwich
-Protestant Association, by William Hull
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Reasons for joining the Norfolk &amp; Norwich Protestant Association
-
-
-Author: William Hull
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2020 [eBook #63314]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REASONS FOR JOINING THE NORFOLK &amp;
-NORWICH PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1840 John Stacy edition by David
-Price.</p>
-<h1>REASONS FOR JOINING<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE</span><br />
-NORFOLK &amp; NORWICH<br />
-PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">IN</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">A LETTER</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">TO A CLERICAL FRIEND.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">BY THE REV. WILLIAM HULL,<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">MINISTER OF ST. GREGORY&rsquo;S.
-NORWICH.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">NORWICH:<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRINTED BY JOHN STACY, OLD
-HAYMARKET.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">MDCCCXL.</span></p>
-<h2><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>A
-LETTER,<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">&amp;c.</span></h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">My dear Sir</span>,</p>
-<p>You have not stated the nature or the grounds of those
-<i>scruples</i> which prevent your immediate adhesion to our
-recently-formed association;&mdash;nor will I attempt to
-conjecture what they may be; especially since you avow your
-cordial approbation of every well-timed effort in defence of our
-Protestant faith and liberties against the malignant aggressions
-of Popery.&nbsp; I am not able to imagine any substantial
-objection on the part of a truly Protestant mind.</p>
-<p>Believing, as I firmly do believe, that our National Church is
-founded on truth, and that the <i>Protestant ascendancy</i>
-involves the temporal and spiritual welfare of the people of
-these realms,&mdash;believing also that the agents and emissaries
-of Popery have, for a series of years, been actively employed in
-embroiling the affairs of this kingdom, with an ultimate view to
-the restoration of the popish priesthood, together with their
-dark superstitions and inhuman despotism,&mdash;believing that
-new and unwonted energies must be called into action, in defence
-of our national religion, or that, by secret undermining and open
-assault, &ldquo;our holy and beautiful house where our fathers <a
-name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-4</span>worshipped&rdquo; will soon be levelled with the dust,
-&ldquo;and all our pleasant things laid waste,&rdquo;&mdash;I
-hail the formation of the Protestant Association as a propitious
-event, and deliberately, from the religious conviction that I am
-in the path of duty, enrol my name as a member.</p>
-<p>In stating thus freely my own forcible impressions, I disclaim
-any intention of impugning the motives of those who are not,
-equally with myself, convinced of the expediency or utility of
-this association.&nbsp; Whatever may be the ground of <i>your</i>
-hesitation, I have entire confidence in the purity and integrity
-of your principles.</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, allow me to say, with deference, that your
-indecision, in this case, does not for a moment cause me to waver
-in my own convictions, since I cannot but suspect that your
-doubts originate in an imperfect conception of the perils to
-which our religion and our country are exposed.&nbsp; Were these
-dangers of less appalling magnitude, I also should have strong
-scruples against this or any similar association.&nbsp; They are
-justifiable on no other ground than that of absolute
-necessity.&nbsp; They bring with them many incidental
-evils.&mdash;They lead into collision adverse parties, and
-produce impassioned controversies; they create evils which no man
-can be right in abetting, even indirectly, but with a view to
-ward off others which are more injurious to the public
-welfare.&nbsp; Besides which, no man of feeling would rashly
-hazard the obloquy which will be cast upon him by his opponents
-in this age of low-minded invective and scurrilous
-defamation.&nbsp; Nor is it a small evil to <a
-name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>lose the
-favourable regards of upright and conscientious persons who take
-an opposite view of the exigencies and the duties of the
-times.&nbsp; For myself, I have no sickly ambition for this
-species of martyrdom.&nbsp; I sacrifice with painful reluctance
-the esteem of the wise and the good, from whom it is my
-misfortune, at any time, to be separated by conflicting opinions
-and irreconcileable interests.&nbsp; But there are occasions
-which call for higher duties than those of conciliation or
-friendship,&mdash;when private affections must be merged in a
-holy patriotism, and when the strength of our principles must be
-proved, not by the extinction of our finer
-sensibilities,&mdash;God forbid!&mdash;but by their yielding,
-with whatever bitterness of grief, to a commanding sense of <span
-class="smcap">Duty</span>.&nbsp; I am strongly impressed with the
-conviction, that such an occasion presents itself in &ldquo;this
-day of <i>trouble</i>, and of <i>rebuke</i>, and of
-<i>blasphemy</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Far from having my own apprehensions allayed by the numbers of
-those who are insensible to the pressure of great and imminent
-danger, my fears are awakened by nothing so much as by that very
-consideration; by no other fact am I so deeply convinced of the
-extreme necessity of supporting the Protestant Association, as
-one means, among others, of diffusing information, and thus
-arousing in our countrymen a spirit of determined resistance to
-Popery, corresponding with the power and the artifice of that
-unrelenting adversary.</p>
-<p>The policy of the Papists has ever been, to the last degree,
-subtle, profound, and unscrupulous,&mdash;varying with the
-changeful phases of society, <a name="page6"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 6</span>and adapting itself with fiend-like
-sagacity to the peculiar character of individuals and of
-nations.&nbsp; But never did that policy show itself more
-triumphantly than in the late rapid march of Popery towards a
-paramount dominion in this kingdom; and in the skill, the
-cunning, the profound strategy by which it has covered its
-progress, lulling into false security the people of this betrayed
-and devoted country.</p>
-<p>I lay comparatively little stress on the number of converts
-openly professing themselves to be proselytes to Popery: the
-report may be exaggerated or it may not.&nbsp; I am not startled,
-as some are, by the increase of popish chapels, monasteries, and
-colleges.&nbsp; I fear nothing from the open teachers of popish
-doctrine, nor would I enter into a <i>fiddle faddle</i>
-controversy with a Jesuitical priesthood, who are not bound by
-the laws of honourable warfare, and who, when defeated in
-argument, always take refuge in their insolent assumption of
-<i>infallibility</i>.&nbsp; The naked dogmas of Popery carry with
-them their own refutation.&nbsp; They originated in the dark ages
-of barbarian ignorance and public confusion, when the Roman
-empire had been swept by the northern hordes, and savage warfare
-left no leisure, no disposition, to cultivate those departments
-of knowledge which expand and invigorate the human mind.&nbsp;
-Popery can never make converts in an enlightened nation like
-England, but from among the most feeble in intellect or sordid in
-character, the uninstructed vulgar, nervous women, or
-intellectual profligates.&nbsp; True, she has advocates both
-subtle and learned; <a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-7</span>but they are men who were cradled in her errors, and
-whose early discipline and youthful associations&mdash;designed
-for the suppression of the manly mind&mdash;have combined, with
-the interested motives of after-life, to fix them in her
-faith.&nbsp; I give no credit to the more notorious of popish
-agitators for sincerity in their <i>religious</i> attachment to
-the cause they serve.&nbsp; Popery is their stepping-stone to
-distinction and power.&nbsp; They laugh in their sleeve at that
-lucrative fable while they derive power, as political
-incendiaries, from the distresses and <i>superstitions</i> of an
-abject people.</p>
-<p>But while naked Popery is simply despicable for its
-absurdities or detestable for its intolerance, I fear every thing
-from the unwearied and versatile genius of <i>Romish policy</i>,
-which, without having proselyted to the popish faith Protestant
-England, has contrived, by a series of man&oelig;uvres, so to
-dislocate the frame of British society, that instead of combining
-to crush, as they might easily do, the common foe, Protestant is
-arrayed against Protestant, while the only party really to be
-dreaded by all, is looked upon without suspicion and without
-fear.&nbsp; If the present course of events is suffered to
-proceed,&mdash;while one class of Protestants is tamely looking
-on, and another section is actively and zealously employed in
-seconding the designs of the papacy,&mdash;I see no impossibility
-that is to prevent the entire power of the State from falling, at
-no distant period, into the hands of the popish faction.&nbsp;
-And what use they will make of that power is not a matter of
-difficult conjecture.&nbsp; History is <i>not</i> &ldquo;an old
-<a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-8</span>almanack,&rdquo; unless to fools and desperadoes; and
-history denounces papal intolerance in characters of horror and
-of blood.</p>
-<p>Allow me to repeat it,&mdash;for this is the very gist of the
-argument,&mdash;from naked and avowed Popery little was to be
-feared; but from Popery carrying on its wily projects through the
-means of <i>Protestant agency</i>, or, under Protestant colours,
-conducting a piratical warfare, every thing is to be
-dreaded.&nbsp; And this is exactly the way in which we are now
-assailed.</p>
-<p>If you look to the <span class="smcap">State</span>, you
-behold the ministers of a Protestant Queen, who are sworn to
-uphold the Protestant religion, bound hand and foot by popish
-demagogues and traitorous agitators, and impotent to carry any
-great measure against the assent of their masters, who can on any
-day effect their dismissal from office.&nbsp; Their policy is
-entirely popish.&nbsp; The Privy Council is thrown open to popish
-intrigue; the army is largely recruited from the popish peasantry
-of Ireland; popish bishops are appointed and salaried by
-government in the colonies; the popish faction holds the balance
-of parties in the Commons house of Parliament.</p>
-<p>The aspect of the <span class="smcap">Church</span> is
-scarcely less alarming.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Oxford Tracts&rdquo; are
-said to represent the sentiments of a considerable number of our
-devout clergy and laity.&nbsp; Of these very remarkable
-productions, enforcing the practices of a superstitious devotion,
-and denouncing, with a papistical jealousy of free enquiry, every
-manly exercise of the human mind, when religion is the <a
-name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>subject of
-investigation, it is sufficient to say that they have been read
-with grief and astonishment by many of the most sound divines of
-the Anglican Church, and hailed by papists with a sneer of
-triumph.&nbsp; For the principles of the Protestant faith, they
-are by far</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;Too ceremonious
-and traditional.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>And, if the spirit of servile superstition which some of these
-tracts breathe,&mdash;if the gloomy intolerance they
-sanction,&mdash;can be shown to harmonize with the doctrines and
-usages of our Church, <i>dissent</i> needs no better
-vindication.&nbsp; Happily these noxious principles are the
-growth of another soil; but they who embrace them are not far
-from the worst dogmas of Popery.&nbsp; They are already in the
-vestibule&mdash;a few more steps will carry them to the altar of
-that desecrated temple.&nbsp; It has been suggested, and the
-suggestion is not at variance with Christian courtesy and
-candour, that these Tracts have originated in a Jesuitical
-conspiracy to pollute the stream of orthodox truth at the
-fountain head.&nbsp; Looking only at the <i>internal</i>
-evidence, the suspicion is fully justified.&nbsp; At any rate,
-they prepare the way in a manner most satisfactory to the
-Papists, for a close alliance with the apostate church, whose
-spirit and whose errors they so nearly resemble.&nbsp; They are
-indefensible as the productions of Protestant divines.</p>
-<p>Perhaps you will pronounce this opinion arrogant and harsh,
-considering who are the writers.&nbsp; But in a case such as the
-present the public have a right <i>to judge the work itself</i>,
-<i>independently of the </i><a name="page10"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 10</span><i>writers</i>, of whose individual
-characters few readers can be supposed to know any thing.&nbsp; I
-judge as one of the public,&mdash;I look at the
-&ldquo;Tracts&rdquo; apart from their authors, and my conviction
-is, that no personal worth, no amiable qualities, no piety, no
-erudition can vindicate the estimable authors of these
-&ldquo;Tracts&rdquo; from having done, with whatever purity of
-intention, great injury to the Protestant cause.&nbsp; Here is
-Popery, indirectly at least, promoted by the professors of a
-university, whose name has hitherto been regarded as the symbol
-of pure orthodoxy.&nbsp; The times are fearful when the whisper
-goes forth, even among the most devoted friends of the
-church&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Popery at Oxford</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; From
-another section of churchmen, scarcely less danger is to be
-apprehended: they are smoothing the way for popish
-ascendancy.&nbsp; I mean those whose <i>ultra-liberalism</i>
-embraces every interest but that of their own
-communion&mdash;whose latitudinarian candour regards with
-complacency every erroneous form of doctrine or worship, as if,
-all that we tolerate we were bound in duty to approve,&mdash;who
-look with special favour on every deviation from the sound
-orthodoxy of the church,&mdash;who hail <i>every irregularity</i>
-as a commendable exercise of freedom,&mdash;and who reserve their
-censures and their frowns for those who conscientiously adhere to
-&ldquo;<i>the good old way</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; By this anomalous
-order of churchmen&mdash;the growth of modern days&mdash;all the
-assailants of the sacred cause are held in honour for their
-presumed freedom from prejudice,&mdash;all its defenders are
-condemned as mercenaries or bigots.&nbsp; Of this description of
-persons, <a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-11</span>it may be presumed, many are prepared to sit down, quite
-at ease, under the <i>mild</i> sovereignty of the papacy.&nbsp;
-Their special predilection for that <i>persecuted</i> race of
-patriots and Christians, who are agitating for an Italian despot
-and the Holy Inquisition, is only preparatory to their own sworn
-allegiance to Rome, the moment that haughty power obtains
-dominion and can command submission.&nbsp; They are waiting for
-the flood-tide.&nbsp; To say the least, the men whose liberalism
-can rejoice in Popery, can have no motives for becoming martyrs
-to Protestant truth and liberty.</p>
-<p>And now let us look at <span class="GutSmall">THE COUNTRY AT
-LARGE</span>.&nbsp; Judging from the tone of our popular
-literature, and from the spirit of the public press, which can
-only subsist by responding to the sentiments of the day, I cannot
-but think that infidelity and profligacy abound to an alarming
-extent among the reading classes.&nbsp; The Protestant church, it
-is plain, can have no hold on the disciples of Voltaire, of Hume,
-of Gibbon, of Paine, of Byron.&nbsp; She will never compromise
-her pure morality.&nbsp; In the bosom of the Mother of Harlots
-they may revel with impunity: <i>confession</i>, and
-<i>absolution</i>, and <i>extreme unction</i>, will reconcile
-them to her ascendancy.&nbsp; Among the paradoxes of the human
-mind, none is more common than the junction of profane scepticism
-with credulous superstition,&mdash;the impious reviler of the
-Bible making his last peace with heaven by taking his
-<i>viaticum</i> from a popish priest.&nbsp; Popery is the
-religion for all men who would indulge the hope of heaven, after
-doing their utmost to convert the present world <a
-name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>into a hell
-of impiety and crime.&nbsp; Already they are in political
-alliance with the man of sin.</p>
-<p>But there are others of less discreditable character than
-these, from whom the Protestant cause derives no aid in this day
-of trial.&nbsp; I mean that large class of easy, worthy,
-unsuspecting persons who have imbibed unguardedly the sentiments
-of modern liberalism, without its malignity, and in ignorance of
-its designs.&nbsp; They see Popery only in the mild and subdued
-form which it puts on while restrained by the usages and the laws
-of a Protestant community.&nbsp; They find nothing in their
-popish neighbours but what is humane and social, and, perhaps,
-intelligent, honourable, and devout; and, reasoning from what
-they see and hear themselves, they give credit to the idle tale
-that <span class="smcap">Popery</span> is <span
-class="GutSmall">REGENERATED</span>,&mdash;that the lion is
-become a lamb, and the serpent a dove,&mdash;and that, under the
-future reign of the Papacy, no longer perfidious, intolerant,
-sanguinary, no materials will be supplied for another &ldquo;Book
-of Martyrs&rdquo;&mdash;let it therefore take its unmolested
-course!</p>
-<p>Add to these, many persons of aristocratic rank and fortune,
-whose principles are wavering, and who, on supposition that the
-Church of England must fall a prey to the motley gang of modern
-revolutionists, are prepared rather to side with Popery, which is
-essentially aristocratical and monarchical, than with Protestant
-dissent, which is plebeian, levelling and democratical.&nbsp;
-They know that the pretended liberalism of Popery means nothing
-more than that &ldquo;<i>she stoops to conquer</i>;&rdquo; <a
-name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>and they will
-prefer her custody of their titles and estates, to that of a
-national convention of chartists or roundheads.</p>
-<p>And now, my dear Sir, if this is not a mistaken view of
-things, we are led to an appalling conclusion.&nbsp; If the
-popish faction, ever vigilant while others sleep, should succeed,
-by a <i>coup d&rsquo;&eacute;tat</i>, in grasping the power of
-the Executive government, they have so stealthily and
-successfully prepared for the event, that a large mass of the
-professedly Protestant community would hail their accession to
-power; other important bodies would be so far neutralized as to
-offer no resistance; while the portion of our church and nation
-who remain &ldquo;faithful among the faithless&rdquo; will have
-to maintain a conflict for truth and righteousness, under
-circumstances of fearful inequality.&nbsp; I need not suggest
-what the power of the state <i>can do</i>, when wielded by men of
-unscrupulous principles, and devoted to their cause with the zeal
-of a morbid superstition.</p>
-<p>I do not say that this catastrophe is inevitable; but it is
-not impossible.&nbsp; The mine is prepared although it may not be
-sprung: but if the match should be applied, the explosion will be
-far more tremendous, and the desolation more complete, than even
-the &ldquo;Gunpowder Treason&rdquo; would have caused, if
-Providence had not detected that most foul conspiracy.&nbsp; The
-authors of that crime would have fallen, at once, victims to
-popular indignation; but the conspirators of the present day will
-have secured themselves from instant destruction by previously
-tampering with the public mind, <a name="page14"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 14</span>and corrupting its principles.&nbsp;
-They have already carried Popish objects by Protestant agents;
-and when the real combat is at length to be fought, <i>pro aris
-et focis</i>, the dupes of their insidious policy will find
-themselves unarmed or in confusion on the field of battle.</p>
-<p>We may smile at popish miracles&mdash;the chapel at
-Loretto&mdash;the blood of St. Januarius&mdash;the healing art of
-the Abb&eacute; Paris&mdash;and all the low trumpery by which the
-pretended vicar of Jesus Christ stoops to deceive and destroy:
-but here is a master-stroke of policy, all but really miraculous,
-displaying not less of satanic skill than malice, and at sight of
-which the stoutest of British hearts may for a moment
-quail.&nbsp; The events of these times will supply our posterity
-with the most humiliating page in the history of their
-country&mdash;Great Britain, invincible in arms, disorganized and
-convulsed by the infernal arts of the Jesuits!</p>
-<p>These dangers must be met by extraordinary measures of
-defence.&nbsp; If the government did its duty, not a Jesuitical
-institute would be suffered to pollute the land: these agents and
-subjects of a foreign power would not be allowed to tamper with
-the peace and the liberties of England.&nbsp; But, deserted by
-the government, itself enslaved by an ignoble faction, and
-powerful only for mischief, we must look to our own resources,
-and, among others, to the <i>Protestant Association</i>.&nbsp; I
-see nothing in its constitution or principles to justify the
-fear, that it may not hopefully look for the blessing of Almighty
-God upon its exertions.&nbsp; It has not been instituted by a
-section or party in the church.&nbsp; It <a
-name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>overlooks
-minor distinctions, and enrols among its members persons of every
-shade of sentiment or opinion, who are willing to make a common
-cause on behalf of our venerable church and our holy
-religion.&nbsp; The moment it is made the instrument of party,
-let it fall!&nbsp; The name of the Noble Lord who is its
-president, is a pledge that its objects are truly British; and
-the clergy and laity who are its members, can have <i>united</i>
-for no purposes less holy than the preservation of that sacred
-light which Popery had extinguished&mdash;which the reformers
-re-kindled&mdash;and which, by God&rsquo;s grace, shall never
-again be put out in England.</p>
-<p>In looking at the aspect of the times, I am not sanguine in my
-hopes, nor do I yield to despondency.&nbsp; It is ours to do our
-duty, and leave the consequences with the Great Arbiter of human
-destinies.&nbsp; If we are disappointed in our efforts to save
-our country, we shall have the consolation of having made a stand
-under circumstances which required some degree of moral courage,
-and a lively faith in the God of Truth, whose servants we are,
-and in whose cause it will be no dishonour to fall.</p>
-<p>In the mean time, it is a reflection not to be evaded, however
-painful to indulge, that great national guilt could alone have
-reduced us to the embarrassments and perplexities of these
-times&mdash;times of degeneracy so rapid and infatuation so
-blind, that to this tormented kingdom may be applied the fearful
-description of the historian of the Roman empire:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-16</span>&ldquo;Labente deinde paullatim disciplin&acirc;, velut
-desidentes primo mores sequatur animo; deinde ut magis magisque
-lapsi sint; tum ire c&oelig;perint pr&aelig;cipites:&mdash;donec
-ad h&aelig;c tempora, quibus <i>nec vitia nostra</i>, <i>nec
-remedia pati possumus</i>, perventum est.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>And now, my dear sir, I have acted upon my own convictions of
-duty in thus plainly stating my motives for upholding the
-Protestant Association: judge them as severely as you
-please.&nbsp; They have at least this claim to calm
-consideration: they are the reasons of an individual whose
-personal interests and prospects would have dictated another
-course of action, but who deems it his greatest happiness to have
-his fortunes blended, &ldquo;for better or for worse,&rdquo; with
-that hallowed cause in which Latimer and Ridley and Hooper and
-Cranmer died.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Yours faithfully,</p>
-<p style="text-align: right">WILLIAM HULL.</p>
-<p><i>Eaton</i>, <i>Dec.</i> 10, 1839.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">THE END.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span
-class="GutSmall">NORWICH:</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">Printed by John Stacy,
-Gentlemen&rsquo;s</span><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">Walk, Old
-Haymarket.</span></p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REASONS FOR JOINING THE NORFOLK &amp;
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