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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63326 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63326)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Letter of Affectionate Remonstrance
-addressed to the members of the Established Church in Norwich and in
-Norfolk and occasioned by the proposed exclusive system of infant
-education, by John Alexander
-
-
-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: A Letter of affectionate remonstrance addressed to the members of the Established Church in Norwich and in Norfolk and occasioned by the proposed exclusive system of infant education
-
-
-Author: John Alexander
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2020 [eBook #63326]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LETTER OF AFFECTIONATE
-REMONSTRANCE ADDRESSED TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH IN NORWICH
-AND IN NORFOLK AND OCCASIONED BY THE PROPOSED EXCLUSIVE SYSTEM OF INFANT
-EDUCATION***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1836 J. Fletcher edition by David Price.
-
-
-
-
-
- A LETTER
- OF
- AFFECTIONATE REMONSTRANCE
- ADDRESSED
- TO THE MEMBERS
- OF
- THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH
-
-
- In Norwich and in Norfolk,
-
- AND OCCASIONED BY
-
- THE PROPOSED EXCLUSIVE SYSTEM
-
- OF
-
- INFANT EDUCATION.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY JOHN ALEXANDER,
- MINISTER OF PRINCE’S STREET CHAPEL, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- “There are still some who wish to confine the element of water to
- their own well, and
- to find the full ripe corn only in their own fields. With them, I
- confess, I have
- no sympathy.”
-
- SAMUEL WILDERSPIN.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- NORWICH:
-
- SOLD BY J. FLETCHER; JARROLD & SONS;
- AND THE OTHER BOOKSELLERS.
- 1836.
-
- _Price Fourpence_.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-IT would have been most agreeable to the author of the following letter
-to have published it anonymously; but he thought that, however
-insignificant a writer might be, it was more respectful to the parties
-addressed to affix his name to his publication. His object, in writing
-it, he can truly say, has not been to offend, but to convince; and,
-though he feels deeply on the subject of the letter, it would have been
-highly unbecoming, when addressing a respectable and influential body of
-persons, to convey his remonstrance in any other language than that of
-affectionate fidelity and firmness. He has never yet come forward, on
-any occasion, to widen the distance which may exist between any
-denominations of Christians; and he feels, increasingly, the importance
-of employing his single talent in promoting the salvation of sinners, and
-the holiness and peace of the Christian Church.
-
-_Norwich_, _March_ 28_th_, 1836.
-
-
-
-
-A LETTER.
-
-
-CHRISTIAN FRIENDS,
-
-AN advertisement has appeared in the Norwich papers of the 26th instant,
-announcing that “a public meeting of members of the Established Church
-will be held in the Hall in the Market, Norwich, on Thursday, 7th of
-April, for the purpose of forming a Society to promote the extension of
-the Infant School system in the County and City.” It is somewhat
-remarkable that a notice of such importance, and addressed to a large and
-respectable body of Christians, should have been inserted in the public
-papers _anonymously_, and that you should be called upon to assemble in
-the Hall, without knowing by whose authority such an assembly is
-convened, and without even knowing who is to preside on the occasion.
-Believing, however, that the advertisement does proceed from some
-competent authority, and perceiving, from the terms in which it is
-expressed, that all the inhabitants of this City, except “the members of
-the Established Church,” are prohibited from attending the meeting, I
-take the liberty, as one of the excluded party, of addressing you from
-the press—and my object in so doing, is to explain to you the principles
-on which the Infant schools in Norwich have hitherto been conducted, and
-to recommend those principles to your adoption at the approaching
-meeting.
-
-You are probably aware that several friends to the education of children,
-and especially to their moral and religious education, have originated,
-and, for some years, supported Infant schools in this neighbourhood, the
-principal of which are to be found in Lakenham, in Crook’s Place, and in
-the parish of St. Miles. These schools have hitherto been conducted not
-on sectarian, but on catholic and Christian principles. Children of all
-classes have been admitted as scholars, and, besides imparting to them
-the elements of general knowledge, they have been taught, according to
-their capacities, the facts and histories recorded in the Holy
-Scriptures, and the great doctrines relative to the sinfulness of man,
-and to the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, on which the majority of
-Christians are agreed. The committees of these schools are composed of
-members of the Establishment and of other Christian churches, all of
-whom, without the slightest degree of jealousy, or of difficulty, have
-cordially united in carrying into effect both the intellectual and the
-religious parts of the system. The committee of the Lakenham school,
-though it, as well as the other schools, is, I believe, chiefly supported
-by Dissenters, has, I am informed, regularly invited the respected
-clergyman of the parish to attend its meetings; and my connexion with the
-school in St. Miles’, enables me to declare, most confidently, that
-repeated efforts have been made to induce members of the Established
-church to afford greater help in directing its concerns, as well as in
-defraying its expenses. I have no doubt that in the other schools,
-equally liberal measures have been adopted.
-
-The children of these schools composed the principal part of the
-interesting group which filled the platform in St. Andrew’s Hall, on
-Tuesday the 22nd instant, when the mode of teaching in Infant Schools,
-and the kind and degree of useful knowledge acquired in them, were
-illustrated by the examination, which Mr. Wilderspin conducted, in the
-presence of perhaps two thousand spectators; and the satisfaction which
-he expressed, both publicly and privately, with the manner in which the
-schools had been trained, imperfect as they confessedly are, was in no
-small degree gratifying to those who have hitherto supported them amidst
-many difficulties and discouragements.
-
-Hitherto, the labourers in the cause of Infant education, in this city,
-have been principally Dissenters; but it is well known that they have
-always desired, and that they would have gladly received, a greater
-number of their brethren in the Establishment as coadjutors. Whatever
-degree of influence they may have had in the schools which have been
-referred to, they have never formed any rules or adopted any principles
-or plans of education, against which the most scrupulous Episcopalian
-need object; and, during the recent visit of Mr. Wilderspin, they had
-their full share in contributing to his introduction to this city, to the
-support of his Lectures, and to the attendance in St. Andrew’s Hall. The
-very first meeting that was held, to make arrangements with Mr.
-Wilderspin, was summoned by a member of the Society of Friends, who,
-without partiality, invited both Churchmen and Dissenters to meet Mr. W.
-in the Lakenham school. The Lectures, which Mr. W. delivered in the
-Guildhall, were attended by at least as many Dissenters as Episcopalians.
-When, after those lectures, a meeting of Clergy and members of the
-Establishment, to which no Dissenter was invited, resolved “that there
-should be an examination of children now receiving instruction in the
-Infant schools of this city,” the committees of those schools, whose
-concurrence with the resolution was I believe never asked, kindly
-assented to it, and suffered their teachers and children to assemble on
-the platform in St. Andrew’s Hall. The Dissenters in this city, gladly
-and gratuitously, sent forms from their chapels, on which the spectators
-might be seated. They purchased tickets, and attended the examination in
-very considerable numbers. They beheld clergymen, and other churchmen,
-beginning to manifest an interest in Infant schools, by conducting the
-little children to the platform. And after having, in these various
-ways, received assistance from your dissenting fellow citizens, as well
-as from others—after having borrowed our schools for a public
-examination—after having received our money towards defraying the
-expenses of that examination—after having told us that “such an
-exhibition of Infant schools would afford a most agreeable testimony of
-their efficacy, and be a means of enlisting both the feelings and the
-judgment of the audience in their favour”—we were not prepared to expect
-that such friendly proceedings on our part would ultimately be used
-against ourselves, and that they were to be rewarded by our utter
-exclusion from all future participation with you in the system of Infant
-education.
-
-Having thus briefly sketched the principles and the proceedings which
-have been hitherto adopted by the conductors of Infant schools in
-Norwich, I now proceed to direct your attention to the _advertisement_,
-by which this letter was more particularly occasioned. That
-advertisement calls upon you, as “members of the Established Church,” to
-form “a society to promote the extension of the Infant school system in
-the county and city”—and I understand it to mean that the members of no
-other Christian church shall be allowed to participate with you in the
-formation of the society, or in its committee, or in its operations.
-This mode of proceeding, you perceive at once, is the very reverse of
-that which has hitherto been adopted; it is contrary even to the bill
-which has been passed for the emancipation of the slaves in the West
-Indies, which provides that even black infants shall be educated “on
-liberal and enlightened principles;” and I ask you, what would have been
-your thoughts and feelings, if any other Christian, and Protestant
-church, in this city, besides your own, had ventured to suggest a society
-for the education of little children so utterly exclusive and illiberal?
-
-Whatever may have been the condition of other parts of the kingdom, this
-city has been lamentably deficient in public unity and cooperation in the
-accomplishment of that which is good—and a different state of things is
-not to be expected from the mere politician, or from any of “the men of
-the world which have their portion in this life.” It is to the religious
-only that we must look for the desired reformation; and if mankind are
-ever taught to dwell together in love, it must be by those who have
-imbibed and who exemplify the spirit of Christianity. But if the
-religious—if those who profess to have “the same mind that was in
-Christ,” refuse to associate with those who love the same Redeemer, and
-are regenerated by the same Spirit, merely because they differ respecting
-some points of discipline in the church—if they thus “set at nought their
-brother”—if they thus practically declare that “Christ is divided,” and
-so divided that his members cannot unite even in the education of
-infants—will not such conduct bring religion itself into dishonour, and
-will it not “cause the enemies of God to blaspheme?” “For if these
-things be done in the green tree, what shall be done in the dry?”
-
-Had the system of Infant schools been the offspring of the Church of
-England—could it be shewn that no infants, but such as have been baptized
-at its font, had the capacity to receive instruction—or if the Dissenters
-of this city had set an example of exclusiveness in infant education,
-then indeed some apology or even justification might be offered for the
-course which is advertised for adoption. But it is well known that the
-system of infant education is quite independent of any form of
-ecclesiastical polity. It is as much the property of the nonconformist
-as of the conformist. It has nothing to do with the peculiarities of
-either; but it asks, and has hitherto cordially received the cooperation
-of both. And the attempt to make it the appendage of a particular
-church, and “a great gulph” of separation between Christians—to enlist
-infants, just “weaned from the breast,” as parties in ecclesiastical
-strife, must be productive of a lamentable influence on the minds both of
-infants and adults, and must be highly offensive to Him who rebuked his
-disciples and said, “Suffer the little children to come unto me, and
-forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven.”
-
-The Church of England—established by the authority of parliament—having
-dissented from the pale of popery, whose intolerance and exclusiveness
-she professes to abhor—declaring that she is emphatically and eminently
-the church of Christ—and praying, as she does, not only for “all sorts
-and conditions of men,” but “more especially for the good estate of the
-catholic church, that all who profess and call themselves Christians may
-hold the faith in unity of spirit, and in the bond of peace”—ought, most
-assuredly, of all churches, to be the most comprehensive in her charity,
-and to set “all sorts and conditions of men,” and the whole “catholic
-church,” an example of meekness and conciliation. But when an
-opportunity presents itself, the most favourable for exhibiting these
-graces, without the slightest compromise of principle, are all these
-professions and all these prayers to be forgotten; and must the
-unestablished and self-supported churches of our land be the only
-sanctuaries where charity can take refuge, and the only societies whose
-members add practice to profession and to prayer? I hope not, my
-brethren; and devoutly as I am attached to the great principles of
-nonconformity, because I consider them to be in harmony with
-Christianity, yet I should strongly suspect their character if I found
-that they prevented me from cooperating with my fellow Christians in any
-“work of faith or labour of love.”
-
-If, my brethren, you seize the present occasion for the purpose of
-widening the distance between Christians of other communions and of your
-own—if you render the Infant school system, which has hitherto been made
-a bond of union, a “wall of separation” between yourselves and others,
-the sin will lie at your own door, and you alone will be answerable for
-the consequences. I know well that such an exclusive system is not the
-desire of you all. There are some among you who wish to see the Church
-of England “national” in her feelings and in her philanthropy, as well as
-in her name; and who would be glad to cooperate with other Christians in
-educating and in evangelizing the people, but who at the same time deem
-it desirable on the whole, to submit to other parties in the church whose
-patronage and support are valued. Permit me to say, however, that such
-policy is of a very questionable character; and the course of conduct,
-which your acquiescence sanctions, appears to me not likely either to
-promote the interests of true religion, or to increase any feelings of
-respect for that Establishment which you conscientiously support. For
-if, in the nineteenth century, you legislate as if you were in the dark
-ages—if you try to revive again the spirit of “the five mile act,” which
-denounced the nonconformist as “incapable of teaching any public or
-private schools”—depend upon it that you will find the current of feeling
-in the present times to be decidedly against you; and not only so, but
-you will sin against the spirit of that religion whose essential
-doctrines and whose hallowed influences ought to be far dearer to us all
-than any forms of ecclesiastical government. “For the kingdom of God is
-not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy
-Ghost.”
-
-In many parts of Great Britain, where Infant schools have been
-established, the population generally have been united in their support;
-and Mr. Wilderspin, in his book entitled “Early Discipline Illustrated,”
-furnishes many facts, in addition to his own opinion, to shew that such
-schools always succeed well when various Christians are associated in
-their committees and in their operations. “I proceeded to Durham,” says
-he in page 45, “where a committee was formed of _Churchmen and
-Dissenters_.” When speaking of Ireland, in page 76, he says, “it may be
-well to shew that wherever Infant schools have been established in that
-country, and properly conducted, they have been found to be real
-blessings _by all parties_, as the following circular will shew.” That
-“circular” was an address of the parish of Booterstown to the Rev. A.
-Sillery, from which I extract the following sentence: “That invaluable
-institution, the Infant school, which in this parish owes its origin to
-you—and the many other excellent arrangements for promoting education and
-religious instruction, bear ample testimony to the talent, zeal, and
-piety, which characterize their exemplary founder and promoter; whilst
-the impartiality with which you administered to the wants of all,
-_without distinction of sect or party_, manifest the unbiassed liberality
-of your truly Christian mind.” “I distributed many circulars and papers
-at Leicester,” says he, page 87, “but hostility was threatened from one
-of the pulpits of the Establishment;” and he then quotes what he justly
-calls “an admirable speech, by M. Babington, Esq.” a member of the Church
-of England, from which I extract the following sentences. “I proceed to
-that objection on which the greatest stress will probably be laid, that
-we are forming an unnatural and improper union of individuals of
-different denominations; and that we are undermining the influence and
-doctrines of the Church of England. _It seems to me that those who thus
-argue shew some distrust of the excellence of that church_. The
-extension of knowledge can hardly fail to be favourable to the cause of
-truth; and as a member of that church, _I am of opinion that its
-doctrines will be more fully established by such intercourse_. But it
-has ceased to be a question, whether a mixed committee can succeed
-satisfactorily in such an object; for the experiment has been tried
-extensively in other towns for nearly seven years, and has lived down the
-opposition which was first raised against it.—Really such arguments are
-too trifling even for ridicule, if it were not, as it appears to me, _a
-suicidal act_, _on the part of our church_, _to urge a system so
-repugnant to the feelings of mankind_.” After relating some interesting
-occurrences at Taunton, Mr. Wilderspin says in page 118, that “a
-committee of various denominations proceeded with great encouragement,
-_intimating_, _by their union_, _that their object was the general good_,
-_and that no party apprehended the occurrence of injury_.” Injury was
-however inflicted by unhallowed hands, and a school was set up “on
-opposite principles.” In page 202, when speaking of Joseph Lancaster,
-Mr. Wilderspin says, “with one part of his system I was always charmed,
-and, so far from the feeling diminishing, it is even now increasing in
-vigour,—_I mean its freedom from all shackles_—_its entire exemption from
-sectarianism_—_its benevolent and catholic spirit_, _which urges not
-merely to the establishment of schools_, _but_ ‘SCHOOLS FOR ALL.’ Often
-have I regretted that this is not universally discoverable. There are
-still some who wish to confine the element of water to their own well,
-and to find the full ripe corn only in their fields:—with them I confess
-I have no sympathy; _on the broadest principle I have hitherto labored_;
-_and on that_, _and that alone I propose to act through the remainder of
-my life_.” But I must conclude these testimonies, which might be greatly
-multiplied, by recording a sentence or two from page 259, respecting
-Sheffield. “Five Schools,” says Mr. Wilderspin, “containing little short
-of one thousand infants, are now in full and efficient operation. _The
-harmony of Churchmen and Dissenters in the work is here most delightful_;
-and as a specimen of the generosity displayed, it may be stated, that one
-gentleman built a school, at his own expense, which cost £1000.” These
-quotations abundantly prove that “the originator of Infant schools,” who
-has visited many of the towns in the three kingdoms, and who is perhaps
-better qualified than any other person to form an opinion as to the best
-mode of conducting them, is decidedly opposed to the exclusive system
-advertised for Norwich. He has “no sympathy” with it—and he declares, as
-the result of his extensive observation and experience, that “the union
-between Churchmen and Dissenters is delightful.”
-
-Should the decision of the approaching meeting be in opposition to this
-delightful union, and should the ministers and members of the Established
-Church determine to prevent the Dissenters from cooperating with them in
-this interesting work, the parties thus excluded will not, I trust, be
-instigated to pursue a similar course, and to form a society for
-themselves alone, to the exclusion of Churchmen. No.—Let them proceed on
-other and better principles. Let them call a public meeting of all
-denominations of Christians who can conscientiously unite in pursuing the
-same system of Infant education, which has been hitherto adopted in this
-city. Let them cordially and earnestly invite the cooperation of liberal
-and religious Churchmen. And let them determine that neither conformity
-nor nonconformity shall be taught to babes in an Infant school, but that
-they shall receive only “the sincere milk of the word, that they may grow
-thereby.” “FOR IN CHRIST JESUS NEITHER CIRCUMCISION AVAILETH ANY THING,
-NOR UNCIRCUMCISION, BUT A NEW CREATURE. AND AS MANY AS WALK ACCORDING TO
-THIS RULE, PEACE BE ON THEM, AND MERCY, AND UPON THE ISRAEL OF GOD.
-BRETHREN, THE GRACE OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST BE WITH YOUR SPIRIT. AMEN.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- Norwich:
- PRINTED BY JOSIAH FLETCHER.
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LETTER OF AFFECTIONATE
-REMONSTRANCE ADDRESSED TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH IN NORWICH
-AND IN NORFOLK AND OCCASIONED BY THE PROPOSED EXCLUSIVE SYSTEM OF INFANT
-EDUCATION***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 63326-0.txt or 63326-0.zip *******
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Letter of affectionate remonstrance
-addressed to the members of the Established Church in Norwich and in
-Norfolk and occasioned by the proposed exclusive system of infant
-education, by John Alexander
-
-
-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: A Letter of affectionate remonstrance addressed to the members of the Established Church in Norwich and in Norfolk and occasioned by the proposed exclusive system of infant education
-
-
-Author: John Alexander
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2020 [eBook #63326]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LETTER OF AFFECTIONATE
-REMONSTRANCE ADDRESSED TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH IN NORWICH
-AND IN NORFOLK AND OCCASIONED BY THE PROPOSED EXCLUSIVE SYSTEM OF INFANT
-EDUCATION***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1836 J. Fletcher edition by David
-Price.</p>
-<h1>A LETTER<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">OF</span><br />
-AFFECTIONATE REMONSTRANCE<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ADDRESSED</span><br />
-TO THE MEMBERS<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">OF</span><br />
-THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>In Norwich and in
-Norfolk,</b></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">AND
-OCCASIONED BY</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">THE PROPOSED EXCLUSIVE SYSTEM</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">OF</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>INFANT EDUCATION</b>.</p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>BY JOHN ALEXANDER,</b><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">MINISTER OF PRINCE&rsquo;S STREET CHAPEL,
-NORWICH.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;There are still some who wish to confine
-the element of water to their own well, and<br />
-to find the full ripe corn only in their own fields.&nbsp; With
-them, I confess, I have<br />
-no sympathy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Samuel
-Wilderspin</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">NORWICH:</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">SOLD BY J.
-FLETCHER; JARROLD &amp; SONS;</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">AND THE OTHER BOOKSELLERS.</span><br />
-1836.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>Price Fourpence</i>.</p>
-<h2><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-3</span>PREFACE.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> would have been most agreeable
-to the author of the following letter to have published it
-anonymously; but he thought that, however insignificant a writer
-might be, it was more respectful to the parties addressed to
-affix his name to his publication.&nbsp; His object, in writing
-it, he can truly say, has not been to offend, but to convince;
-and, though he feels deeply on the subject of the letter, it
-would have been highly unbecoming, when addressing a respectable
-and influential body of persons, to convey his remonstrance in
-any other language than that of affectionate fidelity and
-firmness.&nbsp; He has never yet come forward, on any occasion,
-to widen the distance which may exist between any denominations
-of Christians; and he feels, increasingly, the importance of
-employing his single talent in promoting the salvation of
-sinners, and the holiness and peace of the Christian Church.</p>
-<p><i>Norwich</i>, <i>March</i> 28<i>th</i>, 1836.</p>
-<h2><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>A
-LETTER.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Christian Friends</span>,</p>
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> advertisement has appeared in
-the Norwich papers of the 26th instant, announcing that &ldquo;a
-public meeting of members of the Established Church will be held
-in the Hall in the Market, Norwich, on Thursday, 7th of April,
-for the purpose of forming a Society to promote the extension of
-the Infant School system in the County and City.&rdquo;&nbsp; It
-is somewhat remarkable that a notice of such importance, and
-addressed to a large and respectable body of Christians, should
-have been inserted in the public papers <i>anonymously</i>, and
-that you should be called upon to assemble in the Hall, without
-knowing by whose authority such an assembly is convened, and
-without even knowing who is to preside on the occasion.&nbsp;
-Believing, however, that the advertisement does proceed from some
-competent authority, and perceiving, from the terms in which <a
-name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>it is
-expressed, that all the inhabitants of this City, except
-&ldquo;the members of the Established Church,&rdquo; are
-prohibited from attending the meeting, I take the liberty, as one
-of the excluded party, of addressing you from the press&mdash;and
-my object in so doing, is to explain to you the principles on
-which the Infant schools in Norwich have hitherto been conducted,
-and to recommend those principles to your adoption at the
-approaching meeting.</p>
-<p>You are probably aware that several friends to the education
-of children, and especially to their moral and religious
-education, have originated, and, for some years, supported Infant
-schools in this neighbourhood, the principal of which are to be
-found in Lakenham, in Crook&rsquo;s Place, and in the parish of
-St. Miles.&nbsp; These schools have hitherto been conducted not
-on sectarian, but on catholic and Christian principles.&nbsp;
-Children of all classes have been admitted as scholars, and,
-besides imparting to them the elements of general knowledge, they
-have been taught, according to their capacities, the facts and
-histories recorded in the Holy Scriptures, and the great
-doctrines relative to the sinfulness of man, and to the
-redemption which is in Christ Jesus, on which the majority of
-Christians are agreed.&nbsp; The committees of these schools are
-composed of members of the Establishment and of other Christian
-churches, <a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-7</span>all of whom, without the slightest degree of jealousy, or
-of difficulty, have cordially united in carrying into effect both
-the intellectual and the religious parts of the system.&nbsp; The
-committee of the Lakenham school, though it, as well as the other
-schools, is, I believe, chiefly supported by Dissenters, has, I
-am informed, regularly invited the respected clergyman of the
-parish to attend its meetings; and my connexion with the school
-in St. Miles&rsquo;, enables me to declare, most confidently,
-that repeated efforts have been made to induce members of the
-Established church to afford greater help in directing its
-concerns, as well as in defraying its expenses.&nbsp; I have no
-doubt that in the other schools, equally liberal measures have
-been adopted.</p>
-<p>The children of these schools composed the principal part of
-the interesting group which filled the platform in St.
-Andrew&rsquo;s Hall, on Tuesday the 22nd instant, when the mode
-of teaching in Infant Schools, and the kind and degree of useful
-knowledge acquired in them, were illustrated by the examination,
-which Mr. Wilderspin conducted, in the presence of perhaps two
-thousand spectators; and the satisfaction which he expressed,
-both publicly and privately, with the manner in which the schools
-had been trained, imperfect as they confessedly are, was in no
-small degree <a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-8</span>gratifying to those who have hitherto supported them
-amidst many difficulties and discouragements.</p>
-<p>Hitherto, the labourers in the cause of Infant education, in
-this city, have been principally Dissenters; but it is well known
-that they have always desired, and that they would have gladly
-received, a greater number of their brethren in the Establishment
-as coadjutors.&nbsp; Whatever degree of influence they may have
-had in the schools which have been referred to, they have never
-formed any rules or adopted any principles or plans of education,
-against which the most scrupulous Episcopalian need object; and,
-during the recent visit of Mr. Wilderspin, they had their full
-share in contributing to his introduction to this city, to the
-support of his Lectures, and to the attendance in St.
-Andrew&rsquo;s Hall.&nbsp; The very first meeting that was held,
-to make arrangements with Mr. Wilderspin, was summoned by a
-member of the Society of Friends, who, without partiality,
-invited both Churchmen and Dissenters to meet Mr. W. in the
-Lakenham school.&nbsp; The Lectures, which Mr. W. delivered in
-the Guildhall, were attended by at least as many Dissenters as
-Episcopalians.&nbsp; When, after those lectures, a meeting of
-Clergy and members of the Establishment, to which no Dissenter
-was invited, resolved &ldquo;that <a name="page9"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 9</span>there should be an examination of
-children now receiving instruction in the Infant schools of this
-city,&rdquo; the committees of those schools, whose concurrence
-with the resolution was I believe never asked, kindly assented to
-it, and suffered their teachers and children to assemble on the
-platform in St. Andrew&rsquo;s Hall.&nbsp; The Dissenters in this
-city, gladly and gratuitously, sent forms from their chapels, on
-which the spectators might be seated.&nbsp; They purchased
-tickets, and attended the examination in very considerable
-numbers.&nbsp; They beheld clergymen, and other churchmen,
-beginning to manifest an interest in Infant schools, by
-conducting the little children to the platform.&nbsp; And after
-having, in these various ways, received assistance from your
-dissenting fellow citizens, as well as from others&mdash;after
-having borrowed our schools for a public examination&mdash;after
-having received our money towards defraying the expenses of that
-examination&mdash;after having told us that &ldquo;such an
-exhibition of Infant schools would afford a most agreeable
-testimony of their efficacy, and be a means of enlisting both the
-feelings and the judgment of the audience in their
-favour&rdquo;&mdash;we were not prepared to expect that such
-friendly proceedings on our part would ultimately be used against
-ourselves, and that they were to be rewarded by <a
-name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>our utter
-exclusion from all future participation with you in the system of
-Infant education.</p>
-<p>Having thus briefly sketched the principles and the
-proceedings which have been hitherto adopted by the conductors of
-Infant schools in Norwich, I now proceed to direct your attention
-to the <i>advertisement</i>, by which this letter was more
-particularly occasioned.&nbsp; That advertisement calls upon you,
-as &ldquo;members of the Established Church,&rdquo; to form
-&ldquo;a society to promote the extension of the Infant school
-system in the county and city&rdquo;&mdash;and I understand it to
-mean that the members of no other Christian church shall be
-allowed to participate with you in the formation of the society,
-or in its committee, or in its operations.&nbsp; This mode of
-proceeding, you perceive at once, is the very reverse of that
-which has hitherto been adopted; it is contrary even to the bill
-which has been passed for the emancipation of the slaves in the
-West Indies, which provides that even black infants shall be
-educated &ldquo;on liberal and enlightened principles;&rdquo; and
-I ask you, what would have been your thoughts and feelings, if
-any other Christian, and Protestant church, in this city, besides
-your own, had ventured to suggest a society for the education of
-little children so utterly exclusive and illiberal?</p>
-<p><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-11</span>Whatever may have been the condition of other parts of
-the kingdom, this city has been lamentably deficient in public
-unity and cooperation in the accomplishment of that which is
-good&mdash;and a different state of things is not to be expected
-from the mere politician, or from any of &ldquo;the men of the
-world which have their portion in this life.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is
-to the religious only that we must look for the desired
-reformation; and if mankind are ever taught to dwell together in
-love, it must be by those who have imbibed and who exemplify the
-spirit of Christianity.&nbsp; But if the religious&mdash;if those
-who profess to have &ldquo;the same mind that was in
-Christ,&rdquo; refuse to associate with those who love the same
-Redeemer, and are regenerated by the same Spirit, merely because
-they differ respecting some points of discipline in the
-church&mdash;if they thus &ldquo;set at nought their
-brother&rdquo;&mdash;if they thus practically declare that
-&ldquo;Christ is divided,&rdquo; and so divided that his members
-cannot unite even in the education of infants&mdash;will not such
-conduct bring religion itself into dishonour, and will it not
-&ldquo;cause the enemies of God to blaspheme?&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;For if these things be done in the green tree, what shall
-be done in the dry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Had the system of Infant schools been the offspring of the
-Church of England&mdash;could it <a name="page12"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 12</span>be shewn that no infants, but such as
-have been baptized at its font, had the capacity to receive
-instruction&mdash;or if the Dissenters of this city had set an
-example of exclusiveness in infant education, then indeed some
-apology or even justification might be offered for the course
-which is advertised for adoption.&nbsp; But it is well known that
-the system of infant education is quite independent of any form
-of ecclesiastical polity.&nbsp; It is as much the property of the
-nonconformist as of the conformist.&nbsp; It has nothing to do
-with the peculiarities of either; but it asks, and has hitherto
-cordially received the cooperation of both.&nbsp; And the attempt
-to make it the appendage of a particular church, and &ldquo;a
-great gulph&rdquo; of separation between Christians&mdash;to
-enlist infants, just &ldquo;weaned from the breast,&rdquo; as
-parties in ecclesiastical strife, must be productive of a
-lamentable influence on the minds both of infants and adults, and
-must be highly offensive to Him who rebuked his disciples and
-said, &ldquo;Suffer the little children to come unto me, and
-forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Church of England&mdash;established by the authority of
-parliament&mdash;having dissented from the pale of popery, whose
-intolerance and exclusiveness she professes to
-abhor&mdash;declaring that she is emphatically and eminently the
-church of <a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-13</span>Christ&mdash;and praying, as she does, not only for
-&ldquo;all sorts and conditions of men,&rdquo; but &ldquo;more
-especially for the good estate of the catholic church, that all
-who profess and call themselves Christians may hold the faith in
-unity of spirit, and in the bond of peace&rdquo;&mdash;ought,
-most assuredly, of all churches, to be the most comprehensive in
-her charity, and to set &ldquo;all sorts and conditions of
-men,&rdquo; and the whole &ldquo;catholic church,&rdquo; an
-example of meekness and conciliation.&nbsp; But when an
-opportunity presents itself, the most favourable for exhibiting
-these graces, without the slightest compromise of principle, are
-all these professions and all these prayers to be forgotten; and
-must the unestablished and self-supported churches of our land be
-the only sanctuaries where charity can take refuge, and the only
-societies whose members add practice to profession and to
-prayer?&nbsp; I hope not, my brethren; and devoutly as I am
-attached to the great principles of nonconformity, because I
-consider them to be in harmony with Christianity, yet I should
-strongly suspect their character if I found that they prevented
-me from cooperating with my fellow Christians in any &ldquo;work
-of faith or labour of love.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>If, my brethren, you seize the present occasion for the
-purpose of widening the distance between <a
-name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>Christians of
-other communions and of your own&mdash;if you render the Infant
-school system, which has hitherto been made a bond of union, a
-&ldquo;wall of separation&rdquo; between yourselves and others,
-the sin will lie at your own door, and you alone will be
-answerable for the consequences.&nbsp; I know well that such an
-exclusive system is not the desire of you all.&nbsp; There are
-some among you who wish to see the Church of England
-&ldquo;national&rdquo; in her feelings and in her philanthropy,
-as well as in her name; and who would be glad to cooperate with
-other Christians in educating and in evangelizing the people, but
-who at the same time deem it desirable on the whole, to submit to
-other parties in the church whose patronage and support are
-valued.&nbsp; Permit me to say, however, that such policy is of a
-very questionable character; and the course of conduct, which
-your acquiescence sanctions, appears to me not likely either to
-promote the interests of true religion, or to increase any
-feelings of respect for that Establishment which you
-conscientiously support.&nbsp; For if, in the nineteenth century,
-you legislate as if you were in the dark ages&mdash;if you try to
-revive again the spirit of &ldquo;the five mile act,&rdquo; which
-denounced the nonconformist as &ldquo;incapable of teaching any
-public or private schools&rdquo;&mdash;depend upon it that you
-will find the current of feeling <a name="page15"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 15</span>in the present times to be decidedly
-against you; and not only so, but you will sin against the spirit
-of that religion whose essential doctrines and whose hallowed
-influences ought to be far dearer to us all than any forms of
-ecclesiastical government.&nbsp; &ldquo;For the kingdom of God is
-not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the
-Holy Ghost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In many parts of Great Britain, where Infant schools have been
-established, the population generally have been united in their
-support; and Mr. Wilderspin, in his book entitled &ldquo;Early
-Discipline Illustrated,&rdquo; furnishes many facts, in addition
-to his own opinion, to shew that such schools always succeed well
-when various Christians are associated in their committees and in
-their operations.&nbsp; &ldquo;I proceeded to Durham,&rdquo; says
-he in page 45, &ldquo;where a committee was formed of
-<i>Churchmen and Dissenters</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; When speaking of
-Ireland, in page 76, he says, &ldquo;it may be well to shew that
-wherever Infant schools have been established in that country,
-and properly conducted, they have been found to be real blessings
-<i>by all parties</i>, as the following circular will
-shew.&rdquo;&nbsp; That &ldquo;circular&rdquo; was an address of
-the parish of Booterstown to the Rev. A. Sillery, from which I
-extract the following sentence: &ldquo;That invaluable
-institution, the Infant school, which in this <a
-name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>parish owes
-its origin to you&mdash;and the many other excellent arrangements
-for promoting education and religious instruction, bear ample
-testimony to the talent, zeal, and piety, which characterize
-their exemplary founder and promoter; whilst the impartiality
-with which you administered to the wants of all, <i>without
-distinction of sect or party</i>, manifest the unbiassed
-liberality of your truly Christian mind.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I
-distributed many circulars and papers at Leicester,&rdquo; says
-he, page 87, &ldquo;but hostility was threatened from one of the
-pulpits of the Establishment;&rdquo; and he then quotes what he
-justly calls &ldquo;an admirable speech, by M. Babington,
-Esq.&rdquo; a member of the Church of England, from which I
-extract the following sentences.&nbsp; &ldquo;I proceed to that
-objection on which the greatest stress will probably be laid,
-that we are forming an unnatural and improper union of
-individuals of different denominations; and that we are
-undermining the influence and doctrines of the Church of
-England.&nbsp; <i>It seems to me that those who thus argue shew
-some distrust of the excellence of that church</i>.&nbsp; The
-extension of knowledge can hardly fail to be favourable to the
-cause of truth; and as a member of that church, <i>I am of
-opinion that its doctrines will be more fully established by such
-intercourse</i>.&nbsp; But it has ceased to be a question,
-whether a mixed committee can <a name="page17"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 17</span>succeed satisfactorily in such an
-object; for the experiment has been tried extensively in other
-towns for nearly seven years, and has lived down the opposition
-which was first raised against it.&mdash;Really such arguments
-are too trifling even for ridicule, if it were not, as it appears
-to me, <i>a suicidal act</i>, <i>on the part of our church</i>,
-<i>to urge a system so repugnant to the feelings of
-mankind</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; After relating some interesting
-occurrences at Taunton, Mr. Wilderspin says in page 118, that
-&ldquo;a committee of various denominations proceeded with great
-encouragement, <i>intimating</i>, <i>by their union</i>, <i>that
-their object was the general good</i>, <i>and that no party
-apprehended the occurrence of injury</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Injury was
-however inflicted by unhallowed hands, and a school was set up
-&ldquo;on opposite principles.&rdquo;&nbsp; In page 202, when
-speaking of Joseph Lancaster, Mr. Wilderspin says, &ldquo;with
-one part of his system I was always charmed, and, so far from the
-feeling diminishing, it is even now increasing in
-vigour,&mdash;<i>I mean its freedom from all
-shackles</i>&mdash;<i>its entire exemption from
-sectarianism</i>&mdash;<i>its benevolent and catholic spirit</i>,
-<i>which urges not merely to the establishment of schools</i>,
-<i>but</i> &lsquo;<span class="GutSmall">SCHOOLS FOR
-ALL</span>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Often have I regretted that this is not
-universally discoverable.&nbsp; There are still some who wish to
-confine the element of water to their own well, and to find the
-full ripe corn only <a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-18</span>in their fields:&mdash;with them I confess I have no
-sympathy; <i>on the broadest principle I have hitherto
-labored</i>; <i>and on that</i>, <i>and that alone I propose to
-act through the remainder of my life</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; But I must
-conclude these testimonies, which might be greatly multiplied, by
-recording a sentence or two from page 259, respecting
-Sheffield.&nbsp; &ldquo;Five Schools,&rdquo; says Mr. Wilderspin,
-&ldquo;containing little short of one thousand infants, are now
-in full and efficient operation.&nbsp; <i>The harmony of
-Churchmen and Dissenters in the work is here most delightful</i>;
-and as a specimen of the generosity displayed, it may be stated,
-that one gentleman built a school, at his own expense, which cost
-&pound;1000.&rdquo;&nbsp; These quotations abundantly prove that
-&ldquo;the originator of Infant schools,&rdquo; who has visited
-many of the towns in the three kingdoms, and who is perhaps
-better qualified than any other person to form an opinion as to
-the best mode of conducting them, is decidedly opposed to the
-exclusive system advertised for Norwich.&nbsp; He has &ldquo;no
-sympathy&rdquo; with it&mdash;and he declares, as the result of
-his extensive observation and experience, that &ldquo;the union
-between Churchmen and Dissenters is delightful.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Should the decision of the approaching meeting be in
-opposition to this delightful union, and should the ministers and
-members of the Established <a name="page19"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 19</span>Church determine to prevent the
-Dissenters from cooperating with them in this interesting work,
-the parties thus excluded will not, I trust, be instigated to
-pursue a similar course, and to form a society for themselves
-alone, to the exclusion of Churchmen.&nbsp; No.&mdash;Let them
-proceed on other and better principles.&nbsp; Let them call a
-public meeting of all denominations of Christians who can
-conscientiously unite in pursuing the same system of Infant
-education, which has been hitherto adopted in this city.&nbsp;
-Let them cordially and earnestly invite the cooperation of
-liberal and religious Churchmen.&nbsp; And let them determine
-that neither conformity nor nonconformity shall be taught to
-babes in an Infant school, but that they shall receive only
-&ldquo;the sincere milk of the word, that they may grow
-thereby.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;<span class="smcap">For in Christ
-Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing</span>, <span
-class="smcap">nor uncircumcision</span>, <span class="smcap">but
-a new creature</span>.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">And as many as
-walk according to this rule</span>, <span class="smcap">peace be
-on them,</span> <span class="smcap">and mercy</span>, <span
-class="smcap">and upon the Israel of God</span>.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">Brethren</span>, <span class="smcap">the grace of
-our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit</span>.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">Amen</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="page20"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 20</span><span
-class="GutSmall"><b>Norwich</b></span><span
-class="GutSmall">:</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRINTED BY JOSIAH FLETCHER.</span></p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LETTER OF AFFECTIONATE
-REMONSTRANCE ADDRESSED TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH IN NORWICH
-AND IN NORFOLK AND OCCASIONED BY THE PROPOSED EXCLUSIVE SYSTEM OF INFANT
-EDUCATION***
-
-
-***** This file should be named 63326-h.htm or 63326-h.zip******
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