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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64878 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64878)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Truth about Church Extension, by Anonymous
-
-
-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: The Truth about Church Extension
- An exposure of certain fallacies and misstatements contained in the census reports
-
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-
-
-Release Date: March 20, 2021 [eBook #64878]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TRUTH ABOUT CHURCH EXTENSION***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1857 William Skeffington edition by David Price.
-Many thanks to the British Library for making their copy available.
-
-
-
-
-
- The Truth about Church Extension:
-
-
- AN EXPOSURE
- OF CERTAIN
- FALLACIES AND MISSTATEMENTS
- CONTAINED
- IN THE CENSUS REPORTS
- ON
- RELIGIOUS WORSHIP AND EDUCATION.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- WILLIAM SKEFFINGTON, 163, PICCADILLY.
-
- 1857.
-
- PRICE ONE SHILLING.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The entire absence of criticism on the decennial tables contained in the
-report of Mr. Horace Mann on the Census of Religious Worship has filled
-the writer with equal surprise and concern. For a period of nearly three
-years, hardly a week has passed without some injurious step on the part
-of the Government, some disastrous admission on the part of a friend,
-some daring rhodomontade on the part of a foe—all of which have owed
-their origin more or less directly to the false and mistaken view of the
-Church’s position engendered by the still more erroneous and misleading
-statistics so widely disseminated by the Census report. Nor is there any
-prospect that the evil will diminish—at least, until the next Census. On
-the contrary, the idea that the Church has proved a failure seems to gain
-strength, and the policy of friends and foes alike appears to shape
-itself with special reference to that assumed fact.
-
-The writer does not wish to obtrude upon the public his own calculations
-as if they were absolutely correct; but he is satisfied that the account
-he has given of the _relative_ growth of Church and Dissent during the
-past half century is, if anything, an understatement so far as the former
-is concerned. Had Mr. Bright’s very remarkable return fallen sooner in
-his way he would probably have much modified his estimate relating to
-Dissent; but, as the case was already sufficiently strong for the main
-object he had in view, namely, to demonstrate the monstrous fallacy of
-the official report, he did not think it worth while to alter his
-calculations. His own conviction, however, is that the gross number of
-additional sittings supplied by Dissent is much more accurately
-represented by the table given in page 24 than by that in page 20.
-
-The Census report on Education offers a tempting subject for remark; but
-the writer has not thought it necessary to go further into the matter
-than he has done in the note on page 27. For the reasons there stated,
-it will appear that there are no grounds whatever for asserting that the
-parents of this country neglect to provide their children with the means
-of instruction any more than they neglect to provide them with food or
-clothing. In every class which by any stretch of the term can be called
-“respectable,” parents do supply their children with what they consider a
-sufficient education; and their idea of what is sufficient is, after all,
-not much lower, everything considered, than prevails amongst the middle
-classes, who, in a country like this, must always fix the standard. The
-result of the Census goes to show that the Legislature has adopted the
-right course—that the way to obtain as large a number of attendants at
-school as possible is to subsidise, not to supersede, private exertion;
-and that it is even possible to fix the rate of subsidy too high; for all
-experience proves that parents will not enforce regular attendance,
-unless they feel that if their children stay away from school they will
-not receive something for which they have paid. Whether the Government
-ought to hold its hand until children of a certain class are brought to
-the prison schoolmaster is quite another and a different question; for it
-is clear that under any circumstances those unfortunates must be treated
-in an exceptional manner. Even if we had a national system, children
-belonging to “the dangerous classes” would not be admitted to the common
-schools; for no respectable person, however humble, would allow his sons
-or his daughters to associate with the offspring of habitual thieves or
-beggars.
-
-It is proper to add, in order to account for certain local illustrations,
-which it has been thought advisable to retain, that the substance of the
-following pages first appeared in a somewhat different form in the
-_Nottingham Journal_.
-
-_December_, 1856.
-
-
-
-
-THE TRUTH, &c.
-
-
-AMONG the many changes which the present age has witnessed, none are more
-remarkable than those we have seen take place in the public mind with
-regard to the Church of this country.
-
-Thirty or forty years ago, the popular estimate of what was called the
-Established Religion was as low as can well be conceived. The laity, for
-the most part, regarded Churchmanship as a mere empty tradition, or at
-best as a political symbol, and an excuse for lusty choruses in praise of
-“a jolly full bottle.” The Clergy, unless they were grievously maligned,
-had but two objects in life—the acquirement of “fat livings,” and the
-enjoyment of amusements not now considered clerical. Of course, there
-never was a time when there were not hundreds of exemplary persons in
-holy orders; but that the prevailing impression was wholly without
-foundation it would take a bold man to affirm. The worldliness of the
-Clergy of the eighteenth century has even left its mark on the language.
-The word “curate” literally means a “curé”—a person charged with the cure
-of souls, one that has the spiritual care of a parish. Such is its
-meaning in the Prayer Book, and such was its signification down to the
-last “Review”; but now it has come to mean only a hireling, or an
-assistant. In like manner, “Parson” was the most honourable title a
-parochial clergyman could possess; and that, no doubt, continued to be
-the case so late as the time of George Herbert. The beneficed Clergy
-under the Hanoverian dynasty, however, so conducted themselves, that the
-term is now never used, except by those who wish to speak disrespectfully
-of the profession, or of some individual belonging to it.
-
-It would be wrong, perhaps, to hold the Clergy entirely responsible for
-the sad phase through which we have lately passed. That they were what
-they were was “more their misfortune than their fault.” At the worst,
-they were probably better than the rest of the community, and, save when
-by a persecution to the death the Church is forced into a position of
-direct antagonism to the world, it would be idle to expect it to be much
-in advance of the age. The short reign of the Puritans so confounded
-religion with cant that at the Restoration it had come to be thought a
-sort of virtue to be ungodly. The Church set itself manfully to resist
-the evil, and no doubt it would soon have been successful; but,
-unfortunately, the Nonjuring difficulty supervened. Now, it is the
-misery of a crisis of that description, that the community in which it
-occurs suffers every way. The men whose labours it actually loses are
-necessarily amongst the most conscientious, and, therefore, the most
-valuable, of its ministers; and those who stay behind have their
-usefulness impaired by the stigma which is cast upon their motives. For,
-if there are two men under precisely the same obligations, and one of
-them feels compelled for conscience’ sake to surrender all his worldly
-prospects, people will never be persuaded that the other, who does not
-follow the same example, has not sacrificed his convictions to his
-material interests. We have seen many instances in our own time in which
-this has occurred. Even at this moment many good Churchmen are
-reproached with a love of filthy lucre because they do not follow a few
-who once thought with them, but who have apostatized from the faith of
-their fathers; whereas, if there be a man in the world to whom secession
-under any pretext is impossible it is the consistent Anglican—the
-distinguishing tenet of whose school is the spiritual equality of
-bishops, and the consequent indefeasible authority of that episcopal line
-which has from time immemorial been in possession of a given country. In
-England, the existing Romanist succession was avowedly created by a Papal
-bull in the year 1850; and it is, therefore, on the face of it, an
-intrusion, and a usurpation of the rights which are inherent in the
-representatives of St. Austin and St. Anselm. Yet, because a few
-Anglicans have become Ultramontanists—a step which involved to them as
-distinct a giving up of all their former principles as it would have been
-for a Catholic to become a Socinian—the “High Church” clergy are reviled
-for retaining their benefices, and declining to follow the footsteps of a
-Faber and a Newman! In like manner, we may be sure that those Clergymen
-who conscientiously felt that they might withdraw their allegiance from
-King James, reaped a loss of influence for good, even among the partisans
-of King William. Close upon the Nonjuring troubles followed the
-scandalous attempt of the Hanoverian Government to undermine the faith of
-the Church by means of improper episcopal appointments, its resistance by
-the inferior clergy, and the consequent suppression of Convocation. The
-mischief to which this most unconstitutional step has given rise can
-hardly be overrated. We can scarcely conceive the confusion and
-corruption which would creep into the body politic if Parliament were
-forcibly silenced for a whole century; and there is no reason why the
-English Church should prosper without representative institutions and
-free speech any more than the English nation. Under any circumstances,
-the Church, deprived of her parliament, must have greatly suffered; much
-more so in the face of those vast changes which have come about in the
-extent and distribution of the population. The machinery of the existing
-Church Establishment was designed for a population of five or six million
-souls. By 1821 the inhabitants of this country had increased to twelve
-millions. A new population exceeding the old one had thus been
-introduced, for which the Church as a body had no means of providing a
-single additional bishop or a single new sitting. Had the increase been
-evenly spread over the country the mischief would not have been so great;
-but, unfortunately, the new population chose all kinds of out-of-the-way
-places in which to settle. A rural parish suddenly found itself a
-metropolis; and a district, once traversed only by the shepherd or the
-ploughboy, became the teeming hive of manufacturing industry. In such a
-state of things the parochial system—perfect as it is where the Church
-has wholly subdued a country—miserably broke down. A signal failure was
-in fact inevitable; for what were the solitary parish priests of
-Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds, Bradford, St. Pancras, St. Marylebone,
-Islington, or Lambeth, amongst so many! For all practical purposes it
-may be asserted that at least half of the new population were as much
-beyond the reach of the Church of England as if they had settled in the
-woods of Canada or on the plains of Hindostan. Year after year the evil
-went on increasing, until at last the number of Englishmen who did not
-belong to the Established Church became so great that a Parliament of
-Churchmen were obliged to surrender their exclusive right of legislation
-and government. The prospects of the Church were at this time truly
-deplorable. Its very existence as an establishment was doubtful. The
-Whig Premier actually bade the bishops “set their house in order;” and
-the experiment of confiscation was begun. Humanly speaking it was only
-the difficulty of disposing of the plunder that saved the Church of these
-realms.
-
-The hour of danger, however, was not of long duration. A new school of
-theologians arose, who boldly asserted that the Church was not a creature
-of the State, to be dealt with at the pleasure or convenience of
-politicians, but a Divine institution, with laws, privileges, and a
-polity of its own; and that the duty of extending its usefulness belonged
-to individual exertions not less than to the Legislature. The effect of
-this new teaching, as it then appeared, was electric. Churchmen no
-longer sat with hands folded in blank despair, or amused themselves with
-irrefutable demonstrations that Parliament ought to do something. They
-set to work themselves. Sometimes it was the clergy who stimulated the
-laity; sometimes it was the laity who applied a gentle compulsion to the
-clergy. Churches, parsonages, and schools began to spring up in every
-direction, with a rapidity that would have borne comparison with the
-palmiest days of the mediæval builders. The ancient indigenous
-architecture of the country, and its cognate arts, were in a manner
-rediscovered, and were brought to a perfection scarcely less than that
-attained by the greatest masters of antiquity. Indeed, the spread of
-this new science of ecclesiology has been not the least marvel of the
-present century. It has pervaded every part of the community; it has
-slain outright the bastard classicalism of the Age of Pigtail; and it has
-reproduced itself in the Puginism of the Romanists, and the Ruskinism of
-Dissent. It has even crossed the Channel, and appeared in the very
-centre of European taste—in Paris itself—the fount and origin of the
-whole vast movement being the work of church-building and restoration in
-this country, which has proved a school of art more effective, because on
-an infinitely larger scale, than any which modern times have witnessed.
-
-All this has been, moreover, but the symbol of a greater and yet more
-gratifying change—the gradual rehabilitation of the Church’s character.
-Never since the Reformation did it occupy so high a position as that to
-which it had attained two or three years ago. Old scandals, and old
-epithets of abuse founded upon them, had alike disappeared. We read of
-Parson Trulliber with much the same feeling of incredulous amazement as
-we perused the accounts of Professor Owen’s extinct monsters; and we
-should have looked upon the person who indulged in the sort of
-Billingsgate which was common half a century ago as if another Rip Van
-Winkle had stood before us. The ingenious calculations in which
-demagogues of the last generation used to indulge, with regard to what
-might be done with the ecclesiastical revenues, seemed like prospectuses
-of the South Sea Company. The very Horsmans, like their Puritan
-prototypes who made war on the King in the King’s name, had begun to
-profess a desire only to increase the Church’s efficiency. The
-Anti-State-Church Society itself, borne away by the spirit of the times,
-adopted a clumsy euphemism for its old out-spoken title. It no longer
-sought to destroy “the State Church”—its object was the “Liberation of
-Religion from State Patronage and Control.”
-
-Once more, alas! the sky has changed. What the public now think of the
-Church, it would be difficult exactly to say; but that a strong re-action
-has set in, it would be vain to deny. There seems to be an impression
-abroad that the Church has been taking credit for far more than she was
-entitled to; that she has had a last trial allowed her, whether she would
-regain her place as the Church of the people; that her day of grace has
-passed, and that she has been found wanting. Political Dissent, which
-had fallen into a state of such ludicrous obscurity, has suddenly
-revived, and in a Parliament elected under Lord Derby has achieved what
-it could never do even in the worst times which followed the passing of
-the Reform Bill—it has effected a lodgment in the Universities. It has
-several times carried resolutions adverse to Churchrates. The demands of
-Mr. Pellatt are now granted almost as a matter of course; and not only
-so, but the very Government goes out of its way to flatter the prejudices
-of the Nonconformist. Thus, the Solicitor-General brings in a
-Testamentary Jurisdiction Bill, which would saddle the country with an
-enormous annual charge in the shape of compensations; the sole object
-being to afford Dissenters the gratification of reading at the
-commencement of their probates the words “Victoria, by the Grace of God,
-Queen,” instead of “John Bird, by Divine Providence, Archbishop.” Some
-of the concessions which have been made to “the rights of conscience” are
-absolutely ludicrous. For example, young ladies and gentlemen of the
-different denominations complain that ill-natured people call their
-weddings “workhouse marriages.” A remedy is instantly found, at the risk
-of establishing a Gretna Green in every Dissenting place of worship. In
-a word, the Legislature seems to say to Dissent “Ask and have.” Very
-different is the tone both of Parliament and of the Executive, towards
-the Church. The prayer of the Convocation for permission to reform its
-constitution is, notwithstanding the plighted faith of the Crown,
-peremptorily refused. The Royal Letters on behalf of the Church
-Societies are stopped; the bill drawn up by the bishops to enfranchise
-the Colonial Church is rejected. It is perhaps hardly worth while to
-speak of various shabby acts with regard to money votes, such as the
-withdrawal of the grants to the Bishop of New Zealand and to the Scottish
-Church; but the animus which dictated them is only too obvious. After
-all, however, the saddest evidence that the public feeling has undergone
-a great change is to be found in the Education Bill of Sir John
-Pakington. Every one knows how fast the Church was becoming, in fact,
-what she is in theory, the instructress of the people; and till lately no
-Churchman could have been found to suggest any material alteration in a
-system which was bringing forth such gratifying fruits. Suddenly,
-however, Sir John is seized with a panic. The task appears in his eyes
-to be utterly hopeless, and he brings in a bill which would have
-destroyed the distinctive character of Church schools, and would have
-deprived Churchmen of all share (save that of paying school taxes) in the
-education of every district in which they could not command an absolute
-majority!
-
-That the Church is inefficient, every one now seems to take for
-granted—the only matter in dispute is, what has been the cause? Of
-course the fault is always laid at the door of the Clergy; but it is
-amusing to observe the perplexity which appears to be felt as to the
-manner in which the indictment against them should be framed. Sometimes
-the charge is that they cannot preach—just as if orators were a whit more
-plentiful at the bar or in the senate, on the stage or in the Dissenting
-pulpit. Sometimes we are told that the Clergy are not abler men because
-they are not better paid. We have actually lived to see it stated by the
-_Times_, that the Clergy of the Church of England—the men who a few short
-years ago were reported to be rolling in wealth—are worse rewarded in
-this life than persons belonging to any other profession whatever!
-
-The object of the present essay is to strike at the very first step in
-the _sorites_—to show that the Church, since the great revival, so far
-from having proved a failure, has proved herself more than equal to the
-situation; and finally to point out how grievously both the public and
-the Legislature have been deceived by the data which have been published
-for their guidance.
-
-It need hardly be observed that the unfavourable impression to which
-allusion has been made has been entirely created by Mr. Horace Mann’s
-Report on the Census of Religious Worship. That report has been assailed
-by the Bishop of Oxford, and other right reverend prelates; but their
-strictures, it is respectfully submitted, do not go quite to the point.
-It is not the account given of the present relative positions of Church
-and Dissent which has done the mischief. Every one knew that the Church
-was strongest in the country and Dissent in the towns; and seeing that
-the rural and the urban population were about equal, the public could
-scarcely be surprised to learn that the two bodies were also of nearly
-equal strength. According to the census, the Church had in 1851,
-5,317,915 sittings, and the Dissenters 4,894,648; but the Bishop of
-Oxford has shown that there are good reasons for believing that the
-Church sittings have been unfairly diminished, while those belonging to
-Dissenters have been much exaggerated. On that point the writer will
-only add that the number of sittings assigned to the Churches in the
-tables relating to one large town, the only one he has had occasion to
-verify, is not above three-fourths of the real amount.
-
-The total number of attendants at Church on the census morning was
-2,541,244, against 2,106,238 in the meeting-houses. Now, without
-pressing any objection that might be made to these figures on the score
-of dishonesty in the returns, it must be obvious that they do not fairly
-represent the average attendance. In the first place, such institutions
-as the colleges at the Universities are not taken into account. In the
-next place, no reference is made to such places as the workhouses, in
-most of which service is performed by a chaplain, and from which the
-dissenting inmates are allowed to attend the meeting-houses of their
-respective communities. Thirdly, the weather on the census Sunday was
-very inclement, and while the attendance generally would, no doubt, be
-less than an average, the effect would, beyond all controversy, be much
-more felt in Churches than in meeting-houses. The strength of the
-Church, it has already been said, is in the country, and it is quite a
-different thing in bad weather to walk a few hundred yards along a
-well-paved street, and to trudge a mile down a muddy lane. Fourthly, the
-attendants at all the morning masses in Roman Catholic chapels are
-returned, whereas it is well known that devout persons of that persuasion
-often “assist” at more than one mass on the same morning. Those persons
-have thus been counted twice over. Lastly, the day on which the census
-was taken was Mid-Lent Sunday, on which rustics in the northern counties
-are accustomed to pay visits to their friends instead of attending Divine
-service. That, in its degree, would also act unfavourably on the
-church-going of the census Sunday. If, therefore, we said that on
-ordinary occasions there were three quarters of a million more people at
-church on Sunday mornings in 1851 than in all the dissenting places of
-worship put together, we should probably not be overstating the case; and
-there would certainly be nothing in a state of things like that to
-account for any alteration in the public sentiment.
-
-When, however, we come to look at the statements made as to the relative
-_progress_ of the two bodies during the last half century our wonder at
-the change which has taken place in public opinion ceases. The following
-results, compiled from Tables 5 and 13 of Mr. Mann’s Report, will exhibit
-at a glance the amount of population and the number of sittings in 1801,
-as well as the subsequent increase at each decennial period since then:—
-
- Population. Church Dissenting Total
- Sittings. Sittings. Sittings.
-1801 8,892,536 4,289,883 881,240 5,171,123
-The subsequent increase was as follows:—
-1811 1,271,720 24,305 328,720 353,225
-1821 1,835,980 42,978 527,160 570,138
-1831 1,896,561 124,525 788,080 912,605
-1841 2,017,351 293,945 1,253,600 1,547,545
-1851 2,013,461 542,079 1,115,848 1,657,927
-Total 9,035,073 1,028,032 4,013,408 5,041,440
-Increase
-Total 17,927,609 5,317,915 4,894,648 10,212,562
-
-So that during the last ten years, while the Church was supposed to be
-making unheard-of exertions, the amount of new accommodation she really
-provided was not one-half of that supplied by the dissenting bodies! The
-Wesleyan sects alone provided no less than 630,498 sittings, against the
-542,079 found by the Church! The case may be made yet more clear from
-the following table, which exhibits the number of sittings provided at
-each period for every thousand of the population:—
-
- Church. Dissent. Total.
-1801 482 99 581
-1811 424 120 544
-1821 363 145 508
-1831 323 181 504
-1841 300 238 538
-1851 297 273 570
-
-So that while the Church has lost 185 sittings, Dissent has gained 174.
-In other words, the Church has experienced a total relative loss of 359
-sittings per thousand of the population during the last 50 years. Even
-since 1831 her loss, as compared with Dissent, has not been less than 118
-per thousand!
-
-Comment on this would be superfluous. If such be really the state of the
-case it would be idle to waste time in wrangling over inaccuracies in the
-returns. If Dissent is gaining on the Church at the rate of 50,000,
-sittings per year, whatever may be wrong in the present totals must soon
-be corrected; and the Church must make up its mind, ere long, to sink
-down into a minority.
-
-The only question is, does the Census Report state the truth? _It does
-not_. On the contrary, it states the very reverse of the truth. It is
-not merely inaccurate, but altogether false. Mr. Mann’s figures—although
-they have hitherto been accepted on all sides as if they were “proofs of
-Holy Writ”—rest upon no positive data whatever. So far, indeed, are they
-from possessing any claim upon the confidence of the public, the smallest
-effort of common sense, the most transient recollection of principles
-laid down by the immortal Cocker, would have warned Mr. Mann that the
-process he has adopted could not possibly lead to a correct result.
-
-It appears that as soon as the 30,610 districts into which the country
-was divided for the purposes of the census had been marked out, the
-enumerator in each was directed to return to the head office a list of
-all the places of worship within his jurisdiction. The result was to
-obtain information respecting 14,077 churches or chapels, and 20,390
-dissenting meetings. Circulars were then sent out to the clergy, the
-ministers, or other official persons, requesting to know, amongst other
-things, the number of attendants on Sunday, the 30th of March, 1851, the
-number of sittings, and the date at which the building was erected, or
-first appropriated to religious worship (if since 1801). The report adds
-that—“When delivering the schedules to the proper parties, the
-enumerators told them it was not compulsory upon them to reply to the
-inquiries; but that their compliance with the invitation was entirely
-left to their own sense of the importance and the value to the public of
-the information sought.” As might have been expected there were very
-many instances in which no returns were made. These instances were
-“principally places of worship in connexion with the Church of
-England,—several of the clergy having entertained some scruples about
-complying with an invitation not proceeding from episcopal authority. In
-all such cases, a second application was made direct from the
-Census-office, and this generally was favoured by a courteous return of
-the particulars desired. The few remaining cases were remitted to the
-registrar, who either got the necessary information from the secular
-officers of the church, or else supplied, from his own knowledge, or from
-the most attainable and accurate sources, an estimate of the number of
-sittings and of the usual congregation.” After all, the number of
-sittings could not be obtained in 2,134 cases, the number of attendants
-in 1,004, and the number either of sittings or attendants in 390.
-
-With regard to the tables more immediately under notice, namely those
-which profess to show the comparative progress of Church and Dissent
-during the last half-century, the mode of proceeding was as follows:—The
-buildings were first of all arranged under six heads—those erected or
-appropriated to religious purposes prior to 1801, and those erected or so
-appropriated during five subsequent periods. Thus:—
-
-Built before Churches. Meeting Houses. Total.
-1801 9,667 3,427 13,094
-1811 55 1,169 1,224
-1821 97 1,905 2,002
-1831 276 2,865 3,141
-1841 667 4,199 4,866
-1851 1,197 4,397 5,594
-Dates not assigned 2,118 2,428 4,546
-
-Mr. Mann’s next step was to distribute the last line amongst the six
-previous ones, “according to the proportion which the number actually
-assigned to each of the intervals bears towards the total having dates
-assigned at all.” Multiplying the results so arrived at by the present
-average number of sittings in churches (377), and by that in Dissenting
-meeting houses (240), Mr. Mann obtained two tables (5 and 13) of which
-the following is a summary:—
-
- Churches. Sittings. Meeting Houses. Sittings. Total Total
- Buildings. Sittings.
-1801 11,379 4,289,883 3,701 881,240 15,080 5,171,123
-1811 11,444 4,314,388 5,046 1,209,960 16,490 5,524,348
-1821 11,558 4,357,366 7,238 1,737,120 18,796 6,094,486
-1831 11,883 4,481,891 10,530 2,525,200 22,413 7,207,091
-1841 12,668 4,775,836 15,319 3,778,800 28,017 8,554,636
-1851 14,077 5,317,915 20,390 4,894,648 34,467 10,212,563
- {11}
-
-It would be uncandid not to state that Mr. Mann admits this estimate to
-be open to some objection. His words are:—“It is probable that an
-inference as to the position of affairs in former times can be drawn from
-the dates of existing buildings with more correctness in the ease of the
-Church of England, as the edifices are more permanent and less likely to
-change hands than are the buildings used by the dissenters. Still there
-is a possibility that too great an amount of accommodation has been
-ascribed to the earlier periods.” The tables are, therefore, to be taken
-with a “certain degree of qualification from this cause.” With respect
-to the Nonconformists, he observes in a note:—“In 1801, according to the
-estimate from dates, * * * the Dissenters had only 3,701 buildings.
-This, however, is scarcely probable, and seems to prove that many
-Dissenters’ buildings, existing in former years, have since become
-disused, or have been replaced by others. As so much depends upon the
-extent to which this disuse and substitution have prevailed, these
-calculations, in the absence of any facts upon those points, must
-necessarily be open to some doubts.” Now, it may be taken for granted
-that no one reading these very mild qualifications would suppose that
-they were intended to cover any serious error. Everybody would conclude
-that the mere fact of Mr. Mann’s tables appearing in a grave public
-document was a guarantee that they were in the main correct. Indeed, the
-suspicion that they were not perfectly trustworthy never seemed to have
-entered into anyone’s head. The Society for the Liberation of Religion
-lost no time in issuing a manifesto grounded upon them, and the
-dissenting prints have dwelt on them with great emphasis. Thus the
-_Patriot_, some time ago, declared, with a sort of oath, that “as surely
-as the morrow’s sun would rise,” so surely would Dissent be in a majority
-at the next census. On the faith of these tables, too, Mr. Hadfield
-announced, at the close of last session, that a spirit was growing up
-which would not much longer tolerate such an abomination as a religious
-establishment; and Mr. Gurney, in his sermon at the consecration of the
-Bishops of Gloucester and Christchurch, admitted that Dissent was gaining
-ground.
-
-Proceeding, without further comment, to examine the Tables in detail, it
-must be remarked that Mr. Mann’s formula for distributing the dateless
-buildings is open to very strong objections. It is not, however,
-necessary to enter upon those objections at this point, because the
-operation of the rule with regard to the churches (which shall be dealt
-with first) happens by accident to be very nearly right—the number
-assigned to the year 1831 corresponding pretty closely with the number
-arrived at by the census inquiries in that year. Mr. Mann’s next step,
-however, is begging the question with a vengeance. The circumstance that
-churches now-a-days contain on the average 377 sittings, affords not the
-least ground for supposing that the average capacity of churches was 377,
-fifty years ago. On the contrary, it is absolutely impossible, from the
-nature of church extension in modern times, that the average should have
-remained stationary. First of all, everybody knows that churches in
-large towns are, generally speaking, much more spacious than those in the
-rest of the country; and unless, therefore, the proportion of large town
-and country churches has remained exactly the same, the general average
-capacity of churches must have been disturbed. Mr. Mann’s Table 14
-deprives him of any excuse he might have had for overlooking this obvious
-fact. From that table we learn that there were in 1851:—
-
- Churches. Sittings.
-In large town districts 3,457 1,995,729
-In residue of the country 10,620 3,322,186
- 14,077 5,317,915
-
-—exactly the same as in the general table given above. In 1801, however,
-matters were different. There were then—
-
- Churches. Sittings.
-In large town districts 2,163 1,248,702
-In residue of the country 9,216 2,882,983
- 11,379 4,131,685
-
-The number of churches is the same as in the general table, but the
-number of sittings is less by 158,198. The discrepancy, however, is soon
-explained. The average capacity of the larger town churches is 577
-sittings, or 200 above the general average, while that of the country
-churches is 312, or only 65 less; and, while as many as 1,294 new
-buildings of the former class have been erected, the number of the latter
-class has only been 1,404. On Mr. Mann’s own showing, therefore, his
-principle is erroneous, and his Table 13 has cheated the Church of nearly
-160,000 sittings. But this is by no means the whole of the injustice of
-which he has been guilty. Not merely have there been more churches built
-in large towns than is consistent with maintaining the old average on the
-country at large, but the new structures both in town and country are of
-far greater dimensions than those anciently erected. An Englishman is
-not naturally fond of large communities of any kind. He has a passion
-for privacy; and his pet phrases are “snug,” “nice little,” “not
-numerous, but select.” This feeling breaks out in everything. Take the
-matter of lodging. Abroad, many families club together, and occupy a
-mansion. The plan has been tried in this country; but it meets with
-little success. Most men would regard themselves as “flats” indeed, if
-they put up with a floor when they could get a house; and working men
-regard model lodging-houses as little better than barracks, or, as they
-still term them, “bastiles.” So in ecclesiastical arrangements, John
-Bull, looking upon the parish as but an extension of the family, cannot
-have it too little for his taste. Abroad, the parish is regarded more in
-the light of a city within a city; and hence parochial churches on the
-continent were always less numerous and far larger than was anciently the
-case in this country. Even when we had large churches they were not
-fitted up for many worshippers—size being regarded more a matter of
-dignity than of practical utility. London, before the Great Fire, with
-its vast cathedral, and its hundred and ten parish churches; or Norwich,
-with its spacious minster, and its forty churches, fairly represent the
-true English idea. In modern times, however, we are forced to act
-differently. The sudden increase of population, and the utter
-unpreparedness of the Church to grapple with the difficulty, have
-produced an emergency of which our forefathers had no experience. We
-adopt the continental custom from sheer necessity, just as in London a
-third of the population are obliged, though much against their will, to
-live in lodgings. We build our churches large because that is the
-cheapest mode of supplying our immediate wants. The two systems may be
-well illustrated by contrasting Norwich, with its 41 churches and 17,000
-sittings, with Manchester, which has 32 churches and 44,000 sittings; or
-by comparing the City with its 73 churches and 42,000 sittings with the
-Tower Hamlets which have 65 churches and 68,000 sittings. The census
-tables contain many materials for an inferential argument with regard to
-the size of our new churches, but it is hardly necessary to pursue the
-matter further, because we have ample direct evidence bearing upon the
-point. The Metropolis Church Building Society has assisted in the
-erection of 85 churches, which contain 106,000 sittings, or an average of
-1,247 each. The Church Building Commissioners have aided 520 churches,
-and have thus assisted in providing 565,780 sittings, which would give an
-average of 1,088 each. Even Mr. Mann himself admits, with amusing
-_naïveté_, that “for many reasons the churches in large towns are
-constructed of considerable size, and rarely with accommodation for less
-than 1,000 persons!” [Report page clxii.] Precisely the same reasoning
-will apply to the Church extension of the rural districts; and the reader
-who has duly weighed the facts just stated will be little disposed to
-doubt that in both cases the average size of modern churches is at least
-double that of the churches which were in existence prior to 1801. On
-that hypothesis it would be found by an easy arithmetical problem that
-the capacity of town churches, in 1801, was 420 sittings, and of country
-ones, 276. The increase in the former class would thus have been
-1,086,960 sittings, and in the latter 775,008—making together 1,861,968.
-Probably it was much more; but at all events the calculation omits a very
-important element, namely, the new sittings which have been obtained by
-the enlargement or the re-arrangement of old fabrics. From the
-statistics of above a score of Church Building Societies, it would appear
-that for every additional structure at least two old ones are rebuilt or
-enlarged. There must thus have been at least 5,000 of these cases; and
-though there are no accessible data on which to calculate the amount of
-new accommodation in this manner afforded, it must have been very
-considerable.
-
-On the whole, therefore, we may safely adopt the statistics of the
-Incorporated Society for Building and Enlarging Churches as our guide.
-This society has laboured impartially for the advantage of town and
-country; and up to the year 1851 it had assisted in erecting 884 new
-churches, and in rebuilding or enlarging 2,174 old ones. The total
-amount of new sittings it had thus been instrumental in providing was
-835,000; so that each new church would _represent_ an increase of
-accommodation to the extent of 944 sittings. As, however, the society
-probably assisted the more urgent cases, it would perhaps be safer to
-assume that each new church has only represented an increase of 850 new
-sittings—in other words, that the new churches not assisted by the
-society represent about 800 each. The result will then be as follows:—
-
- No. of Churches. Sittings.
-1801 11,379 3,024,615
- Decennial increase:
-1811 65 55,250
-1821 114 96,900
-1831 325 276,250
-1841 785 667,250
-1851 1,409 1,197,650
-Total Increase 2,698 2,293,300
-Total 14,077 5,317,915
-
-Turning now to the Dissenting tables, we shall find that Mr. Mann’s
-formula leads to still more absurd results than when it is applied to the
-churches. It has, however, the curious felicity of operating in the two
-cases in a manner diametrically opposite; for while it robs the Church of
-more than half the new accommodation which she has provided, it
-obligingly credits Dissent with about the same number of sittings, to
-which it has not the ghost of a claim.
-
-It is the proper place to offer here a few remarks upon the mode which
-has been adopted for distributing the dateless buildings amongst the six
-periods. Every one is, of course, aware that in many cases “there is
-much virtue” in an average. In such problems as determining the number
-of letters which will be posted in a given year without being addressed,
-it operates with almost infallible certainty. But it must be clear that
-2,428 out of 20,390 places could not have been returned without dates by
-mere accident. In a large proportion of cases the omission must have
-been intentional; and it is obvious that those cases would include very
-few new buildings. The enumerators, being all persons possessed of local
-knowledge, could have had no difficulty in determining whether a building
-had or had not been erected within the last ten, twenty, or thirty years.
-It would only be in cases where the structure was of what is called in
-ladies’ sometimes “a certain,” sometimes “an uncertain” age, that they
-would be unable to ascertain when it was erected or appropriated to
-public worship. The number of such instances would bear no relation
-whatever to the number having dates assigned. The case is wholly beyond
-the province of the Rule of Three; and to attempt to adjust the table by
-means of proportion is, on the face of it, unfair. Out of the 2,118
-dateless churches, no fewer than 1,712 are relegated to the number of
-those erected before 1801, whereas of the 2,428 dateless meeting-houses,
-only 465 would be placed in the same category. In point of fact,
-however, there are not so many; for Mr. Mann has hit on a plan, which is
-a miracle of perverse ingenuity, in order to make the growth of Dissent
-during the half century look larger than ever. Ninety-nine persons out
-of a hundred would have applied the rule first to the churches, then to
-the meeting-houses, and then they would have added the results together.
-Mr. Mann has adopted precisely the opposite course. He has, first of
-all, dealt with the total column, then with the Church, and he has lastly
-subtracted the one set of results from the other. The consequence is he
-has assigned no more than 274 of the dateless meeting-houses to the
-period before 1801. The total number he has distributed amongst the
-first three periods is only 737, whereas he has divided no fewer than
-1,691 amongst the last three. It need scarcely be said that all the
-probabilities would be all in favour of reversing the process.
-
-At the outset, therefore, Mr. Mann’s estimate comes before us under
-circumstances of extreme suspicion; but, granting, for the sake of
-argument, that his distribution of the existing meeting-houses were
-correct, it must be obvious that any inference from dates would be
-preposterous unless we could be certain that there were no buildings in
-existence at the earlier periods, other than those included in the table.
-It has been seen that Mr. Mann has not overlooked this circumstance. He
-admits that the small number assigned to 1801 “seems to prove that many
-dissenters’ buildings existing in former years have since become disused
-or have been replaced by others;” but no one would suspect from this
-statement the vast number of these disused buildings. Take, for example,
-the case of Nottingham. From Mr. Wylie’s local history it would appear
-that of the 29 meeting-houses returned to the Census Office, only six
-dated back to the commencement of the present century. In other words,
-dissent in Nottingham, on Mr. Mann’s hypothesis, all but quintupled
-itself during the 50 years. In point of fact, however, there were, not
-six, but thirteen or fourteen, dissenting congregations in 1801, and
-probably several more whose “memorial has perished with them.”
-
-The absurdity of the Census estimate may be still further illustrated by
-a reference once more to Tables 6 and 14. Those tables are to Mr. Mann’s
-calculation not very different from the proof of an addition sum. If his
-estimate were right they would agree with Tables 5 and 13; but instead of
-doing so, they lead to the following astounding results:—In 1851, there
-were in the
-
- Meeting Houses. Sittings. Average
- Sittings.
-Large town 6,129 2,131,515 347 each.
-districts
-Residue of country 14,261 2,763,133 193 „
-
-This is, of course, quite correct. But now see what the tables say of
-1801—
-
- Meeting Houses. Sittings. Average
- Sittings.
-Large town 1,337 258,220 193 each.
-districts
-Residue of country 2,634 781,218 330 „
-
-The late Mr. Hume’s emphatic appreciation of a certain “modest assurance”
-as a means towards getting through life will be remembered. How the
-lamented sage would have envied the courage of Mr. Mann in putting his
-name to a document embodying these statements! It is really much the
-same as if the Astronomer Royal had presented to Parliament an elaborate
-calculation, signed with his proper name, in which he proved the diameter
-of the earth to be 25,000 miles, and its circumference 8,000! Seriously,
-the very least one might have expected from a public servant performing
-an important official duty would have been to abandon calculations which
-he must have observed led to nonsensical consequences; and not to put
-forth statements which, while they involved a gross libel upon the most
-venerable institution in the country, were calculated to prove, as they
-have proved, so fatally misleading. These very Tables 6 and 14 are of
-great importance. We are constantly hearing that the great towns
-monopolise the intelligence of the age, and that it is they which are to
-govern the country. What then, has been the verdict of the great towns
-on the question—Church _versus_ Dissent? According to these tables, the
-Church, in the large towns, has provided only 747,027 sittings to meet an
-increase in the population of 5,621,096 souls. Dissent, in the meantime,
-has furnished 1,873,305, or more than twice as many. The Church’s
-increase is not two-thirds the number of sittings she originally
-possessed; the increase of Dissent is more than sevenfold! If these
-figures were only correct, it would hardly be possible to conceive a more
-complete condemnation of the Church’s system; if they are not—and there
-is no reason to think that Dissent has materially altered its position in
-the large towns since 1801—it is impossible to imagine a more scandalous
-or a more gratuitous calumny.
-
-Mr. Mann’s formula proving utterly untrustworthy, the question arises,
-are there any data on which a substantially correct notion of the number
-of Dissenting sittings in 1801 may be arrived at? To the writer, it
-appears that there are. Thus, from the statistics of the different
-Wesleyan bodies appended to Mr. Mann’s report, it would appear that the
-old and new Connections in 1801 had at least 100,000 members. It would
-further appear, that for every member the Wesleyans have about four
-sittings, so that in 1801 the Wesleyans must have had at least 400,000
-sittings. The next question is, what proportion did the Wesleyans bear
-to the aggregate Nonconformity of 1801? At present, the Wesleyan sects
-have about 11/24ths of the entire number of Dissenting sittings; but
-their ratio of progress has confessedly been double that of their fellow
-Nonconformists. Mr. Mann’s process of calculating from dates,
-unsatisfactory as it is in other respects, may, perhaps, be allowed to
-decide how much of the entire Dissenting accommodation of 1801 was
-possessed by the Wesleyan bodies. According to table 17, the old and new
-Connections had between them only 165,000 sittings, out of the 881,240.
-It has been shown, however, that they had, in reality, not less than
-400,000; and, raising the sittings belonging to the other sects in the
-same proportion, we get a total of 2,136,339. This result receives
-complete corroboration from Mr. Mann’s own returns. First of all, it is
-clear that meeting-houses which have remained in existence half a century
-must be buildings of some importance. Dissenting places of worship are
-of two classes—those which have regular congregations and a regular
-ministry attached to them, and those which are merely temporary preaching
-stations. The number of these latter will surprise the reader. Mr.
-Edward Baines, in his evidence before the Churchrates Committee,
-estimated that no fewer than 7,360 of the 19,000 which he supposed
-belonged to “the three denominations” were of this description. The
-total number of mere preaching stations, however, may be easily
-ascertained. It may be safely assumed that all places which have a
-regular ministry are opened both on Sunday mornings and on Sunday
-afternoons or evenings. The total number of this class in 1851 was only
-10,583; so that each would _represent_ an average of 462 sittings. Now,
-as the number of Dissenting places of worship which date back to 1801
-cannot be less, even if calculated on Mr. Mann’s principle, than 3900,
-the number of sittings in that year must have been upwards of 1,800,000.
-But it would be a great fallacy to suppose that even first-class
-Dissenting congregations are exempt from the tendency to decay and
-disappear. If Nottingham may be taken as a fair example, it would seem
-that not two-thirds of the regularly organised congregations existing in
-1801 survive to this day. The total number of sittings at the
-commencement of the present century would thus be at least 2,700,000.
-
-The matter does not, however, rest even here. These estimates are purely
-conjectural; but since the writer first turned his attention to the
-subject, a valuable piece of positive evidence has fallen in his way. It
-is a Parliamentary return obtained by Mr. Bright last year, which
-professes to show the number of places of worship licensed under the
-Toleration Act. It is very imperfect in its earlier tables, but those
-since 1800 seem to be tolerably complete. Comparing the number of places
-licensed during each of the last five decennial periods with the number
-of existing buildings returned to Mr. Mann as opened in each, we get the
-following remarkable results:—{19}
-
-Ten years Places Still in Still in
-ending licensed. existence. existence (per
- cent.)
-1810 5,460 1,169 21
-1820 10,161 1,905 18
-1830 10,585 2,865 27
-1840 7,422 4,199 56
-1850 5,810 4,397 75
- 39,438 14,535
-
-This is a comparison which cannot fail to startle the editor of the
-_Patriot_, and to shake the nerves of the Society for the Liberation of
-Religion. It proves beyond the possibility of cavil that the enormous
-and constantly increasing growth which Mr. Mann’s tables assign to modern
-Dissent is “a mockery, a delusion, and a snare.” It shows, moreover
-(which is the matter more immediately in hand), that barely two in seven
-(21/75ths) of the Dissenting places of worship which were in existence in
-1801, are still remaining. The number of such places was not 3,701, as
-Mr. Mann states, but between 13,000 and 14,000; and the estimate of
-sittings first made, after every conceivable allowance for increase of
-average capacity, and other sources of error, is thus greatly under
-rather than over the mark. The Dissenting increase may, therefore, be
-safely taken at 2,758,309 sittings instead of 4,013,408; and if it be
-distributed according to the proportion of places licensed, matters will
-stand thus:—
-
-Ten years ending 1811 381,875
- ,, „ 1821 710,664
- ,, „ 1831 740,319
- ,, „ 1841 519,097
- ,, „ 1851 406,354
-
-If it be objected that the average capacity of Dissenting buildings has
-increased of late years, there are two answers—first, there is no
-evidence of such increase to any material extent; and, secondly, that
-there is an antagonistic influence at work, which would counterbalance
-such increase if it existed. It must be clear that the number of
-“causes” which annually collapse becomes greater in the same ratio as the
-congregations themselves increase. Thus, almost the same number of
-places were licensed in the ten years ending 1810 as in the same period
-ending 1850; but the number of places discontinued out of 13,000 would
-obviously be less than the number discontinued out of, say 18,500; so
-that unless the new Dissenting meeting-houses are larger nowadays than
-was formerly the case, the amount of sittings attributed to the latter
-periods is too large, rather than too small.
-
-We have now materials for the reconstruction of our table:—
-
- Population. Church Dissenting Total
- Sittings. Sittings. Sittings.
-1801 8,892,536 3,024,615 2,136,339 5,160,954
-Subsequent decennial increase:—
-1811 1,271,720 55,250 381,875 437,125
-1821 1,835,930 96,900 710,664 807,564
-1831 1,896,561 276,250 740,319 1,016,569
-1841 2,017,351 667,250 519,097 1,186,347
-1851 2,013,161 1,197,650 406,354 1,604,004
-Total 9,035,073 2,293,300 2,758,309 5,051,609
-Increase
-Total 17,927,609 5,317,915 4,894,648 10,212,583
-
-The number of sittings per thousand of the population was, at the
-different periods, as follows:—
-
- ACCORDING TO THE ABOVE ACCORDING TO MR. MANN’S
- TABLE. TABLE.
- Church. Dissent. Church. Dissent.
-1801 340 240 482 99
-1811 303 247 424 120
-1821 264 269 363 145
-1831 248 285 323 181
-1841 258 282 300 238
-1851 297 273 297 273
-
-Thus it will be seen that every inference drawn from Mr. Mann’s tables
-has proved false.
-
-Dissent has _not_, during the half century, supplied four times as much
-new accommodation as the Church—if it has supplied any more at all, the
-excess does not amount to a fourth.
-
-Dissent has _not_, during the last 20 years, supplied three times as much
-accommodation as the Church—it has barely supplied half as much.
-
-Dissent is _not_ advancing at a pace twice as rapid as the Church; on the
-contrary, the Church is advancing at nearly three times the speed of
-Dissent.
-
-Dissent has _not_ improved its position, and the Church has not lost
-position since 1831; on the contrary, the Church has gained, and Dissent
-has lost, ground since that year.
-
-Finally, as churches, save only where there is an excess of accommodation
-as compared with the population, are at least as well attended as
-dissenting places of worship, the charge of comparative inefficiency
-which has been so rashly brought against the clergy proves to be utterly
-without foundation.
-
-Here, then, the present inquiry might be brought to a close; and yet it
-would be palpably unfair to the Church to rest the case upon a mere
-comparison of the additional sittings supplied by her rivals and by
-herself. A new church, generally speaking, means a very different thing
-from a new meeting-house. It means a substantially built and even
-highly-decorative structure, the freehold of which is the property of the
-community to which it belongs; it means decent and becoming furniture for
-the performance of divine service; provision for a properly educated
-minister in perpetuity; service performed at least twice every Sunday, or
-even twice every day; a house for the resident minister; a day-school, or
-rather a group of day-schools; and a host of other benevolent and
-educational agencies. If the establishment of the day-school be taken as
-a criterion how far the parochial machinery has been completed, the
-following table from the report of the Educational Census will be
-instructive:—
-
- DAY SCHOOLS SUPPORTED BY RELIGIOUS BODIES.
-
-Founded before Church Schools. Dissenting Schools. Total.
-1801 709 57 766
-1811 350 60 410
-1821 756 123 879
-1831 897 124 1,021
-1841 2,002 415 2,417
-1855 3,448 1,156 4,604
-Not stated 409 89 498
- 8,571 2,024 10,595
-
-What, on the other hand, is the status of a majority of the 20,390
-buildings returned to the Census office as “chapels” may be guessed from
-the fact that the total number of professional dissenting ministers of
-every description in 1851 was only 8,658.
-
-A very tangible mode of settling the question which body has done most to
-evangelise the people would be to inquire how much each has spent? The
-“Society for the Liberation of Religion,” in a tract they have put forth,
-grounded on the Census report, states that the achievements of
-voluntaryism during the half century have been “astonishing.” On the
-authority of Mr. Edward Baines, they assume that of the 16,689 dissenting
-chapels opened since 1801, “only” 10,000 are separate buildings, and that
-the cost of each has been “but” £1,500—in other words, that dissenters
-have spent £15,000,000 on their meeting-houses during the last fifty
-years! That would, indeed, be an “astonishing” result, but it is not
-half so surprising as the perfervid imagination which dictated the
-calculation. In point of fact, it is equivalent to saying that the
-dissenters have provided three millions of permanent sittings, at the
-rate of five pounds per sitting. The real truth, however, is that they
-have not supplied more than two millions and three quarters of new
-sittings of any kind; and when it is considered in how many cases opening
-a new meeting-house means hiring a room or building, in the popular
-phrase, “on tick”; when it is further borne in mind that the average cost
-of churches is not above £5 or £6 per sitting, it will be admitted that
-five or six millions sterling would be a remarkably liberal sum to put
-down for the amount really raised by dissenters for the purpose of
-self-extension during the half century. On the other hand, the sum which
-must have been spent on churches cannot have been less than ten or twelve
-millions—of which one-half has been raised during the ten years 1841–51.
-The expenditure on church extension at the present moment is at least
-five times as great as that of all the dissenters put together.
-
-The votaries of _Iscariotism_, or the “cheap and nasty” in religion, will
-perhaps turn this fact to account, and abuse Churchmen for lavishing such
-large sums of money on a few buildings, while there is so much spiritual
-destitution calling for relief. They will perhaps say, “Look what an
-amount of spiritual agency the Dissenters bring to bear for half the sum
-you expend; and, after all, the Dissenters ‘get more out of’ their
-buildings than Churchmen.” At first sight, Mr. Mann’s tables appear to
-justify this assertion; but here, as in every other respect, they only
-mislead. According to Table 16 there were on the Census Sunday 190
-services in every 100 dissenting places of worship; whereas, there were
-only 171 in the same number of churches. But if this table be any
-criterion, it would appear that the machinery of Dissent is, by
-comparison, more efficient in the rural districts than in the towns; for
-while the Non-conformists opened their town buildings on the average 2.10
-times, and the Churchmen 2.06 times, they opened their country buildings
-1.84 times and the Churchmen only 1.64 times. Yet it must be obvious
-that the proportion of country congregations which possess a regular
-ministry must be very small, the greater part of the 8,658 professional
-Dissenting preachers being required for the towns. The fact is, the
-majority of country meeting-houses are served by non-professional
-persons. As soon as the morning service is over in the towns, a swarm of
-“Spiritual Bashi-Bazooks,” issue forth, who, for the rest of the day,
-play the more ambitious, if not more edifying, _rôle_ of preacher. The
-sort of congregations to which they minister may be gathered from a
-comparison of the number of meeting-houses and the number of sittings
-open at the different periods of the day:—
-
- Meeting Houses (open). Sittings (open).
-Morning 11,875 3,645,875
-Afternoon 11,338 2,506,116
-Evening 15,619 3,983,725
-
-So that in the afternoon, with only 537 fewer places open, the number of
-sittings was 1,139,759 fewer than in the morning. In the evening (when,
-of course, all the more important buildings which were open in the
-morning were again accessible to the public) the exertions of 3,744
-additional preachers, nearly a third more, only rendered available
-337,850 additional sittings, or about one-eleventh more; and they
-attracted only 97,668 additional hearers, an increase of less than one in
-twenty-one! It may, perhaps, be allowable to doubt whether the labours
-of non-resident, non-professional preachers can be attended with any
-results worth speaking of; but, at all events, their irregular
-ministrations can have no real bearing on the question whether the
-regular meeting-houses are used more or less frequently than the
-churches. Obviously, the fairest way would be to inquire which class of
-buildings are opened the oftener throughout the whole week; and, in that
-case, there is no doubt that the comparison would show greatly in favour
-of the churches. If, however, we must confine ourselves to Sunday, the
-proper question to ask would be—in how many cases there is a service
-before, and another after, noon? The answer, according to Table 16,
-would be as follows:—
-
- Churches. Meeting Houses.
- (per cent.) (per cent.)
-Town districts 85 75
-Rural ditto 62 43
-Whole country 66 51
-
-If the investigation could be limited to the new accommodation, the
-result would strikingly show that the extra outlay on the churches had in
-no sense been thrown away.
-
-After all, the number of sittings a religious body can open in the
-morning is the real test of its strength. Amongst persons of every
-denomination there is a strong feeling that they ought to frequent their
-own place of worship in the morning, but in the after part of the day
-many persons do not consider themselves called upon to attend again, or
-they feel themselves at liberty to visit other churches or meetings. In
-short, to speak technically, the morning service is looked upon by
-everybody as a service of “obligation,” while all the rest are regarded
-as mere services of “devotion.” Now, of the 5,317,915 sittings belonging
-to the Church, no fewer than 4,852,645 were actually available on the
-Census morning. The remaining 465,270 were almost exclusively in the
-country, where one clergyman has still often to serve more than one
-parish or chapelry. Cases of this kind have of late years been much
-diminished, owing to the operation of the Pluralities Act, and still more
-in consequence of the increased zeal, both of the clergy and the laity.
-The Bishop of Salisbury stated in his primary charge that the number of
-churches in that diocese having two sermons on Sunday had increased
-during the episcopate of Dr. Denison (16 years) from 143 to 426; and the
-number having monthly communions from 35 to 181. The increase in the
-number of church sittings during the past half century may be considered
-as nett, for there can be no doubt that nearly all the new buildings have
-the double service. At all events, if there are any that have not, they
-are more than compensated for by those ancient churches where there was
-formerly only one service on the Lord’s Day, but where there are now two.
-On the other hand, the Dissenters are not able to open quite
-three-fourths of their sittings on the Sunday morning; and as there is no
-reason whatever for supposing that their new accommodation is exempt from
-this deduction, we may subtract one-fourth from the gross number assigned
-in the tables to each period.
-
-The following table, compiled on the assumption that 58 per cent. of the
-population might attend divine worship on any Sunday morning, will show
-at a glance the number of sittings really required at each decennial
-period, and the real provision made to supply the deficiency:—
-
- Sittings Furnished By dissent. Total.
- (open) by the
- required. Church.
-1801 5,157,671 2,559,345 1,577,143 4,136,488
-Increase decennially:—
-1811 737,598 55,250 286,407 341,657
-1821 1,064,869 96,900 532,998 629,898
-1831 1,100,005 276,250 555,239 831,488
-1841 1,170,064 667,250 389,323 1,056,573
-1851 1,167,807 1,197,650 304,766 1,502,416
-Total 5,240,342 2,293,300 2,068,732 4,362,032
-increase
-Total 10,398,013 4,852,645 3,645,875 8,498,520
-
-Or, exhibiting the same results in a somewhat different form:—
-
- Sittings per Provided by By Dissent. Total.
- 1,000 of Church.
- population
- required.
-1801 580 287 177 464
-1811 580 257 183 441
-1821 580 225 199 424
-1831 580 214 212 426
-1841 580 229 209 438
-1851 580 270 203 473
-
- Church loss since 1801, 17; Dissenting gain, 26: total Church loss, 43.
-
- Church gain since 1831, 56; Dissenting loss, 9; total Church gain, 65.
-
-This, then, is really the rate at which each body “is advancing in the
-path of self extension;” and the best proof of its accuracy is, that it
-exactly tallies with what one would have expected beforehand. Mr. Mann’s
-tables, on the contrary, are absolutely incredible. We must never
-forget, that during the Great Rebellion, Puritanism was actually the
-dominant faction; and even at the Restoration it cannot be supposed that
-the Dissenters were a small or an uninfluential class. In 1662 no fewer
-than 2,000 ministers were ejected under the new Act of Uniformity; and as
-at the last census there were only 6405 professional Protestant
-Ministers, it will be seen that the ejected preachers alone formed a
-larger body, in comparison with the existing population, than the
-Protestant Dissenting Ministry does now. It cannot be doubted that every
-one of those men had a greater or less following; and it must be
-remembered that in the days of the Commonwealth there was always a rabble
-of sects who might even then be called Dissenters. It is true that,
-after the Restoration, Nonconformity was subjected to severe repressive
-laws, but those laws were not enforced with unvarying rigour. In 1672
-there was the Indulgence, and in 1681 the House of Commons passed a
-strong resolution against the prosecution of Protestant Dissenters.
-Besides, after all, the Conventicle Acts only continued in force about 23
-years—not much longer, in fact, than Episcopacy had been proscribed by
-law. The natural result which would follow the famous proclamation of
-James II., and the subsequent passing of the Toleration Act, would be a
-great and sudden revival of Dissent. How small was the church-feeling of
-Parliament at the Revolution may be gathered from a curious fact
-mentioned in Mr. Macaulay’s third volume. It was proposed that the
-Commons should sit on Easter Monday. The Churchmen vigorously protested
-against the innovation; but they did not dare to divide, and the House
-did sit on the festival in question. Without at all straining the
-inference to be drawn from this incident, it would be difficult, indeed,
-to suppose that Churchmen had matters their own way. Even under the
-penal laws, the Dissenters must have been a large body; for James the
-Second’s scheme for forming a coalition of Roman Catholic and Protestant
-Dissenters against the Establishment would have been stark folly unless
-the two bodies, when combined, would have made up, at least, a powerful
-minority. From the Revolution to 1801 the Dissenters had more than a
-century to increase and multiply; and all the circumstances of the case
-were in their favour. Worn out by the political struggles of a century
-and a half, during which she had been made the tool of contending
-factions; deprived of her Legislative powers; silenced and frowned upon
-by the powers that were, the Church had sunk into that fatal lethargy
-from which the present generation has only just seen her awake. During
-that long and dreary period, all the prominent theologians, with a few
-bright exceptions, were either Dissenters or inclined to Dissent. The
-eighteenth century, too, was the golden age of popular Nonconformist
-preachers. Not to mention a host of smaller names, Wesley and Whitfield
-both rose, flourished, and died before its close. And yet, if we are to
-believe Mr. Mann, the Dissenters in 1801 were a much smaller body,
-compared with the whole population, than they were under the penal laws!
-{25} On the other hand, all who remember the obloquy and contempt under
-which the Church continued until the passing of the Reform Act, will
-reject, without a moment’s hesitation, the notion that, in 1831, she
-actually possessed more accommodation, in proportion to the population,
-than at the present day. The change which has taken place in the popular
-sentiment towards her has not been caused by any document like this
-Census report, which suddenly appeared and disabused the public mind of
-its preconceived ideas. It has, on the contrary, been brought about by
-the silent influence of those spectacles of zeal and self-denying
-liberality which have been witnessed in every corner of the land. The
-Church has, in fact, lived down her traducers. A hundred proverbs bear
-witness to the vast amount of good deeds which are required to remove an
-evil reputation; and yet Mr. Mann calls upon us to believe that the
-Establishment has achieved this, although, with all her numbers and all
-her wealth, she has not, since 1831, done so much as the Wesleyan sects
-alone, towards supplying the people with the means of religious
-instruction and worship! One has no language to characterize such a
-daring attempt on the public credulity. The most charitable hypothesis
-will be to conclude that Mr. Mann, though an arithmetician by his office,
-knows nothing about arithmetic; and so remit him to the consideration of
-Mr. Roebuck and the Administrative Reform Society. {26}
-
-THE inquiry through which the reader has been invited to travel will
-probably suggest several considerations; and first of all the importance
-of putting a stop to the statistical nuisance which has of late years
-flourished with so rank a growth. Surely it is time that members of both
-Houses of Parliament, who resent so jealously any attempt on the part of
-Government officials to exceed or fall short of the precise instructions
-given them, in making returns, should raise their voices against the
-system of publishing with official statistics the crude, and, as it has
-been seen, the nonsensical but pernicious theorizings of the persons
-entrusted with the task of compiling reports. Like Mr. Mantalini, the
-majority of persons never trouble themselves to examine a numerical
-process, but content themselves with simply asking what is the total; and
-it therefore becomes the duty of Parliament to see that the unsuspecting
-confidence of the public is not abused. The reader must not suppose that
-the Report on Religious Worship is the only recent one which is open to
-objection. The Census Report on Schools is just as full of fallacies;
-and it has certainly been one of the strangest phenomena ever witnessed
-in the history of public discussion, that the schemes of Lord John
-Russell and Sir John Pakington, assailed as they were on every side,
-should have escaped what would, after all, have been the most effective
-blow that could have been aimed against them—the simple but conclusive
-fact, so easily deducible from the premises of the Report on Schools,
-that nearly as many children were under education as could be induced to
-attend unless they were driven to the class of the teacher by the
-policeman’s staff. {27}
-
-Again, the inquiry will probably satisfy the reader that the anti-Church
-legislation of the day ought to proceed no further. It is easy to assign
-the cause which in the first instance gave it birth. Most statesmen, it
-may be presumed, will be ready to adopt, with regard to the multifarious
-sects of modern Christianity, the last clause, at least, of Gibbon’s
-famous dictum respecting the ancient religions of Pagan Rome—“to the
-people equally true, to the philosopher equally false, to the magistrate
-equally useful.” Persons who profess with sincerity almost any form of
-Christian doctrine are comparatively easy to govern; they throw but a
-light burden upon the poor-rate and they cost nothing at all in the shape
-of police. A statesman, then, might dislike Dissent, but what was he to
-say to a state of things like that revealed in the Census report? The
-Church, according to Mr. Mann’s tables, could not, by dint of the utmost
-exertions she is ever likely to put forth, find accommodation for half
-the souls who are year by year added to the population. On the other
-hand the Dissenters, who are far less wealthy, and have few endowments,
-provide without difficulty and without fuss more than twice the amount of
-new accommodation supplied by the Church. The irresistible inference in
-the mind of a mere statesman would be that Dissent ought to be aided and
-encouraged. But if it turns out that the facts are precisely the reverse
-of what has been represented—if in reality Dissent is making no progress,
-while the Church is providing new accommodation sufficient for the whole
-of the new population—why should the Legislature go out of its path to
-foster mere religious discord, and to impede the spread of what the
-country has, after all, long since recognised as the “more excellent
-way.” Why, for instance, should Churchrates be abolished? If they were
-right in 1831, when there were more Dissenters and fewer Churchmen, why
-are they wrong now? If Parliament has conferred upon parishes, _as a
-boon_, the right to tax themselves (if a majority of the ratepayers think
-fit) for the purpose of building and maintaining public baths, museums,
-and libraries, why should parishes now be deprived of a right which they
-possessed before there was a Chancellor of the Exchequer or a
-budget—before the Norman set foot upon our shores, or there was a House
-of Commons worthy of the name—the right to tax themselves in order to
-maintain edifices which may be museums second in interest to none, and
-which may have been centres of enlightenment long before the days of
-Caxton and Guttenberg?
-
-There is another view of the case which ought not to be overlooked by
-statesmen who regard a religious Establishment as a mere matter of
-police. Granting that Dissent teaches men to be neither drunkards nor
-thieves, is it calculated to make them as good citizens and as good
-neighbours as the Church? The answer must surely be a negative. The
-common consent of mankind has pronounced the famous descriptions of the
-old Puritans in “Hudibras” to be almost as applicable to modern
-Dissenters as to their ancient prototypes. Nor, indeed, would it be
-easy, if they were not, to account for the popularity of Butler’s
-oft-quoted lines; for even just satires, to say nothing of unjustifiable
-lampoons, rarely survive the persons against whom they are directed. Of
-course, men are often much better than the system to which they belong.
-There are hundreds—nay, thousands—of Dissenters whose Dissent is a mere
-accident of birth and education, and who are truly catholic at heart; but
-of Dissent in the abstract, no one who has either studied its history or
-is acquainted with its practical working will deny the applicability to
-it not only of Butler’s portraiture, but of another yet more famous
-description, qualified in the latter case, however, with the insertion or
-omission throughout of the important word—“not.” Dissent suffers not
-long, and is not kind—Dissent is envious—behaves itself unseemly—vaunts
-itself, and is puffed up—seeks every tittle of its “rights”—is easily
-provoked—thinks evil—gloats over every slip on the part of its
-opponents—attributes what is good in them to a wrong motive—will bear
-nothing of which it can rid itself by agitation or clamour—will put a
-good construction upon nothing when an evil one is possible—hopes
-nothing—endures nothing. If this were not so, how would it be possible
-to account for its inveterate propensity to internal schism? The
-scriptural account of the Kingdom of Heaven is that it should grow as
-from a seed; but Dissent is propagated chiefly by _cuttings_. It is not
-yet two hundred years since the Kirk was established in Scotland, and yet
-there are no fewer than six sorts of Presbyterians. The case of
-Wesleyanism is still worse. Within sixty years after the death of its
-founder it had split into seven antagonistic sects. Whitfield himself
-quarrelled with Wesley, and his followers have, since his death,
-separated into two bodies. There are four sorts of Baptists. Of the
-Independents, Mr. Mann speaks with refreshing innocence as forming “a
-compact and undivided body.” It would be nearer the truth to say that
-they consist of nearly as many sects as there are meeting-houses. Nearly
-every congregation is of volcanic origin, and every one contains within
-it elements which might at any moment explode and shatter the whole
-concern.
-
-That the writer may not be thought to be unsupported by facts, he will
-here summarize the history of Anabaptistic and Congregational Dissent in
-the first town to the annals of which he has ready access—Nottingham, his
-authority being Mr. Wylie’s local history, published in 1853.
-Nottingham, however, is a remarkably good example for the purpose. It
-has a manufacturing population of 57,000, having doubled itself since
-1801. It is almost at the head of those places in which Dissent is most
-rampant, and the Church most depressed. It possessed, according to Mr.
-Mann’s table K, 35.2 Dissenting sittings to every hundred inhabitants,
-the only other places equal or superior to it in that respect being
-Merthyr Tydvil (52.4), Sunderland (35.2), Rochdale (36.5), and Swansea
-(42.8). It boasts of 74.1 per cent. of the whole religious accommodation
-within its boundaries, the only places having more being Merthyr (89.7),
-and Rochdale (78.7).
-
- About the middle of the last century, then, the Presbyterian
- congregation on the High Pavement adopted Socinian tenets; and many
- families thereupon left it and joined a small congregation of
- Calvinistic Independents in Castle-gate. Their meeting-house was
- immediately enlarged, and it has ever since been considered the
- leading Dissenting place of worship. In 1761, a second secession
- from High Pavement, this time of Sabellians, built themselves a new
- meeting-house in Halifax-place. In 1801, they erected themselves a
- new building in St. Mary’s-gate, which has long since been closed.
- In 1798, a third swarm, again Calvinistic Independents, left High
- Pavement, and settled in the Halifax-place meeting-house, vacated by
- their Sabellian predecessors. In 1819, they built themselves a new
- meeting-house, called “Zion Chapel,” in Fletcher-gate, the old one
- being now a school. In 1822, a secession from Castle-gate built a
- new meeting-house in St. James’s-street; and six years later a
- secession from St. James’s-street built a meeting-house in
- Friar-lane. In 1804, a secession from Zion Chapel erected “Hephzibah
- Chapel,” which being in debt, was sold to the Universalists in 1808,
- and was soon afterwards converted into a National School. In 1828,
- another secession from “Zion Chapel” erected a meeting called
- “Bethesda Chapel.”
-
- The General Baptists at first met in a disused Wesleyan
- meeting-house, called “The Tabernacle,” which has long since been
- pulled down. In 1799 they built themselves a place in Stoney-street.
- In 1817 a quarrel arose between Mr. Smith, the senior pastor, and his
- junior, of whose pulpit talents he was said to be jealous. The
- congregation dismissed them both, and appointed a Mr. George. On
- Sunday, the 3rd of August, in the same year, there was a personal
- conflict after the Donnybrook manner, between the partisans of Smith
- and George. The friends of Smith being beaten drew off, and built
- themselves a meeting-house in Broad-street. In 1850 there was
- another secession from Stoney-street, who built themselves a
- meeting-house on the Mansfield-road.
-
- The Particular Baptists originally occupied an ancient meeting-house
- in Park-street: but in 1815 they built themselves a larger place in
- George-street. In 1847 there was a secession of extra-Particulars.
- These met first in a room in Clinton-street, then in an old building
- which had been disused by the Quakers, and finally, in a splendid
- gothic edifice, which they built for themselves on Derby-road. The
- old meeting-house in Park-street fell into the hands of a
- congregation of the Scotch variety of the sect, whose peace has only
- been disturbed by the Bethesdians, who joined them in 1828, until
- they decided upon setting up for themselves.
-
-Thus it will be seen that of the nine new congregations enumerated above,
-not one was originated without a quarrel—a quarrel, too, of the worst
-kind, a personal one. Nobody can study the history of religious polemics
-without perceiving that the root of all that bitterness which has made
-the _odium theologicum_ a proverb, is to be found in the tendency there
-is in men to transfer the indignation they might reasonably feel against
-error, from the error itself to those who hold it. If people would only
-consent to forget history and would conduct the argument upon purely
-abstract principles, even the Roman controversy might be made instructive
-and edifying; but somehow, before long, the debate wanders away from the
-truth or falsehood of the creed under discussion to that most irrelevant
-of all issues, the virtues or failings of those by whom it is professed.
-What shall we say, then, of a system which gives rise to controversies
-which, from their commencement to their close, are purely personal? Lest
-it should be supposed that the case of Nottingham is an isolated
-instance, here is an extract on which the writer stumbled the other day
-in a tract written in praise of Congregationalism, and stated on the
-title page to be “commended by J. Bennett, D.D.” It appears to be quoted
-from a work called “The Library of Ecclesiastical Knowledge,” and the
-scene of the incident is stated to be “one of the principal cities of the
-United States:”—
-
- A Baptist congregation, originally small, had increased so rapidly
- that an enlargement of the chapel became necessary. It was
- immediately effected. The congregation still continued to increase,
- and a second time it became necessary to enlarge. Everything still
- going on prosperously, a third enlargement, some time after, was
- proposed. The noble-minded pastor, however, thinking that he had
- already as much on his hands as any mere mortal could conscientiously
- discharge, with a generous contempt for his own interests, opposed
- this step, and suggested that they should exert themselves to raise a
- new interest, entirely independent of the old one. The people
- entered cheerfully into his design; nay, they made a nobler sacrifice
- than that of their money. For as soon as the new building was
- finished, one of the deacons, with a few of the most respectable
- members of the old church, voluntarily separated from it, and
- proceeded to form the infant _colony_ that had branched off from the
- mother church. What is still more delightful, the two churches
- formed a common fund for the erection of a third chapel. This was
- soon accomplished. In a short time a large and flourishing church
- was the result; and, at the time our informant related this fact, all
- three churches were actually subscribing towards a fourth chapel.
- This is noble conduct. Who can tell how soon cities and towns might
- be evangelised, if this principle were sternly (!) acted upon? A
- somewhat similar fact has, we understand, been recently witnessed in
- a city of our own country, where some congregational churches have
- imitated their Baptist brethren of America. When will all ministers
- “go and do likewise?”
-
-This is truly edifying and amusing. First of all, mark the _habitat_ of
-this Nonconformist phœnix, a congregation which has actually given birth
-to another without a preliminary quarrel. We must actually cross the
-Atlantic, and seek the phenomenon in the land where the penny-a-liner
-places his sea-serpents, and his other choicer wonders. To increase
-without envy, hatred, and uncharitableness is, it seems, to a Dissenter,
-something inexpressibly “noble”—and brotherly love is something that must
-be “sternly” acted upon! We may be quite certain that it is something
-the congregational sects very rarely see, or it would not throw them into
-such lamentable, and yet, in some sense, ludicrous contortions of
-surprise.
-
-Perhaps some Dissenter will be whispering, after the manner of Mr.
-Roebuck, the three words, Gorham, Liddell, Denison; but the _tu quoque_
-wholly fails. In the first place, it is the surprising peculiarity of
-the present Church controversies that the noisiest, if not the
-weightiest, disputants are not Churchmen at all. In the next place,
-those who are Churchmen, and enter with any bitterness into the strife,
-are remarkable neither for their number nor their influence. The great
-party in the Church of England is, after all, the middle party; and
-however fierce the cannonade which the extreme left, and its allies
-outside the pale, may direct against the extreme right, their missiles
-fly harmlessly over the vast body which lies between. The truth is, the
-recent outburst of controversy, so far as the Church herself is
-responsible for it, is nothing but the natural recoil of that
-conservative sentiment which must always be a powerful feeling in a
-religious community, from doctrines and usages which had become
-unfamiliar. As the unfamiliarity passes away, the controversy will also
-gradually cease. Already the doctrines and usages in question have been
-unconsciously adopted by many of those who fancy themselves most opposed
-to them; and, indeed, if our doughtiest combatants would only take pains
-to understand what it is their antagonists really hold, they would often
-find that they are fighting against mere shadows. The recent suits in
-the ecclesiastical courts cannot but open the eyes of Churchmen to the
-extreme tenuity of the points in dispute. Take the S. Barnabas case.
-Everybody will remember the language which was applied to the “practices”
-revived by Mr. Bennett. “Popish,” “histrionic,” “mummery,” were the
-mildest terms in the repertory of that gentleman’s assailants. Those
-“practices” remain to this day—if anything, they have been elaborated
-rather than subjected to any mitigating process. Messrs. Westerton and
-Beal bring the matter before the proper tribunal; but what are the only
-issues they can find to raise? Such notable questions as whether the
-cross, which glitters on the crown, the orb, and sceptre of the
-Sovereign, which glows on the national banner, which crowns almost every
-church gable in the land, with which every Churchman is marked at his
-baptism, which the very Socinians place upon their buildings, is,
-forsooth, a lawful ornament?—whether a table ceases to be a table by
-being made of stone?—whether the altar which has never been moved these
-two hundred years, and which nobody wants to move, must nevertheless be
-movable?—whether the altar vestments and the “fair linen cloths” used
-during Communion time, may have fringes, or must be plain-hemmed? Even
-if Dr. Lushington’s judgment should eventually be confirmed, if in this
-age of schools of design, Mr. Westerton’s crusade against art should
-prove successful, the alterations that would be made at S. Barnabas would
-be discernible by none out the keenest eyes—so little can there be found
-in matters ritual to fight about. Even in the Denison case the points of
-difference are almost as infinitesimal. It is true that under the
-revived act of Elizabeth—compared with which the laws of Draco seem a
-mild and considerate code—the Archdeacon has been sentenced to lose his
-preferments; but his doctrine on the Real Presence has, in sober fact,
-never been so much as challenged. His opponents, passing over all that
-was material in his propositions, have only attacked a _quasi_ corollary
-which he has added to his main position, but which is, in reality, a
-complete _non-sequitur_. Whether Dr. Lushington is right or wrong, it is
-clear that a person holding the dogma of transubstantiation itself might,
-with perfect logical consistency, accept the ruling of the Court.
-
-The differences between the highest and the lowest schools being so
-impalpable, it would seem absurd to suppose that the present
-controversies can have a much longer continuance. But whether that be so
-or not, there is a very important distinction (and one that is well worth
-the notice of statesmen) between the extension of the Church and the
-spread of Dissent. Church extension, as far as it goes, tends to compose
-differences. The consecration of a new church is almost invariably
-regarded as an occasion when party differences should be laid aside—the
-opening of a new meeting-house is too commonly the crowning act of an
-irreparable schism.
-
-Another lesson which the report of Mr. Mann ought to teach Churchmen is
-the necessity there is for insisting upon the next religious census being
-made a complete and accurate one. The next religious census ought to
-include all such institutions as colleges, workhouses, hospitals, and the
-like—it ought to be enforced by the same penalties as the civil census;
-and it ought to be understood that all the returns would be printed in a
-blue book. With these precautions the Church need not fear the result.
-Even if the census of 1861 should prove no more trustworthy than that of
-1851, it will remove a great deal of the misconceptions to which the
-latter has given rise. As far as one may judge, the work of church
-extension is progressing just as rapidly now as it was ten years ago; the
-number of the clergy is just as rapidly augmenting; {33} and as all
-additional clergymen have now to be supported on the voluntary principle,
-we may presume that they follow the ordinary laws of supply and demand.
-We may, therefore, confidently expect that the number of church sittings
-open on the census morning in 1861 will not be fewer than six millions;
-and if there be an average attendance (which there was not on the last
-occasion) the number of persons present will be about three millions and
-a half. That the Dissenters will be able to open any more sittings than
-in 1851, is doubtful; for it must be remembered that since 1841 the
-Church has been annually absorbing a population equal to the entire
-yearly increase. But allowing them the same increase as has been
-assigned to them for the decade 1841–51, they will not be able to open
-more than four million sittings, and they will not have more than two
-millions and a half of attendants. This estimate is formed on the
-supposition that the next census will be made on the voluntary principle
-like the last. If a more complete and accurate account is taken, the
-result may be very different. It is quite within the bounds of
-possibility that the number of church attendants may turn out to be near
-four millions, while that of the Dissenters may not much exceed two.
-
-Looking at all the facts of the case, there is every reason why the
-Church should take courage. Never since the Reformation has she had so
-much real power for good—never has she been so free from abuses. Each
-year sees thousands returning to the fold from which they or their
-parents had strayed; each year sees her enemies more and more “dwindle,
-peak, and pine.” Everything, too, points to a daily acceleration of the
-process. At the very time that Convocation is resuming its functions,
-the Non-conformist Union is compelled by internal dissentions to abandon
-their yearly meeting. What Mr. Miall calls “the dissidence of
-dissent”—that is to say, all in it that is pre-eminently narrow-minded,
-ignorant, and infected with bigotry—is concentrating itself, and is thus
-getting free the more respectable elements of modern non-conformity.
-Meanwhile the better class of Dissenters are doing all in their power to
-cut the ground from under their own feet. They are building
-“steeple-houses,” inventing liturgies, and adopting even choral services;
-in other words they are expressing in the most emphatic manner their
-opinion that the whole theory of dissent is wrong. For a short time a
-Brummagem ecclesiology may satisfy them; but in the end they will no
-doubt rank themselves amongst the best sons of the Church. The truth is,
-there is no other religious community at the present day which can bid so
-high for the reverent attachment of Englishmen. Whatever the claims of
-Rome—her antiquity, her catholicity, her apostolicity—they are equally
-the Church of England’s. Her succession of bishops is the same, her
-regard for the primitive church greater, her conception of Christendom
-far more grand. The glories of the ancient rituals belong equally to the
-Book of Common Prayer. It contains nothing material which was not in
-them, there was nothing material in them (save only certain invocations
-and legends of the saints) which is not in it. The Prayer Book is, in
-fact, nothing but a translation (magnificently done) of the older
-offices, a little compressed and simplified. The structure is the
-same—the mode of using it the same; and if it has lost somewhat of the
-multiplied ceremonies which were anciently observed, it has gained far
-more in the majesty and breadth which it has acquired from its thoroughly
-congregational character. Besides, it is throughout a reality, whereas
-the office books of the Latin Communion have, to some extent at least,
-become a sham. Thus the Breviary has long since been practically
-abolished as a public form of prayer, and even as a manual of private
-devotions for the clergy, that which forms its staple, the Book of
-Psalms, has been virtually reduced to a fourth its bulk. In nearly a
-thousand churches belonging to the Anglican communion the whole Psalter
-is publicly recited every month, and in twenty times that number it is
-said through twice every year.
-
-If Protestant Dissenters boast of their enlightenment or of their
-reverence for Scripture, the Church may meet them on that ground likewise
-with the utmost confidence. The Prayer-book scarcely recognises a person
-to be a Churchman if he cannot read; and she directs some forty psalms
-and some thirty chapters of the Bible to be gone through every week. In
-a word, approach the Church of England from the most opposite points, and
-she will be found to possess exactly that attribute which a person might
-think is most admirable. The man who reverences antiquity—who has a
-taste for art—who has a passion for ritual—who would have everything
-“understanded of the people,”—he who insists upon ranks and orders—and he
-who stands up for popular rights, will equally find in the Church of this
-country the very quality which he deems important. Never was there any
-institution so “many-sided;” never one that became with so much success
-“all things to all men.” How she could ever have lost her hold on the
-affections of Englishmen is indeed wonderful; but, in truth, until
-lately, she has never had a chance of making herself understood. _Now_,
-for the first time, her theory is beginning to be appreciated; and the
-success which has attended her, wonderful as it has been, is probably but
-the foretaste of a future more brilliant than anything of which we can
-now form an idea.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES.
-
-
-{11} The above tables, it is right to say, have been obtained by
-subtracting Mr. Mann’s tables relating to the Church from the tables
-relating to places of worship in the aggregate.
-
-{19} It is right to say that the decennial periods do not exactly agree.
-In Mr. Mann’s tables they are from 1801–11, &c.; in Mr. Bright’s return,
-from 1800–10, &c. It is not, however, apprehended that this circumstance
-would materially affect the calculation.
-
-{25} Neale estimates the Nonconformists, in the time of Charles II., at
-a hundred and fifty thousand families, or three quarters of a million
-persons; in other words, at about a sixth of the population. If the
-Dissenters had in 1801 only 881,240 sittings, their number of morning
-attendants would be considerably less than 400,000; and, allowing each
-attendant to represent three persons, that would give a Dissenting
-population of about 1,100,000.
-
-{26} The faculty of reasoning correctly in figures is not so ordinary an
-accomplishment as might have been supposed. Even so intelligent a writer
-as Mr. Henry Mayhew prints, at page 391 of his “Great World of London,” a
-table, of which the following is a specimen:—
-
- 1842. Can neither Can read
- read nor only (percent)
- write (percent).
-Convicted at assizes 39.79 27.21
-and sessions
-Convicted—summarily 39.90 21.65
- Average 39.84 24.43
-
-—the average being found by adding together the two lines and dividing
-the sum by two. It need hardly, however, be pointed out that the result
-so arrived at could not be true unless the number of persons in each
-class was exactly the same. A man who had invested in the Great Western
-Railway £900 which yielded him two per cent., and £100 in the South
-Western which paid him six, might say, on Mr. Mayhew’s principle, that he
-had invested £1000 at 4 per cent; but he would soon find out that he
-would have to receive only £24 for his yearly dividend instead of
-£40—£2.8 percent. instead of £4.
-
-{27} Mr. Mann calculates that without in the least interfering with
-juvenile labour, and without questioning the discretion of parents who
-kept children between the ages of 3 and 5 and 12 and 15 at home, there
-ought to have been more than three million children at school in 1851.
-It would be easy to show that this estimate is based upon nothing better
-than a series of blunders and bad guesses, but there is a much shorter
-mode of dealing with it. The children of the middle and upper classes do
-not remain under professional instructors at home or at school for a
-longer average period than six years. Now, the total number of children
-in 1851 between the ages of 4 and 10 was 2,484,866, or 13.8 per cent. of
-the entire population. The number actually on the school books was
-2,200,000, or 12.2 per cent. So that either all the children in the
-country were at school, but the average time was one-eighth too short; or
-the average time was of the right length, but the number of scholars was
-one-eighth too few. The truth, of course, lay somewhere between these
-two alternatives. Since 1851 considerable progress has no doubt been
-made; but it unfortunately turns out that the effect of improved
-machinery is not to improve the general education, but merely to shorten
-the time allotted to schooling. It is found that if by better modes of
-tuition a child can be made sooner to acquire what its parents think
-sufficient for it to know, it is only so much the sooner taken away. It
-would therefore be vain to expect that the school per centage will ever
-be much higher than it was in 1851—at least, until the middle classes
-raise their own standard. Of the children on the schoolbooks in 1851,
-the per centage of actual daily attendants was 83—91 for the private, and
-79 for the public scholar. In America, where the schools are wholly
-free, the per centage was still less. In Massachusetts, for example, it
-was only 75. In other words, the attendance in England and Wales in 1851
-was 1,826,000 daily. If the 2,200,000 had all been private scholars, it
-would have been 2,002,000. On the other hand if there had been 2,400,000
-free scholars, it would only have been 1,800,000. These figures will
-speak for themselves.
-
-{33} The number of additional clergy ordained every year is stated to be
-300. The number required to maintain the proportion of clergy to
-population which existed in 1851 would be under 200.
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Truth about Church Extension, by Anonymous
-
-
-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
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Truth about Church Extension
- An exposure of certain fallacies and misstatements contained in the census reports
-
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-
-
-Release Date: March 20, 2021 [eBook #64878]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TRUTH ABOUT CHURCH EXTENSION***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1857 William Skeffington edition by David
-Price.&nbsp; Many thanks to the British Library for making their
-copy available.</p>
-<h1>The Truth about Church Extension:</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center">AN EXPOSURE<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">OF CERTAIN</span><br />
-FALLACIES AND MISSTATEMENTS<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CONTAINED</span><br />
-IN THE CENSUS REPORTS<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ON</span><br />
-RELIGIOUS WORSHIP AND EDUCATION.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">LONDON:</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">WILLIAM SKEFFINGTON, 163,
-PICCADILLY.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">1857.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PRICE ONE
-SHILLING.</span></p>
-<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-1</span>PREFACE.</h2>
-<p>The entire absence of criticism on the decennial tables
-contained in the report of Mr. Horace Mann on the Census of
-Religious Worship has filled the writer with equal surprise and
-concern.&nbsp; For a period of nearly three years, hardly a week
-has passed without some injurious step on the part of the
-Government, some disastrous admission on the part of a friend,
-some daring rhodomontade on the part of a foe&mdash;all of which
-have owed their origin more or less directly to the false and
-mistaken view of the Church&rsquo;s position engendered by the
-still more erroneous and misleading statistics so widely
-disseminated by the Census report.&nbsp; Nor is there any
-prospect that the evil will diminish&mdash;at least, until the
-next Census.&nbsp; On the contrary, the idea that the Church has
-proved a failure seems to gain strength, and the policy of
-friends and foes alike appears to shape itself with special
-reference to that assumed fact.</p>
-<p>The writer does not wish to obtrude upon the public his own
-calculations as if they were absolutely correct; but he is
-satisfied that the account he has given of the <i>relative</i>
-growth of Church and Dissent during the past half century is, if
-anything, an understatement so far as the former is
-concerned.&nbsp; Had Mr. Bright&rsquo;s very remarkable return
-fallen sooner in his way he would probably have much modified his
-estimate relating to Dissent; but, as the case was already
-sufficiently strong for the main object he had in view, namely,
-to demonstrate the monstrous fallacy of the official report, he
-did not think it worth while to alter his calculations.&nbsp; His
-own conviction, however, is that the gross number of additional
-sittings supplied by Dissent is much more accurately represented
-by the table given in page <span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page24">24</a></span> than by that in page <span
-class="indexpageno"><a href="#page20">20</a></span>.</p>
-<p>The Census report on Education offers a tempting subject for
-remark; but the writer has not thought it necessary to go further
-into the matter than he has done in the note on page <span
-class="indexpageno"><a href="#page27">27</a></span>.&nbsp; For
-the reasons there stated, it will appear that there are no
-grounds whatever for asserting that the parents of this country
-neglect to provide their children with the means of instruction
-any <a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>more
-than they neglect to provide them with food or clothing.&nbsp; In
-every class which by any stretch of the term can be called
-&ldquo;respectable,&rdquo; parents do supply their children with
-what they consider a sufficient education; and their idea of what
-is sufficient is, after all, not much lower, everything
-considered, than prevails amongst the middle classes, who, in a
-country like this, must always fix the standard.&nbsp; The result
-of the Census goes to show that the Legislature has adopted the
-right course&mdash;that the way to obtain as large a number of
-attendants at school as possible is to subsidise, not to
-supersede, private exertion; and that it is even possible to fix
-the rate of subsidy too high; for all experience proves that
-parents will not enforce regular attendance, unless they feel
-that if their children stay away from school they will not
-receive something for which they have paid.&nbsp; Whether the
-Government ought to hold its hand until children of a certain
-class are brought to the prison schoolmaster is quite another and
-a different question; for it is clear that under any
-circumstances those unfortunates must be treated in an
-exceptional manner.&nbsp; Even if we had a national system,
-children belonging to &ldquo;the dangerous classes&rdquo; would
-not be admitted to the common schools; for no respectable person,
-however humble, would allow his sons or his daughters to
-associate with the offspring of habitual thieves or beggars.</p>
-<p>It is proper to add, in order to account for certain local
-illustrations, which it has been thought advisable to retain,
-that the substance of the following pages first appeared in a
-somewhat different form in the <i>Nottingham Journal</i>.</p>
-<p><i>December</i>, 1856.</p>
-<h2><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>THE
-TRUTH, &amp;c.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Among</span> the many changes which the
-present age has witnessed, none are more remarkable than those we
-have seen take place in the public mind with regard to the Church
-of this country.</p>
-<p>Thirty or forty years ago, the popular estimate of what was
-called the Established Religion was as low as can well be
-conceived.&nbsp; The laity, for the most part, regarded
-Churchmanship as a mere empty tradition, or at best as a
-political symbol, and an excuse for lusty choruses in praise of
-&ldquo;a jolly full bottle.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Clergy, unless they
-were grievously maligned, had but two objects in life&mdash;the
-acquirement of &ldquo;fat livings,&rdquo; and the enjoyment of
-amusements not now considered clerical.&nbsp; Of course, there
-never was a time when there were not hundreds of exemplary
-persons in holy orders; but that the prevailing impression was
-wholly without foundation it would take a bold man to
-affirm.&nbsp; The worldliness of the Clergy of the eighteenth
-century has even left its mark on the language.&nbsp; The word
-&ldquo;curate&rdquo; literally means a
-&ldquo;cur&eacute;&rdquo;&mdash;a person charged with the cure of
-souls, one that has the spiritual care of a parish.&nbsp; Such is
-its meaning in the Prayer Book, and such was its signification
-down to the last &ldquo;Review&rdquo;; but now it has come to
-mean only a hireling, or an assistant.&nbsp; In like manner,
-&ldquo;Parson&rdquo; was the most honourable title a parochial
-clergyman could possess; and that, no doubt, continued to be the
-case so late as the time of George Herbert.&nbsp; The beneficed
-Clergy under the Hanoverian dynasty, however, so conducted
-themselves, that the term is now never used, except by those who
-wish to speak disrespectfully of the profession, or of some
-individual belonging to it.</p>
-<p>It would be wrong, perhaps, to hold the Clergy entirely
-responsible for the sad phase through which we have lately
-passed.&nbsp; That they were what they were was &ldquo;more their
-misfortune than their fault.&rdquo;&nbsp; At the <a
-name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>worst, they
-were probably better than the rest of the community, and, save
-when by a persecution to the death the Church is forced into a
-position of direct antagonism to the world, it would be idle to
-expect it to be much in advance of the age.&nbsp; The short reign
-of the Puritans so confounded religion with cant that at the
-Restoration it had come to be thought a sort of virtue to be
-ungodly.&nbsp; The Church set itself manfully to resist the evil,
-and no doubt it would soon have been successful; but,
-unfortunately, the Nonjuring difficulty supervened.&nbsp; Now, it
-is the misery of a crisis of that description, that the community
-in which it occurs suffers every way.&nbsp; The men whose labours
-it actually loses are necessarily amongst the most conscientious,
-and, therefore, the most valuable, of its ministers; and those
-who stay behind have their usefulness impaired by the stigma
-which is cast upon their motives.&nbsp; For, if there are two men
-under precisely the same obligations, and one of them feels
-compelled for conscience&rsquo; sake to surrender all his worldly
-prospects, people will never be persuaded that the other, who
-does not follow the same example, has not sacrificed his
-convictions to his material interests.&nbsp; We have seen many
-instances in our own time in which this has occurred.&nbsp; Even
-at this moment many good Churchmen are reproached with a love of
-filthy lucre because they do not follow a few who once thought
-with them, but who have apostatized from the faith of their
-fathers; whereas, if there be a man in the world to whom
-secession under any pretext is impossible it is the consistent
-Anglican&mdash;the distinguishing tenet of whose school is the
-spiritual equality of bishops, and the consequent indefeasible
-authority of that episcopal line which has from time immemorial
-been in possession of a given country.&nbsp; In England, the
-existing Romanist succession was avowedly created by a Papal bull
-in the year 1850; and it is, therefore, on the face of it, an
-intrusion, and a usurpation of the rights which are inherent in
-the representatives of St. Austin and St. Anselm.&nbsp; Yet,
-because a few Anglicans have become Ultramontanists&mdash;a step
-which involved to them as distinct a giving up of all their
-former principles as it would have been for a Catholic to become
-a Socinian&mdash;the &ldquo;High Church&rdquo; clergy are reviled
-for retaining their benefices, and declining to follow the
-footsteps of a Faber and a Newman!&nbsp; In like manner, we may
-be sure that those Clergymen who conscientiously felt that they
-might withdraw their allegiance from King James, reaped a loss of
-influence for good, even among the partisans of King
-William.&nbsp; Close upon the Nonjuring troubles followed the
-scandalous attempt of the Hanoverian Government to undermine the
-faith of the Church by means of improper episcopal appointments,
-its resistance by the inferior clergy, and the consequent
-suppression of Convocation.&nbsp; The mischief to which this most
-unconstitutional step has given rise can hardly be
-overrated.&nbsp; We can scarcely conceive the confusion and <a
-name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>corruption
-which would creep into the body politic if Parliament were
-forcibly silenced for a whole century; and there is no reason why
-the English Church should prosper without representative
-institutions and free speech any more than the English
-nation.&nbsp; Under any circumstances, the Church, deprived of
-her parliament, must have greatly suffered; much more so in the
-face of those vast changes which have come about in the extent
-and distribution of the population.&nbsp; The machinery of the
-existing Church Establishment was designed for a population of
-five or six million souls.&nbsp; By 1821 the inhabitants of this
-country had increased to twelve millions.&nbsp; A new population
-exceeding the old one had thus been introduced, for which the
-Church as a body had no means of providing a single additional
-bishop or a single new sitting.&nbsp; Had the increase been
-evenly spread over the country the mischief would not have been
-so great; but, unfortunately, the new population chose all kinds
-of out-of-the-way places in which to settle.&nbsp; A rural parish
-suddenly found itself a metropolis; and a district, once
-traversed only by the shepherd or the ploughboy, became the
-teeming hive of manufacturing industry.&nbsp; In such a state of
-things the parochial system&mdash;perfect as it is where the
-Church has wholly subdued a country&mdash;miserably broke
-down.&nbsp; A signal failure was in fact inevitable; for what
-were the solitary parish priests of Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds,
-Bradford, St. Pancras, St. Marylebone, Islington, or Lambeth,
-amongst so many!&nbsp; For all practical purposes it may be
-asserted that at least half of the new population were as much
-beyond the reach of the Church of England as if they had settled
-in the woods of Canada or on the plains of Hindostan.&nbsp; Year
-after year the evil went on increasing, until at last the number
-of Englishmen who did not belong to the Established Church became
-so great that a Parliament of Churchmen were obliged to surrender
-their exclusive right of legislation and government.&nbsp; The
-prospects of the Church were at this time truly deplorable.&nbsp;
-Its very existence as an establishment was doubtful.&nbsp; The
-Whig Premier actually bade the bishops &ldquo;set their house in
-order;&rdquo; and the experiment of confiscation was begun.&nbsp;
-Humanly speaking it was only the difficulty of disposing of the
-plunder that saved the Church of these realms.</p>
-<p>The hour of danger, however, was not of long duration.&nbsp; A
-new school of theologians arose, who boldly asserted that the
-Church was not a creature of the State, to be dealt with at the
-pleasure or convenience of politicians, but a Divine institution,
-with laws, privileges, and a polity of its own; and that the duty
-of extending its usefulness belonged to individual exertions not
-less than to the Legislature.&nbsp; The effect of this new
-teaching, as it then appeared, was electric.&nbsp; Churchmen no
-longer sat with hands folded in blank despair, or amused
-themselves with irrefutable demonstrations that Parliament ought
-to do something.&nbsp; <a name="page6"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 6</span>They set to work themselves.&nbsp;
-Sometimes it was the clergy who stimulated the laity; sometimes
-it was the laity who applied a gentle compulsion to the
-clergy.&nbsp; Churches, parsonages, and schools began to spring
-up in every direction, with a rapidity that would have borne
-comparison with the palmiest days of the medi&aelig;val
-builders.&nbsp; The ancient indigenous architecture of the
-country, and its cognate arts, were in a manner rediscovered, and
-were brought to a perfection scarcely less than that attained by
-the greatest masters of antiquity.&nbsp; Indeed, the spread of
-this new science of ecclesiology has been not the least marvel of
-the present century.&nbsp; It has pervaded every part of the
-community; it has slain outright the bastard classicalism of the
-Age of Pigtail; and it has reproduced itself in the Puginism of
-the Romanists, and the Ruskinism of Dissent.&nbsp; It has even
-crossed the Channel, and appeared in the very centre of European
-taste&mdash;in Paris itself&mdash;the fount and origin of the
-whole vast movement being the work of church-building and
-restoration in this country, which has proved a school of art
-more effective, because on an infinitely larger scale, than any
-which modern times have witnessed.</p>
-<p>All this has been, moreover, but the symbol of a greater and
-yet more gratifying change&mdash;the gradual rehabilitation of
-the Church&rsquo;s character.&nbsp; Never since the Reformation
-did it occupy so high a position as that to which it had attained
-two or three years ago.&nbsp; Old scandals, and old epithets of
-abuse founded upon them, had alike disappeared.&nbsp; We read of
-Parson Trulliber with much the same feeling of incredulous
-amazement as we perused the accounts of Professor Owen&rsquo;s
-extinct monsters; and we should have looked upon the person who
-indulged in the sort of Billingsgate which was common half a
-century ago as if another Rip Van Winkle had stood before
-us.&nbsp; The ingenious calculations in which demagogues of the
-last generation used to indulge, with regard to what might be
-done with the ecclesiastical revenues, seemed like prospectuses
-of the South Sea Company.&nbsp; The very Horsmans, like their
-Puritan prototypes who made war on the King in the King&rsquo;s
-name, had begun to profess a desire only to increase the
-Church&rsquo;s efficiency.&nbsp; The Anti-State-Church Society
-itself, borne away by the spirit of the times, adopted a clumsy
-euphemism for its old out-spoken title.&nbsp; It no longer sought
-to destroy &ldquo;the State Church&rdquo;&mdash;its object was
-the &ldquo;Liberation of Religion from State Patronage and
-Control.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Once more, alas! the sky has changed.&nbsp; What the public
-now think of the Church, it would be difficult exactly to say;
-but that a strong re-action has set in, it would be vain to
-deny.&nbsp; There seems to be an impression abroad that the
-Church has been taking credit for far more than she was entitled
-to; that she has had a last trial allowed her, whether she would
-regain her place as the Church of the people; that her day of
-grace <a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>has
-passed, and that she has been found wanting.&nbsp; Political
-Dissent, which had fallen into a state of such ludicrous
-obscurity, has suddenly revived, and in a Parliament elected
-under Lord Derby has achieved what it could never do even in the
-worst times which followed the passing of the Reform
-Bill&mdash;it has effected a lodgment in the Universities.&nbsp;
-It has several times carried resolutions adverse to
-Churchrates.&nbsp; The demands of Mr. Pellatt are now granted
-almost as a matter of course; and not only so, but the very
-Government goes out of its way to flatter the prejudices of the
-Nonconformist.&nbsp; Thus, the Solicitor-General brings in a
-Testamentary Jurisdiction Bill, which would saddle the country
-with an enormous annual charge in the shape of compensations; the
-sole object being to afford Dissenters the gratification of
-reading at the commencement of their probates the words
-&ldquo;Victoria, by the Grace of God, Queen,&rdquo; instead of
-&ldquo;John Bird, by Divine Providence, Archbishop.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Some of the concessions which have been made to &ldquo;the rights
-of conscience&rdquo; are absolutely ludicrous.&nbsp; For example,
-young ladies and gentlemen of the different denominations
-complain that ill-natured people call their weddings
-&ldquo;workhouse marriages.&rdquo;&nbsp; A remedy is instantly
-found, at the risk of establishing a Gretna Green in every
-Dissenting place of worship.&nbsp; In a word, the Legislature
-seems to say to Dissent &ldquo;Ask and have.&rdquo;&nbsp; Very
-different is the tone both of Parliament and of the Executive,
-towards the Church.&nbsp; The prayer of the Convocation for
-permission to reform its constitution is, notwithstanding the
-plighted faith of the Crown, peremptorily refused.&nbsp; The
-Royal Letters on behalf of the Church Societies are stopped; the
-bill drawn up by the bishops to enfranchise the Colonial Church
-is rejected.&nbsp; It is perhaps hardly worth while to speak of
-various shabby acts with regard to money votes, such as the
-withdrawal of the grants to the Bishop of New Zealand and to the
-Scottish Church; but the animus which dictated them is only too
-obvious.&nbsp; After all, however, the saddest evidence that the
-public feeling has undergone a great change is to be found in the
-Education Bill of Sir John Pakington.&nbsp; Every one knows how
-fast the Church was becoming, in fact, what she is in theory, the
-instructress of the people; and till lately no Churchman could
-have been found to suggest any material alteration in a system
-which was bringing forth such gratifying fruits.&nbsp; Suddenly,
-however, Sir John is seized with a panic.&nbsp; The task appears
-in his eyes to be utterly hopeless, and he brings in a bill which
-would have destroyed the distinctive character of Church schools,
-and would have deprived Churchmen of all share (save that of
-paying school taxes) in the education of every district in which
-they could not command an absolute majority!</p>
-<p>That the Church is inefficient, every one now seems to take
-for granted&mdash;the only matter in dispute is, what has been
-the cause?&nbsp; Of course the <a name="page8"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 8</span>fault is always laid at the door of
-the Clergy; but it is amusing to observe the perplexity which
-appears to be felt as to the manner in which the indictment
-against them should be framed.&nbsp; Sometimes the charge is that
-they cannot preach&mdash;just as if orators were a whit more
-plentiful at the bar or in the senate, on the stage or in the
-Dissenting pulpit.&nbsp; Sometimes we are told that the Clergy
-are not abler men because they are not better paid.&nbsp; We have
-actually lived to see it stated by the <i>Times</i>, that the
-Clergy of the Church of England&mdash;the men who a few short
-years ago were reported to be rolling in wealth&mdash;are worse
-rewarded in this life than persons belonging to any other
-profession whatever!</p>
-<p>The object of the present essay is to strike at the very first
-step in the <i>sorites</i>&mdash;to show that the Church, since
-the great revival, so far from having proved a failure, has
-proved herself more than equal to the situation; and finally to
-point out how grievously both the public and the Legislature have
-been deceived by the data which have been published for their
-guidance.</p>
-<p>It need hardly be observed that the unfavourable impression to
-which allusion has been made has been entirely created by Mr.
-Horace Mann&rsquo;s Report on the Census of Religious
-Worship.&nbsp; That report has been assailed by the Bishop of
-Oxford, and other right reverend prelates; but their strictures,
-it is respectfully submitted, do not go quite to the point.&nbsp;
-It is not the account given of the present relative positions of
-Church and Dissent which has done the mischief.&nbsp; Every one
-knew that the Church was strongest in the country and Dissent in
-the towns; and seeing that the rural and the urban population
-were about equal, the public could scarcely be surprised to learn
-that the two bodies were also of nearly equal strength.&nbsp;
-According to the census, the Church had in 1851, 5,317,915
-sittings, and the Dissenters 4,894,648; but the Bishop of Oxford
-has shown that there are good reasons for believing that the
-Church sittings have been unfairly diminished, while those
-belonging to Dissenters have been much exaggerated.&nbsp; On that
-point the writer will only add that the number of sittings
-assigned to the Churches in the tables relating to one large
-town, the only one he has had occasion to verify, is not above
-three-fourths of the real amount.</p>
-<p>The total number of attendants at Church on the census morning
-was 2,541,244, against 2,106,238 in the meeting-houses.&nbsp;
-Now, without pressing any objection that might be made to these
-figures on the score of dishonesty in the returns, it must be
-obvious that they do not fairly represent the average
-attendance.&nbsp; In the first place, such institutions as the
-colleges at the Universities are not taken into account.&nbsp; In
-the next place, no reference is made to such places as the
-workhouses, in most of which service is performed by a chaplain,
-and from which the dissenting inmates are allowed to attend the
-meeting-houses of their respective <a name="page9"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 9</span>communities.&nbsp; Thirdly, the
-weather on the census Sunday was very inclement, and while the
-attendance generally would, no doubt, be less than an average,
-the effect would, beyond all controversy, be much more felt in
-Churches than in meeting-houses.&nbsp; The strength of the
-Church, it has already been said, is in the country, and it is
-quite a different thing in bad weather to walk a few hundred
-yards along a well-paved street, and to trudge a mile down a
-muddy lane.&nbsp; Fourthly, the attendants at all the morning
-masses in Roman Catholic chapels are returned, whereas it is well
-known that devout persons of that persuasion often
-&ldquo;assist&rdquo; at more than one mass on the same
-morning.&nbsp; Those persons have thus been counted twice
-over.&nbsp; Lastly, the day on which the census was taken was
-Mid-Lent Sunday, on which rustics in the northern counties are
-accustomed to pay visits to their friends instead of attending
-Divine service.&nbsp; That, in its degree, would also act
-unfavourably on the church-going of the census Sunday.&nbsp; If,
-therefore, we said that on ordinary occasions there were three
-quarters of a million more people at church on Sunday mornings in
-1851 than in all the dissenting places of worship put together,
-we should probably not be overstating the case; and there would
-certainly be nothing in a state of things like that to account
-for any alteration in the public sentiment.</p>
-<p>When, however, we come to look at the statements made as to
-the relative <i>progress</i> of the two bodies during the last
-half century our wonder at the change which has taken place in
-public opinion ceases.&nbsp; The following results, compiled from
-Tables 5 and 13 of Mr. Mann&rsquo;s Report, will exhibit at a
-glance the amount of population and the number of sittings in
-1801, as well as the subsequent increase at each decennial period
-since then:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Population.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Church Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Dissenting Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">8,892,536</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,289,883</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">881,240</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,171,123</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='5'><p>The subsequent increase was as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,271,720</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">24,305</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">328,720</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">353,225</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,835,980</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">42,978</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">527,160</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">570,138</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,896,561</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">124,525</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">788,080</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">912,605</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,017,351</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">293,945</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,253,600</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,547,545</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,013,461</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">542,079</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,115,848</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,657,927</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total Increase</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">9,035,073</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,028,032</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,013,408</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,041,440</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">17,927,609</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,317,915</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,894,648</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,212,562</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>So that during the last ten years, while the Church was
-supposed to be making unheard-of exertions, the amount of new
-accommodation she really provided was not one-half of that
-supplied by the dissenting bodies!&nbsp; The Wesleyan sects alone
-provided no less than 630,498 sittings, against the 542,079 found
-by the Church!&nbsp; The case may be made yet more clear from the
-following table, which <a name="page10"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 10</span>exhibits the number of sittings
-provided at each period for every thousand of the
-population:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Church.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Dissent.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">482</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">99</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">581</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">424</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">120</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">544</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">363</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">145</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">508</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">323</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">181</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">504</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">300</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">238</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">538</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">297</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">273</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">570</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>So that while the Church has lost 185 sittings, Dissent has
-gained 174.&nbsp; In other words, the Church has experienced a
-total relative loss of 359 sittings per thousand of the
-population during the last 50 years.&nbsp; Even since 1831 her
-loss, as compared with Dissent, has not been less than 118 per
-thousand!</p>
-<p>Comment on this would be superfluous.&nbsp; If such be really
-the state of the case it would be idle to waste time in wrangling
-over inaccuracies in the returns.&nbsp; If Dissent is gaining on
-the Church at the rate of 50,000, sittings per year, whatever may
-be wrong in the present totals must soon be corrected; and the
-Church must make up its mind, ere long, to sink down into a
-minority.</p>
-<p>The only question is, does the Census Report state the
-truth?&nbsp; <i>It does not</i>.&nbsp; On the contrary, it states
-the very reverse of the truth.&nbsp; It is not merely inaccurate,
-but altogether false.&nbsp; Mr. Mann&rsquo;s
-figures&mdash;although they have hitherto been accepted on all
-sides as if they were &ldquo;proofs of Holy
-Writ&rdquo;&mdash;rest upon no positive data whatever.&nbsp; So
-far, indeed, are they from possessing any claim upon the
-confidence of the public, the smallest effort of common sense,
-the most transient recollection of principles laid down by the
-immortal Cocker, would have warned Mr. Mann that the process he
-has adopted could not possibly lead to a correct result.</p>
-<p>It appears that as soon as the 30,610 districts into which the
-country was divided for the purposes of the census had been
-marked out, the enumerator in each was directed to return to the
-head office a list of all the places of worship within his
-jurisdiction.&nbsp; The result was to obtain information
-respecting 14,077 churches or chapels, and 20,390 dissenting
-meetings.&nbsp; Circulars were then sent out to the clergy, the
-ministers, or other official persons, requesting to know, amongst
-other things, the number of attendants on Sunday, the 30th of
-March, 1851, the number of sittings, and the date at which the
-building was erected, or first appropriated to religious worship
-(if since 1801).&nbsp; The report adds that&mdash;&ldquo;When
-delivering the schedules to the proper parties, the enumerators
-told them it was not compulsory upon them to reply to the
-inquiries; but that their compliance with the invitation was
-entirely left to their own sense of the importance and the value
-to the public of the information sought.&rdquo;&nbsp; As might
-have been expected there were very many instances <a
-name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>in which no
-returns were made.&nbsp; These instances were &ldquo;principally
-places of worship in connexion with the Church of
-England,&mdash;several of the clergy having entertained some
-scruples about complying with an invitation not proceeding from
-episcopal authority.&nbsp; In all such cases, a second
-application was made direct from the Census-office, and this
-generally was favoured by a courteous return of the particulars
-desired.&nbsp; The few remaining cases were remitted to the
-registrar, who either got the necessary information from the
-secular officers of the church, or else supplied, from his own
-knowledge, or from the most attainable and accurate sources, an
-estimate of the number of sittings and of the usual
-congregation.&rdquo;&nbsp; After all, the number of sittings
-could not be obtained in 2,134 cases, the number of attendants in
-1,004, and the number either of sittings or attendants in
-390.</p>
-<p>With regard to the tables more immediately under notice,
-namely those which profess to show the comparative progress of
-Church and Dissent during the last half-century, the mode of
-proceeding was as follows:&mdash;The buildings were first of all
-arranged under six heads&mdash;those erected or appropriated to
-religious purposes prior to 1801, and those erected or so
-appropriated during five subsequent periods.&nbsp;
-Thus:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Built before</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Churches.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Meeting Houses.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">9,667</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,427</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">13,094</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">55</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,169</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,224</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">97</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,905</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,002</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">276</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,865</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,141</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">667</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,199</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,866</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,197</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,397</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,594</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Dates not assigned</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,118</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,428</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,546</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>Mr. Mann&rsquo;s next step was to distribute the last line
-amongst the six previous ones, &ldquo;according to the proportion
-which the number actually assigned to each of the intervals bears
-towards the total having dates assigned at all.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Multiplying the results so arrived at by the present average
-number of sittings in churches (377), and by that in Dissenting
-meeting houses (240), Mr. Mann obtained two tables (5 and 13) of
-which the following is a summary:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Churches.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Meeting Houses.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total Buildings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,379</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,289,883</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,701</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">881,240</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">15,080</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,171,123</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,444</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,314,388</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,046</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,209,960</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">16,490</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,524,348</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,558</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,357,366</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">7,238</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,737,120</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">18,796</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">6,094,486</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,883</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,481,891</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,530</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,525,200</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">22,413</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">7,207,091</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">12,668</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,775,836</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">15,319</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,778,800</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">28,017</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">8,554,636</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">14,077</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,317,915</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">20,390</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,894,648</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">34,467</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,212,563 <a
-name="citation11"></a><a href="#footnote11"
-class="citation">[11]</a></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>It would be uncandid not to state that Mr. Mann admits this
-estimate to be open to some objection.&nbsp; His words
-are:&mdash;&ldquo;It is probable that an inference as to the
-position of affairs in former times can be drawn from <a
-name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>the dates of
-existing buildings with more correctness in the ease of the
-Church of England, as the edifices are more permanent and less
-likely to change hands than are the buildings used by the
-dissenters.&nbsp; Still there is a possibility that too great an
-amount of accommodation has been ascribed to the earlier
-periods.&rdquo;&nbsp; The tables are, therefore, to be taken with
-a &ldquo;certain degree of qualification from this
-cause.&rdquo;&nbsp; With respect to the Nonconformists, he
-observes in a note:&mdash;&ldquo;In 1801, according to the
-estimate from dates, * * * the Dissenters had only 3,701
-buildings.&nbsp; This, however, is scarcely probable, and seems
-to prove that many Dissenters&rsquo; buildings, existing in
-former years, have since become disused, or have been replaced by
-others.&nbsp; As so much depends upon the extent to which this
-disuse and substitution have prevailed, these calculations, in
-the absence of any facts upon those points, must necessarily be
-open to some doubts.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now, it may be taken for
-granted that no one reading these very mild qualifications would
-suppose that they were intended to cover any serious error.&nbsp;
-Everybody would conclude that the mere fact of Mr. Mann&rsquo;s
-tables appearing in a grave public document was a guarantee that
-they were in the main correct.&nbsp; Indeed, the suspicion that
-they were not perfectly trustworthy never seemed to have entered
-into anyone&rsquo;s head.&nbsp; The Society for the Liberation of
-Religion lost no time in issuing a manifesto grounded upon them,
-and the dissenting prints have dwelt on them with great
-emphasis.&nbsp; Thus the <i>Patriot</i>, some time ago, declared,
-with a sort of oath, that &ldquo;as surely as the morrow&rsquo;s
-sun would rise,&rdquo; so surely would Dissent be in a majority
-at the next census.&nbsp; On the faith of these tables, too, Mr.
-Hadfield announced, at the close of last session, that a spirit
-was growing up which would not much longer tolerate such an
-abomination as a religious establishment; and Mr. Gurney, in his
-sermon at the consecration of the Bishops of Gloucester and
-Christchurch, admitted that Dissent was gaining ground.</p>
-<p>Proceeding, without further comment, to examine the Tables in
-detail, it must be remarked that Mr. Mann&rsquo;s formula for
-distributing the dateless buildings is open to very strong
-objections.&nbsp; It is not, however, necessary to enter upon
-those objections at this point, because the operation of the rule
-with regard to the churches (which shall be dealt with first)
-happens by accident to be very nearly right&mdash;the number
-assigned to the year 1831 corresponding pretty closely with the
-number arrived at by the census inquiries in that year.&nbsp; Mr.
-Mann&rsquo;s next step, however, is begging the question with a
-vengeance.&nbsp; The circumstance that churches now-a-days
-contain on the average 377 sittings, affords not the least ground
-for supposing that the average capacity of churches was 377,
-fifty years ago.&nbsp; On the contrary, it is absolutely
-impossible, from the nature of church extension in modern times,
-that the average <a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-13</span>should have remained stationary.&nbsp; First of all,
-everybody knows that churches in large towns are, generally
-speaking, much more spacious than those in the rest of the
-country; and unless, therefore, the proportion of large town and
-country churches has remained exactly the same, the general
-average capacity of churches must have been disturbed.&nbsp; Mr.
-Mann&rsquo;s Table 14 deprives him of any excuse he might have
-had for overlooking this obvious fact.&nbsp; From that table we
-learn that there were in 1851:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Churches.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>In large town districts</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,457</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,995,729</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>In residue of the country</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,620</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,322,186</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">14,077</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,317,915</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>&mdash;exactly the same as in the general table given
-above.&nbsp; In 1801, however, matters were different.&nbsp;
-There were then&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Churches.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>In large town districts</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,163</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,248,702</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>In residue of the country</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">9,216</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,882,983</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,379</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,131,685</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>The number of churches is the same as in the general table,
-but the number of sittings is less by 158,198.&nbsp; The
-discrepancy, however, is soon explained.&nbsp; The average
-capacity of the larger town churches is 577 sittings, or 200
-above the general average, while that of the country churches is
-312, or only 65 less; and, while as many as 1,294 new buildings
-of the former class have been erected, the number of the latter
-class has only been 1,404.&nbsp; On Mr. Mann&rsquo;s own showing,
-therefore, his principle is erroneous, and his Table 13 has
-cheated the Church of nearly 160,000 sittings.&nbsp; But this is
-by no means the whole of the injustice of which he has been
-guilty.&nbsp; Not merely have there been more churches built in
-large towns than is consistent with maintaining the old average
-on the country at large, but the new structures both in town and
-country are of far greater dimensions than those anciently
-erected.&nbsp; An Englishman is not naturally fond of large
-communities of any kind.&nbsp; He has a passion for privacy; and
-his pet phrases are &ldquo;snug,&rdquo; &ldquo;nice
-little,&rdquo; &ldquo;not numerous, but select.&rdquo;&nbsp; This
-feeling breaks out in everything.&nbsp; Take the matter of
-lodging.&nbsp; Abroad, many families club together, and occupy a
-mansion.&nbsp; The plan has been tried in this country; but it
-meets with little success.&nbsp; Most men would regard themselves
-as &ldquo;flats&rdquo; indeed, if they put up with a floor when
-they could get a house; and working men regard model
-lodging-houses as little better than barracks, or, as they still
-term them, &ldquo;bastiles.&rdquo;&nbsp; So in ecclesiastical
-arrangements, John Bull, looking upon the parish as but an
-extension of the family, cannot have it too little for his
-taste.&nbsp; Abroad, the parish is regarded more in the light of
-a city within a city; and hence parochial churches on the
-continent were always less numerous and far <a
-name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>larger than
-was anciently the case in this country.&nbsp; Even when we had
-large churches they were not fitted up for many
-worshippers&mdash;size being regarded more a matter of dignity
-than of practical utility.&nbsp; London, before the Great Fire,
-with its vast cathedral, and its hundred and ten parish churches;
-or Norwich, with its spacious minster, and its forty churches,
-fairly represent the true English idea.&nbsp; In modern times,
-however, we are forced to act differently.&nbsp; The sudden
-increase of population, and the utter unpreparedness of the
-Church to grapple with the difficulty, have produced an emergency
-of which our forefathers had no experience.&nbsp; We adopt the
-continental custom from sheer necessity, just as in London a
-third of the population are obliged, though much against their
-will, to live in lodgings.&nbsp; We build our churches large
-because that is the cheapest mode of supplying our immediate
-wants.&nbsp; The two systems may be well illustrated by
-contrasting Norwich, with its 41 churches and 17,000 sittings,
-with Manchester, which has 32 churches and 44,000 sittings; or by
-comparing the City with its 73 churches and 42,000 sittings with
-the Tower Hamlets which have 65 churches and 68,000
-sittings.&nbsp; The census tables contain many materials for an
-inferential argument with regard to the size of our new churches,
-but it is hardly necessary to pursue the matter further, because
-we have ample direct evidence bearing upon the point.&nbsp; The
-Metropolis Church Building Society has assisted in the erection
-of 85 churches, which contain 106,000 sittings, or an average of
-1,247 each.&nbsp; The Church Building Commissioners have aided
-520 churches, and have thus assisted in providing 565,780
-sittings, which would give an average of 1,088 each.&nbsp; Even
-Mr. Mann himself admits, with amusing <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i>,
-that &ldquo;for many reasons the churches in large towns are
-constructed of considerable size, and rarely with accommodation
-for less than 1,000 persons!&rdquo;&nbsp; [Report page
-clxii.]&nbsp; Precisely the same reasoning will apply to the
-Church extension of the rural districts; and the reader who has
-duly weighed the facts just stated will be little disposed to
-doubt that in both cases the average size of modern churches is
-at least double that of the churches which were in existence
-prior to 1801.&nbsp; On that hypothesis it would be found by an
-easy arithmetical problem that the capacity of town churches, in
-1801, was 420 sittings, and of country ones, 276.&nbsp; The
-increase in the former class would thus have been 1,086,960
-sittings, and in the latter 775,008&mdash;making together
-1,861,968.&nbsp; Probably it was much more; but at all events the
-calculation omits a very important element, namely, the new
-sittings which have been obtained by the enlargement or the
-re-arrangement of old fabrics.&nbsp; From the statistics of above
-a score of Church Building Societies, it would appear that for
-every additional structure at least two old ones are rebuilt or
-enlarged.&nbsp; There must thus have been at least 5,000 of these
-cases; and though <a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-15</span>there are no accessible data on which to calculate the
-amount of new accommodation in this manner afforded, it must have
-been very considerable.</p>
-<p>On the whole, therefore, we may safely adopt the statistics of
-the Incorporated Society for Building and Enlarging Churches as
-our guide.&nbsp; This society has laboured impartially for the
-advantage of town and country; and up to the year 1851 it had
-assisted in erecting 884 new churches, and in rebuilding or
-enlarging 2,174 old ones.&nbsp; The total amount of new sittings
-it had thus been instrumental in providing was 835,000; so that
-each new church would <i>represent</i> an increase of
-accommodation to the extent of 944 sittings.&nbsp; As, however,
-the society probably assisted the more urgent cases, it would
-perhaps be safer to assume that each new church has only
-represented an increase of 850 new sittings&mdash;in other words,
-that the new churches not assisted by the society represent about
-800 each.&nbsp; The result will then be as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">No. of Churches.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,379</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,024,615</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='3'><p style="text-align: center">Decennial
-increase:</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">65</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">55,250</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">114</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">96,900</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">325</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">276,250</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">785</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">667,250</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,409</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,197,650</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total Increase</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,698</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,293,300</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">14,077</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,317,915</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>Turning now to the Dissenting tables, we shall find that Mr.
-Mann&rsquo;s formula leads to still more absurd results than when
-it is applied to the churches.&nbsp; It has, however, the curious
-felicity of operating in the two cases in a manner diametrically
-opposite; for while it robs the Church of more than half the new
-accommodation which she has provided, it obligingly credits
-Dissent with about the same number of sittings, to which it has
-not the ghost of a claim.</p>
-<p>It is the proper place to offer here a few remarks upon the
-mode which has been adopted for distributing the dateless
-buildings amongst the six periods.&nbsp; Every one is, of course,
-aware that in many cases &ldquo;there is much virtue&rdquo; in an
-average.&nbsp; In such problems as determining the number of
-letters which will be posted in a given year without being
-addressed, it operates with almost infallible certainty.&nbsp;
-But it must be clear that 2,428 out of 20,390 places could not
-have been returned without dates by mere accident.&nbsp; In a
-large proportion of cases the omission must have been
-intentional; and it is obvious that those cases would include
-very few new buildings.&nbsp; The enumerators, being all persons
-possessed of local knowledge, could have had no difficulty in
-determining whether a building had or had not been erected within
-the last ten, twenty, or thirty years.&nbsp; It would only be in
-cases where the <a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-16</span>structure was of what is called in ladies&rsquo;
-sometimes &ldquo;a certain,&rdquo; sometimes &ldquo;an
-uncertain&rdquo; age, that they would be unable to ascertain when
-it was erected or appropriated to public worship.&nbsp; The
-number of such instances would bear no relation whatever to the
-number having dates assigned.&nbsp; The case is wholly beyond the
-province of the Rule of Three; and to attempt to adjust the table
-by means of proportion is, on the face of it, unfair.&nbsp; Out
-of the 2,118 dateless churches, no fewer than 1,712 are relegated
-to the number of those erected before 1801, whereas of the 2,428
-dateless meeting-houses, only 465 would be placed in the same
-category.&nbsp; In point of fact, however, there are not so many;
-for Mr. Mann has hit on a plan, which is a miracle of perverse
-ingenuity, in order to make the growth of Dissent during the half
-century look larger than ever.&nbsp; Ninety-nine persons out of a
-hundred would have applied the rule first to the churches, then
-to the meeting-houses, and then they would have added the results
-together.&nbsp; Mr. Mann has adopted precisely the opposite
-course.&nbsp; He has, first of all, dealt with the total column,
-then with the Church, and he has lastly subtracted the one set of
-results from the other.&nbsp; The consequence is he has assigned
-no more than 274 of the dateless meeting-houses to the period
-before 1801.&nbsp; The total number he has distributed amongst
-the first three periods is only 737, whereas he has divided no
-fewer than 1,691 amongst the last three.&nbsp; It need scarcely
-be said that all the probabilities would be all in favour of
-reversing the process.</p>
-<p>At the outset, therefore, Mr. Mann&rsquo;s estimate comes
-before us under circumstances of extreme suspicion; but,
-granting, for the sake of argument, that his distribution of the
-existing meeting-houses were correct, it must be obvious that any
-inference from dates would be preposterous unless we could be
-certain that there were no buildings in existence at the earlier
-periods, other than those included in the table.&nbsp; It has
-been seen that Mr. Mann has not overlooked this
-circumstance.&nbsp; He admits that the small number assigned to
-1801 &ldquo;seems to prove that many dissenters&rsquo; buildings
-existing in former years have since become disused or have been
-replaced by others;&rdquo; but no one would suspect from this
-statement the vast number of these disused buildings.&nbsp; Take,
-for example, the case of Nottingham.&nbsp; From Mr. Wylie&rsquo;s
-local history it would appear that of the 29 meeting-houses
-returned to the Census Office, only six dated back to the
-commencement of the present century.&nbsp; In other words,
-dissent in Nottingham, on Mr. Mann&rsquo;s hypothesis, all but
-quintupled itself during the 50 years.&nbsp; In point of fact,
-however, there were, not six, but thirteen or fourteen,
-dissenting congregations in 1801, and probably several more whose
-&ldquo;memorial has perished with them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The absurdity of the Census estimate may be still further
-illustrated <a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-17</span>by a reference once more to Tables 6 and 14.&nbsp; Those
-tables are to Mr. Mann&rsquo;s calculation not very different
-from the proof of an addition sum.&nbsp; If his estimate were
-right they would agree with Tables 5 and 13; but instead of doing
-so, they lead to the following astounding results:&mdash;In 1851,
-there were in the</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Meeting Houses.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Average Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Large town districts</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">6,129</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,131,515</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">347 each.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Residue of country</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">14,261</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,763,133</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">193 &bdquo;</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>This is, of course, quite correct.&nbsp; But now see what the
-tables say of 1801&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p>Meeting Houses.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Average Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Large town districts</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,337</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">258,220</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">193 each.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Residue of country</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,634</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">781,218</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">330 &bdquo;</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>The late Mr. Hume&rsquo;s emphatic appreciation of a certain
-&ldquo;modest assurance&rdquo; as a means towards getting through
-life will be remembered.&nbsp; How the lamented sage would have
-envied the courage of Mr. Mann in putting his name to a document
-embodying these statements!&nbsp; It is really much the same as
-if the Astronomer Royal had presented to Parliament an elaborate
-calculation, signed with his proper name, in which he proved the
-diameter of the earth to be 25,000 miles, and its circumference
-8,000!&nbsp; Seriously, the very least one might have expected
-from a public servant performing an important official duty would
-have been to abandon calculations which he must have observed led
-to nonsensical consequences; and not to put forth statements
-which, while they involved a gross libel upon the most venerable
-institution in the country, were calculated to prove, as they
-have proved, so fatally misleading.&nbsp; These very Tables 6 and
-14 are of great importance.&nbsp; We are constantly hearing that
-the great towns monopolise the intelligence of the age, and that
-it is they which are to govern the country.&nbsp; What then, has
-been the verdict of the great towns on the question&mdash;Church
-<i>versus</i> Dissent?&nbsp; According to these tables, the
-Church, in the large towns, has provided only 747,027 sittings to
-meet an increase in the population of 5,621,096 souls.&nbsp;
-Dissent, in the meantime, has furnished 1,873,305, or more than
-twice as many.&nbsp; The Church&rsquo;s increase is not
-two-thirds the number of sittings she originally possessed; the
-increase of Dissent is more than sevenfold!&nbsp; If these
-figures were only correct, it would hardly be possible to
-conceive a more complete condemnation of the Church&rsquo;s
-system; if they are not&mdash;and there is no reason to think
-that Dissent has materially altered its position in the large
-towns since 1801&mdash;it is impossible to imagine a more
-scandalous or a more gratuitous calumny.</p>
-<p>Mr. Mann&rsquo;s formula proving utterly untrustworthy, the
-question arises, are there any data on which a substantially
-correct notion of the number of Dissenting sittings in 1801 may
-be arrived at?&nbsp; To the writer, it appears that there
-are.&nbsp; Thus, from the statistics of the different <a
-name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>Wesleyan
-bodies appended to Mr. Mann&rsquo;s report, it would appear that
-the old and new Connections in 1801 had at least 100,000
-members.&nbsp; It would further appear, that for every member the
-Wesleyans have about four sittings, so that in 1801 the Wesleyans
-must have had at least 400,000 sittings.&nbsp; The next question
-is, what proportion did the Wesleyans bear to the aggregate
-Nonconformity of 1801?&nbsp; At present, the Wesleyan sects have
-about 11/24ths of the entire number of Dissenting sittings; but
-their ratio of progress has confessedly been double that of their
-fellow Nonconformists.&nbsp; Mr. Mann&rsquo;s process of
-calculating from dates, unsatisfactory as it is in other
-respects, may, perhaps, be allowed to decide how much of the
-entire Dissenting accommodation of 1801 was possessed by the
-Wesleyan bodies.&nbsp; According to table 17, the old and new
-Connections had between them only 165,000 sittings, out of the
-881,240.&nbsp; It has been shown, however, that they had, in
-reality, not less than 400,000; and, raising the sittings
-belonging to the other sects in the same proportion, we get a
-total of 2,136,339.&nbsp; This result receives complete
-corroboration from Mr. Mann&rsquo;s own returns.&nbsp; First of
-all, it is clear that meeting-houses which have remained in
-existence half a century must be buildings of some
-importance.&nbsp; Dissenting places of worship are of two
-classes&mdash;those which have regular congregations and a
-regular ministry attached to them, and those which are merely
-temporary preaching stations.&nbsp; The number of these latter
-will surprise the reader.&nbsp; Mr. Edward Baines, in his
-evidence before the Churchrates Committee, estimated that no
-fewer than 7,360 of the 19,000 which he supposed belonged to
-&ldquo;the three denominations&rdquo; were of this
-description.&nbsp; The total number of mere preaching stations,
-however, may be easily ascertained.&nbsp; It may be safely
-assumed that all places which have a regular ministry are opened
-both on Sunday mornings and on Sunday afternoons or
-evenings.&nbsp; The total number of this class in 1851 was only
-10,583; so that each would <i>represent</i> an average of 462
-sittings.&nbsp; Now, as the number of Dissenting places of
-worship which date back to 1801 cannot be less, even if
-calculated on Mr. Mann&rsquo;s principle, than 3900, the number
-of sittings in that year must have been upwards of
-1,800,000.&nbsp; But it would be a great fallacy to suppose that
-even first-class Dissenting congregations are exempt from the
-tendency to decay and disappear.&nbsp; If Nottingham may be taken
-as a fair example, it would seem that not two-thirds of the
-regularly organised congregations existing in 1801 survive to
-this day.&nbsp; The total number of sittings at the commencement
-of the present century would thus be at least 2,700,000.</p>
-<p>The matter does not, however, rest even here.&nbsp; These
-estimates are purely conjectural; but since the writer first
-turned his attention to the subject, a valuable piece of positive
-evidence has fallen in his way.&nbsp; It <a
-name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>is a
-Parliamentary return obtained by Mr. Bright last year, which
-professes to show the number of places of worship licensed under
-the Toleration Act.&nbsp; It is very imperfect in its earlier
-tables, but those since 1800 seem to be tolerably complete.&nbsp;
-Comparing the number of places licensed during each of the last
-five decennial periods with the number of existing buildings
-returned to Mr. Mann as opened in each, we get the following
-remarkable results:&mdash;<a name="citation19"></a><a
-href="#footnote19" class="citation">[19]</a></p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Ten years ending</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Places licensed.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Still in existence.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Still in existence (per cent.)</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1810</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,460</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,169</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">21</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1820</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,161</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,905</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">18</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1830</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,585</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,865</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">27</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1840</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">7,422</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,199</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">56</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1850</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,810</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,397</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">75</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">39,438</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">14,535</p>
-</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>This is a comparison which cannot fail to startle the editor
-of the <i>Patriot</i>, and to shake the nerves of the Society for
-the Liberation of Religion.&nbsp; It proves beyond the
-possibility of cavil that the enormous and constantly increasing
-growth which Mr. Mann&rsquo;s tables assign to modern Dissent is
-&ldquo;a mockery, a delusion, and a snare.&rdquo;&nbsp; It shows,
-moreover (which is the matter more immediately in hand), that
-barely two in seven (21/75ths) of the Dissenting places of
-worship which were in existence in 1801, are still
-remaining.&nbsp; The number of such places was not 3,701, as Mr.
-Mann states, but between 13,000 and 14,000; and the estimate of
-sittings first made, after every conceivable allowance for
-increase of average capacity, and other sources of error, is thus
-greatly under rather than over the mark.&nbsp; The Dissenting
-increase may, therefore, be safely taken at 2,758,309 sittings
-instead of 4,013,408; and if it be distributed according to the
-proportion of places licensed, matters will stand
-thus:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Ten years ending</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">381,875</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">,, &bdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">710,664</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">,, &bdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">740,319</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">,, &bdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">519,097</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">,, &bdquo;</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">406,354</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>If it be objected that the average capacity of Dissenting
-buildings has increased of late years, there are two
-answers&mdash;first, there is no evidence of such increase to any
-material extent; and, secondly, that there is an antagonistic
-influence at work, which would counterbalance such increase if it
-existed.&nbsp; It must be clear that the number of
-&ldquo;causes&rdquo; which annually collapse becomes greater in
-the same ratio as the congregations themselves increase.&nbsp;
-Thus, almost the same number of places were licensed in the ten
-years ending 1810 as in the same period ending 1850; but the
-number of places discontinued out of 13,000 would obviously be <a
-name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>less than the
-number discontinued out of, say 18,500; so that unless the new
-Dissenting meeting-houses are larger nowadays than was formerly
-the case, the amount of sittings attributed to the latter periods
-is too large, rather than too small.</p>
-<p>We have now materials for the reconstruction of our
-table:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p>Population.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Church Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Dissenting Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Total Sittings.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">8,892,536</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,024,615</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,136,339</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,160,954</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='5'><p>Subsequent decennial increase:&mdash;</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,271,720</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">55,250</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">381,875</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">437,125</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,835,930</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">96,900</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">710,664</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">807,564</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,896,561</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">276,250</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">740,319</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,016,569</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,017,351</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">667,250</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">519,097</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,186,347</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,013,161</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,197,650</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">406,354</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,604,004</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total Increase</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">9,035,073</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,293,300</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,758,309</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,051,609</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">17,927,609</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,317,915</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,894,648</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,212,583</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>The number of sittings per thousand of the population was, at
-the different periods, as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td colspan='2'><p><span class="smcap">according to the above
-table</span>.</p>
-</td>
-<td colspan='2'><p><span class="smcap">According to Mr.
-Mann&rsquo;s Table</span>.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p>Church.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Dissent.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Church.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p>Dissent.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">340</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">240</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">482</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">99</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">303</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">247</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">424</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">120</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">264</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">269</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">363</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">145</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">248</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">285</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">323</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">181</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">258</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">282</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">300</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">238</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">297</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">273</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">297</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">273</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>Thus it will be seen that every inference drawn from Mr.
-Mann&rsquo;s tables has proved false.</p>
-<p>Dissent has <i>not</i>, during the half century, supplied four
-times as much new accommodation as the Church&mdash;if it has
-supplied any more at all, the excess does not amount to a
-fourth.</p>
-<p>Dissent has <i>not</i>, during the last 20 years, supplied
-three times as much accommodation as the Church&mdash;it has
-barely supplied half as much.</p>
-<p>Dissent is <i>not</i> advancing at a pace twice as rapid as
-the Church; on the contrary, the Church is advancing at nearly
-three times the speed of Dissent.</p>
-<p>Dissent has <i>not</i> improved its position, and the Church
-has not lost position since 1831; on the contrary, the Church has
-gained, and Dissent has lost, ground since that year.</p>
-<p>Finally, as churches, save only where there is an excess of
-accommodation as compared with the population, are at least as
-well attended as dissenting places of worship, the charge of
-comparative inefficiency which has been so rashly brought against
-the clergy proves to be utterly without foundation.</p>
-<p>Here, then, the present inquiry might be brought to a close;
-and yet it would be palpably unfair to the Church to rest the
-case upon a mere comparison of the additional sittings supplied
-by her rivals and by herself.&nbsp; A new church, generally
-speaking, means a very different thing from a <a
-name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>new
-meeting-house.&nbsp; It means a substantially built and even
-highly-decorative structure, the freehold of which is the
-property of the community to which it belongs; it means decent
-and becoming furniture for the performance of divine service;
-provision for a properly educated minister in perpetuity; service
-performed at least twice every Sunday, or even twice every day; a
-house for the resident minister; a day-school, or rather a group
-of day-schools; and a host of other benevolent and educational
-agencies.&nbsp; If the establishment of the day-school be taken
-as a criterion how far the parochial machinery has been
-completed, the following table from the report of the Educational
-Census will be instructive:&mdash;</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Day Schools
-Supported by Religious Bodies</span>.</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Founded before</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Church Schools.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Dissenting Schools.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">709</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">57</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">766</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">350</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">60</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">410</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">756</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">123</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">879</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">897</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">124</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,021</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,002</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">415</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,417</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1855</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,448</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,156</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,604</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Not stated</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">409</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">89</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">498</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">8,571</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,024</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,595</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>What, on the other hand, is the status of a majority of the
-20,390 buildings returned to the Census office as
-&ldquo;chapels&rdquo; may be guessed from the fact that the total
-number of professional dissenting ministers of every description
-in 1851 was only 8,658.</p>
-<p>A very tangible mode of settling the question which body has
-done most to evangelise the people would be to inquire how much
-each has spent?&nbsp; The &ldquo;Society for the Liberation of
-Religion,&rdquo; in a tract they have put forth, grounded on the
-Census report, states that the achievements of voluntaryism
-during the half century have been
-&ldquo;astonishing.&rdquo;&nbsp; On the authority of Mr. Edward
-Baines, they assume that of the 16,689 dissenting chapels opened
-since 1801, &ldquo;only&rdquo; 10,000 are separate buildings, and
-that the cost of each has been &ldquo;but&rdquo;
-&pound;1,500&mdash;in other words, that dissenters have spent
-&pound;15,000,000 on their meeting-houses during the last fifty
-years!&nbsp; That would, indeed, be an &ldquo;astonishing&rdquo;
-result, but it is not half so surprising as the perfervid
-imagination which dictated the calculation.&nbsp; In point of
-fact, it is equivalent to saying that the dissenters have
-provided three millions of permanent sittings, at the rate of
-five pounds per sitting.&nbsp; The real truth, however, is that
-they have not supplied more than two millions and three quarters
-of new sittings of any kind; and when it is considered in how
-many cases opening a new meeting-house means hiring a room or
-building, in the popular phrase, &ldquo;on tick&rdquo;; when it
-is further borne in mind that the average cost of churches is not
-above &pound;5 or &pound;6 per sitting, it will be admitted that
-five or six millions sterling would be a remarkably liberal sum
-to put down for the amount really raised by dissenters for the
-purpose of self-extension <a name="page22"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 22</span>during the half century.&nbsp; On the
-other hand, the sum which must have been spent on churches cannot
-have been less than ten or twelve millions&mdash;of which
-one-half has been raised during the ten years
-1841&ndash;51.&nbsp; The expenditure on church extension at the
-present moment is at least five times as great as that of all the
-dissenters put together.</p>
-<p>The votaries of <i>Iscariotism</i>, or the &ldquo;cheap and
-nasty&rdquo; in religion, will perhaps turn this fact to account,
-and abuse Churchmen for lavishing such large sums of money on a
-few buildings, while there is so much spiritual destitution
-calling for relief.&nbsp; They will perhaps say, &ldquo;Look what
-an amount of spiritual agency the Dissenters bring to bear for
-half the sum you expend; and, after all, the Dissenters
-&lsquo;get more out of&rsquo; their buildings than
-Churchmen.&rdquo;&nbsp; At first sight, Mr. Mann&rsquo;s tables
-appear to justify this assertion; but here, as in every other
-respect, they only mislead.&nbsp; According to Table 16 there
-were on the Census Sunday 190 services in every 100 dissenting
-places of worship; whereas, there were only 171 in the same
-number of churches.&nbsp; But if this table be any criterion, it
-would appear that the machinery of Dissent is, by comparison,
-more efficient in the rural districts than in the towns; for
-while the Non-conformists opened their town buildings on the
-average 2.10 times, and the Churchmen 2.06 times, they opened
-their country buildings 1.84 times and the Churchmen only 1.64
-times.&nbsp; Yet it must be obvious that the proportion of
-country congregations which possess a regular ministry must be
-very small, the greater part of the 8,658 professional Dissenting
-preachers being required for the towns.&nbsp; The fact is, the
-majority of country meeting-houses are served by non-professional
-persons.&nbsp; As soon as the morning service is over in the
-towns, a swarm of &ldquo;Spiritual Bashi-Bazooks,&rdquo; issue
-forth, who, for the rest of the day, play the more ambitious, if
-not more edifying, <i>r&ocirc;le</i> of preacher.&nbsp; The sort
-of congregations to which they minister may be gathered from a
-comparison of the number of meeting-houses and the number of
-sittings open at the different periods of the day:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Meeting Houses (open).</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings (open).</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Morning</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,875</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,645,875</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Afternoon</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">11,338</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,506,116</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Evening</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">15,619</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,983,725</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>So that in the afternoon, with only 537 fewer places open, the
-number of sittings was 1,139,759 fewer than in the morning.&nbsp;
-In the evening (when, of course, all the more important buildings
-which were open in the morning were again accessible to the
-public) the exertions of 3,744 additional preachers, nearly a
-third more, only rendered available 337,850 additional sittings,
-or about one-eleventh more; and they attracted only 97,668
-additional hearers, an increase of less than one in
-twenty-one!&nbsp; It may, perhaps, be allowable to doubt whether
-the labours of non-resident, non-professional preachers can be
-attended with any <a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-23</span>results worth speaking of; but, at all events, their
-irregular ministrations can have no real bearing on the question
-whether the regular meeting-houses are used more or less
-frequently than the churches.&nbsp; Obviously, the fairest way
-would be to inquire which class of buildings are opened the
-oftener throughout the whole week; and, in that case, there is no
-doubt that the comparison would show greatly in favour of the
-churches.&nbsp; If, however, we must confine ourselves to Sunday,
-the proper question to ask would be&mdash;in how many cases there
-is a service before, and another after, noon?&nbsp; The answer,
-according to Table 16, would be as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Churches.<br />
-(per cent.)</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Meeting Houses.<br />
-(per cent.)</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Town districts</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">85</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">75</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Rural ditto</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">62</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">43</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Whole country</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">66</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">51</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>If the investigation could be limited to the new
-accommodation, the result would strikingly show that the extra
-outlay on the churches had in no sense been thrown away.</p>
-<p>After all, the number of sittings a religious body can open in
-the morning is the real test of its strength.&nbsp; Amongst
-persons of every denomination there is a strong feeling that they
-ought to frequent their own place of worship in the morning, but
-in the after part of the day many persons do not consider
-themselves called upon to attend again, or they feel themselves
-at liberty to visit other churches or meetings.&nbsp; In short,
-to speak technically, the morning service is looked upon by
-everybody as a service of &ldquo;obligation,&rdquo; while all the
-rest are regarded as mere services of
-&ldquo;devotion.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now, of the 5,317,915 sittings
-belonging to the Church, no fewer than 4,852,645 were actually
-available on the Census morning.&nbsp; The remaining 465,270 were
-almost exclusively in the country, where one clergyman has still
-often to serve more than one parish or chapelry.&nbsp; Cases of
-this kind have of late years been much diminished, owing to the
-operation of the Pluralities Act, and still more in consequence
-of the increased zeal, both of the clergy and the laity.&nbsp;
-The Bishop of Salisbury stated in his primary charge that the
-number of churches in that diocese having two sermons on Sunday
-had increased during the episcopate of Dr. Denison (16 years)
-from 143 to 426; and the number having monthly communions from 35
-to 181.&nbsp; The increase in the number of church sittings
-during the past half century may be considered as nett, for there
-can be no doubt that nearly all the new buildings have the double
-service.&nbsp; At all events, if there are any that have not,
-they are more than compensated for by those ancient churches
-where there was formerly only one service on the Lord&rsquo;s
-Day, but where there are now two.&nbsp; On the other hand, the
-Dissenters are not able to open quite three-fourths of their
-sittings on the Sunday morning; and as there is no reason
-whatever for supposing that their new accommodation <a
-name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>is exempt
-from this deduction, we may subtract one-fourth from the gross
-number assigned in the tables to each period.</p>
-<p>The following table, compiled on the assumption that 58 per
-cent. of the population might attend divine worship on any Sunday
-morning, will show at a glance the number of sittings really
-required at each decennial period, and the real provision made to
-supply the deficiency:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings (open) required.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Furnished by the Church.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">By dissent.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,157,671</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,559,345</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,577,143</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,136,488</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='5'><p>Increase decennially:&mdash;</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">737,598</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">55,250</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">286,407</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">341,657</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,064,869</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">96,900</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">532,998</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">629,898</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,100,005</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">276,250</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">555,239</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">831,488</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,170,064</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">667,250</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">389,323</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,056,573</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,167,807</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,197,650</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">304,766</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">1,502,416</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total increase</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">5,240,342</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,293,300</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">2,068,732</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,362,032</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Total</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">10,398,013</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4,852,645</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3,645,875</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">8,498,520</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>Or, exhibiting the same results in a somewhat different
-form:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Sittings per 1,000 of
-population required.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Provided by Church.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">By Dissent.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Total.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1801</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">580</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">287</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">177</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">464</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1811</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">580</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">257</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">183</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">441</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1821</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">580</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">225</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">199</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">424</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1831</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">580</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">214</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">212</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">426</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1841</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">580</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">229</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">209</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">438</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>1851</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">580</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">270</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">203</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">473</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p style="text-align: center">Church loss since 1801, 17;
-Dissenting gain, 26: total Church loss, 43.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Church gain since 1831, 56;
-Dissenting loss, 9; total Church gain, 65.</p>
-<p>This, then, is really the rate at which each body &ldquo;is
-advancing in the path of self extension;&rdquo; and the best
-proof of its accuracy is, that it exactly tallies with what one
-would have expected beforehand.&nbsp; Mr. Mann&rsquo;s tables, on
-the contrary, are absolutely incredible.&nbsp; We must never
-forget, that during the Great Rebellion, Puritanism was actually
-the dominant faction; and even at the Restoration it cannot be
-supposed that the Dissenters were a small or an uninfluential
-class.&nbsp; In 1662 no fewer than 2,000 ministers were ejected
-under the new Act of Uniformity; and as at the last census there
-were only 6405 professional Protestant Ministers, it will be seen
-that the ejected preachers alone formed a larger body, in
-comparison with the existing population, than the Protestant
-Dissenting Ministry does now.&nbsp; It cannot be doubted that
-every one of those men had a greater or less following; and it
-must be remembered that in the days of the Commonwealth there was
-always a rabble of sects who might even then be called
-Dissenters.&nbsp; It is true that, after the Restoration,
-Nonconformity was subjected to severe repressive laws, but those
-laws were not enforced with unvarying rigour.&nbsp; In 1672 there
-was the Indulgence, and in 1681 the House of Commons passed a
-strong resolution against the prosecution of Protestant
-Dissenters.&nbsp; Besides, after all, the Conventicle Acts only
-continued in force about 23 years&mdash;not much longer, in fact,
-than Episcopacy had <a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-25</span>been proscribed by law.&nbsp; The natural result which
-would follow the famous proclamation of James II., and the
-subsequent passing of the Toleration Act, would be a great and
-sudden revival of Dissent.&nbsp; How small was the church-feeling
-of Parliament at the Revolution may be gathered from a curious
-fact mentioned in Mr. Macaulay&rsquo;s third volume.&nbsp; It was
-proposed that the Commons should sit on Easter Monday.&nbsp; The
-Churchmen vigorously protested against the innovation; but they
-did not dare to divide, and the House did sit on the festival in
-question.&nbsp; Without at all straining the inference to be
-drawn from this incident, it would be difficult, indeed, to
-suppose that Churchmen had matters their own way.&nbsp; Even
-under the penal laws, the Dissenters must have been a large body;
-for James the Second&rsquo;s scheme for forming a coalition of
-Roman Catholic and Protestant Dissenters against the
-Establishment would have been stark folly unless the two bodies,
-when combined, would have made up, at least, a powerful
-minority.&nbsp; From the Revolution to 1801 the Dissenters had
-more than a century to increase and multiply; and all the
-circumstances of the case were in their favour.&nbsp; Worn out by
-the political struggles of a century and a half, during which she
-had been made the tool of contending factions; deprived of her
-Legislative powers; silenced and frowned upon by the powers that
-were, the Church had sunk into that fatal lethargy from which the
-present generation has only just seen her awake.&nbsp; During
-that long and dreary period, all the prominent theologians, with
-a few bright exceptions, were either Dissenters or inclined to
-Dissent.&nbsp; The eighteenth century, too, was the golden age of
-popular Nonconformist preachers.&nbsp; Not to mention a host of
-smaller names, Wesley and Whitfield both rose, flourished, and
-died before its close.&nbsp; And yet, if we are to believe Mr.
-Mann, the Dissenters in 1801 were a much smaller body, compared
-with the whole population, than they were under the penal laws!
-<a name="citation25"></a><a href="#footnote25"
-class="citation">[25]</a>&nbsp; On the other hand, all who
-remember the obloquy and contempt under which the Church
-continued until the passing of the Reform Act, will reject,
-without a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, the notion that, in 1831,
-she actually possessed more accommodation, in proportion to the
-population, than at the present day.&nbsp; The change which has
-taken place in the popular sentiment towards her has not been
-caused by any document like this Census report, which suddenly
-appeared and disabused the public mind of its preconceived
-ideas.&nbsp; It has, on the contrary, been brought about by the
-silent influence of those spectacles of zeal and self-denying
-liberality which have been witnessed <a name="page26"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 26</span>in every corner of the land.&nbsp;
-The Church has, in fact, lived down her traducers.&nbsp; A
-hundred proverbs bear witness to the vast amount of good deeds
-which are required to remove an evil reputation; and yet Mr. Mann
-calls upon us to believe that the Establishment has achieved
-this, although, with all her numbers and all her wealth, she has
-not, since 1831, done so much as the Wesleyan sects alone,
-towards supplying the people with the means of religious
-instruction and worship!&nbsp; One has no language to
-characterize such a daring attempt on the public credulity.&nbsp;
-The most charitable hypothesis will be to conclude that Mr. Mann,
-though an arithmetician by his office, knows nothing about
-arithmetic; and so remit him to the consideration of Mr. Roebuck
-and the Administrative Reform Society. <a
-name="citation26"></a><a href="#footnote26"
-class="citation">[26]</a></p>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> inquiry through which the
-reader has been invited to travel will probably suggest several
-considerations; and first of all the importance of putting a stop
-to the statistical nuisance which has of late years flourished
-with so rank a growth.&nbsp; Surely it is time that members of
-both Houses of Parliament, who resent so jealously any attempt on
-the part of Government officials to exceed or fall short of the
-precise instructions given them, in making returns, should raise
-their voices against the system of publishing with official
-statistics the crude, and, as it has been seen, the nonsensical
-but pernicious theorizings of the persons entrusted with the task
-of compiling reports.&nbsp; Like Mr. Mantalini, the majority of
-persons never trouble themselves to examine a numerical process,
-but content themselves with simply asking what is the total; and
-it therefore becomes the duty of Parliament to see that the
-unsuspecting confidence of the public is not abused.&nbsp; The
-reader must not suppose that the Report on Religious Worship is
-the only recent one which is open to objection.&nbsp; The Census
-Report on Schools is just as full of fallacies; and it has
-certainly been one of the strangest phenomena ever witnessed in
-the history of public discussion, that the schemes of Lord John
-Russell and Sir John Pakington, assailed as they were on <a
-name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>every side,
-should have escaped what would, after all, have been the most
-effective blow that could have been aimed against them&mdash;the
-simple but conclusive fact, so easily deducible from the premises
-of the Report on Schools, that nearly as many children were under
-education as could be induced to attend unless they were driven
-to the class of the teacher by the policeman&rsquo;s staff. <a
-name="citation27"></a><a href="#footnote27"
-class="citation">[27]</a></p>
-<p>Again, the inquiry will probably satisfy the reader that the
-anti-Church legislation of the day ought to proceed no
-further.&nbsp; It is easy to assign the cause which in the first
-instance gave it birth.&nbsp; Most statesmen, it may be presumed,
-will be ready to adopt, with regard to the multifarious sects of
-modern Christianity, the last clause, at least, of Gibbon&rsquo;s
-famous dictum respecting the ancient religions of Pagan
-Rome&mdash;&ldquo;to the people equally true, to the philosopher
-equally false, to the magistrate equally useful.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Persons who profess with sincerity almost any form of Christian
-doctrine are comparatively easy to govern; they throw but a light
-burden upon the poor-rate and they cost nothing at all in the
-shape of police.&nbsp; A statesman, then, might dislike Dissent,
-but what was he to say to a state of things like that revealed in
-the Census report?&nbsp; The Church, according to Mr.
-Mann&rsquo;s tables, could not, by dint of the utmost exertions
-she is ever likely to put forth, find accommodation for half the
-souls who are year by year added to the population.&nbsp; On the
-other hand the Dissenters, who are far less wealthy, and have few
-endowments, provide without difficulty and without fuss more than
-twice the amount of new accommodation supplied by the
-Church.&nbsp; The irresistible inference in the mind of a mere
-statesman would be that Dissent ought to be aided and
-encouraged.&nbsp; But if <a name="page28"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 28</span>it turns out that the facts are
-precisely the reverse of what has been represented&mdash;if in
-reality Dissent is making no progress, while the Church is
-providing new accommodation sufficient for the whole of the new
-population&mdash;why should the Legislature go out of its path to
-foster mere religious discord, and to impede the spread of what
-the country has, after all, long since recognised as the
-&ldquo;more excellent way.&rdquo;&nbsp; Why, for instance, should
-Churchrates be abolished?&nbsp; If they were right in 1831, when
-there were more Dissenters and fewer Churchmen, why are they
-wrong now?&nbsp; If Parliament has conferred upon parishes, <i>as
-a boon</i>, the right to tax themselves (if a majority of the
-ratepayers think fit) for the purpose of building and maintaining
-public baths, museums, and libraries, why should parishes now be
-deprived of a right which they possessed before there was a
-Chancellor of the Exchequer or a budget&mdash;before the Norman
-set foot upon our shores, or there was a House of Commons worthy
-of the name&mdash;the right to tax themselves in order to
-maintain edifices which may be museums second in interest to
-none, and which may have been centres of enlightenment long
-before the days of Caxton and Guttenberg?</p>
-<p>There is another view of the case which ought not to be
-overlooked by statesmen who regard a religious Establishment as a
-mere matter of police.&nbsp; Granting that Dissent teaches men to
-be neither drunkards nor thieves, is it calculated to make them
-as good citizens and as good neighbours as the Church?&nbsp; The
-answer must surely be a negative.&nbsp; The common consent of
-mankind has pronounced the famous descriptions of the old
-Puritans in &ldquo;Hudibras&rdquo; to be almost as applicable to
-modern Dissenters as to their ancient prototypes.&nbsp; Nor,
-indeed, would it be easy, if they were not, to account for the
-popularity of Butler&rsquo;s oft-quoted lines; for even just
-satires, to say nothing of unjustifiable lampoons, rarely survive
-the persons against whom they are directed.&nbsp; Of course, men
-are often much better than the system to which they belong.&nbsp;
-There are hundreds&mdash;nay, thousands&mdash;of Dissenters whose
-Dissent is a mere accident of birth and education, and who are
-truly catholic at heart; but of Dissent in the abstract, no one
-who has either studied its history or is acquainted with its
-practical working will deny the applicability to it not only of
-Butler&rsquo;s portraiture, but of another yet more famous
-description, qualified in the latter case, however, with the
-insertion or omission throughout of the important
-word&mdash;&ldquo;not.&rdquo;&nbsp; Dissent suffers not long, and
-is not kind&mdash;Dissent is envious&mdash;behaves itself
-unseemly&mdash;vaunts itself, and is puffed up&mdash;seeks every
-tittle of its &ldquo;rights&rdquo;&mdash;is easily
-provoked&mdash;thinks evil&mdash;gloats over every slip on the
-part of its opponents&mdash;attributes what is good in them to a
-wrong motive&mdash;will bear nothing of which it can rid itself
-by agitation or clamour&mdash;will put a good construction upon
-nothing when an evil one <a name="page29"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 29</span>is possible&mdash;hopes
-nothing&mdash;endures nothing.&nbsp; If this were not so, how
-would it be possible to account for its inveterate propensity to
-internal schism?&nbsp; The scriptural account of the Kingdom of
-Heaven is that it should grow as from a seed; but Dissent is
-propagated chiefly by <i>cuttings</i>.&nbsp; It is not yet two
-hundred years since the Kirk was established in Scotland, and yet
-there are no fewer than six sorts of Presbyterians.&nbsp; The
-case of Wesleyanism is still worse.&nbsp; Within sixty years
-after the death of its founder it had split into seven
-antagonistic sects.&nbsp; Whitfield himself quarrelled with
-Wesley, and his followers have, since his death, separated into
-two bodies.&nbsp; There are four sorts of Baptists.&nbsp; Of the
-Independents, Mr. Mann speaks with refreshing innocence as
-forming &ldquo;a compact and undivided body.&rdquo;&nbsp; It
-would be nearer the truth to say that they consist of nearly as
-many sects as there are meeting-houses.&nbsp; Nearly every
-congregation is of volcanic origin, and every one contains within
-it elements which might at any moment explode and shatter the
-whole concern.</p>
-<p>That the writer may not be thought to be unsupported by facts,
-he will here summarize the history of Anabaptistic and
-Congregational Dissent in the first town to the annals of which
-he has ready access&mdash;Nottingham, his authority being Mr.
-Wylie&rsquo;s local history, published in 1853.&nbsp; Nottingham,
-however, is a remarkably good example for the purpose.&nbsp; It
-has a manufacturing population of 57,000, having doubled itself
-since 1801.&nbsp; It is almost at the head of those places in
-which Dissent is most rampant, and the Church most
-depressed.&nbsp; It possessed, according to Mr. Mann&rsquo;s
-table K, 35.2 Dissenting sittings to every hundred inhabitants,
-the only other places equal or superior to it in that respect
-being Merthyr Tydvil (52.4), Sunderland (35.2), Rochdale (36.5),
-and Swansea (42.8).&nbsp; It boasts of 74.1 per cent. of the
-whole religious accommodation within its boundaries, the only
-places having more being Merthyr (89.7), and Rochdale (78.7).</p>
-<blockquote><p>About the middle of the last century, then, the
-Presbyterian congregation on the High Pavement adopted Socinian
-tenets; and many families thereupon left it and joined a small
-congregation of Calvinistic Independents in Castle-gate.&nbsp;
-Their meeting-house was immediately enlarged, and it has ever
-since been considered the leading Dissenting place of
-worship.&nbsp; In 1761, a second secession from High Pavement,
-this time of Sabellians, built themselves a new meeting-house in
-Halifax-place.&nbsp; In 1801, they erected themselves a new
-building in St. Mary&rsquo;s-gate, which has long since been
-closed.&nbsp; In 1798, a third swarm, again Calvinistic
-Independents, left High Pavement, and settled in the
-Halifax-place meeting-house, vacated by their Sabellian
-predecessors.&nbsp; In 1819, they built themselves a new
-meeting-house, called &ldquo;Zion Chapel,&rdquo; in
-Fletcher-gate, the old one being now a school.&nbsp; In 1822, a
-secession from Castle-gate built a new meeting-house in St.
-James&rsquo;s-street; and six years later a secession from St.
-James&rsquo;s-street built a meeting-house in Friar-lane.&nbsp;
-In 1804, a secession from Zion Chapel erected &ldquo;Hephzibah
-Chapel,&rdquo; which being in debt, was sold to the Universalists
-in 1808, and was soon afterwards converted into a National
-School.&nbsp; In 1828, another secession from &ldquo;Zion
-Chapel&rdquo; erected a meeting called &ldquo;Bethesda
-Chapel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The General Baptists at first met in a disused Wesleyan
-meeting-house, called &ldquo;The Tabernacle,&rdquo; which has
-long since been pulled down.&nbsp; In 1799 they built themselves
-a place in Stoney-street.&nbsp; In 1817 a quarrel arose between
-Mr. Smith, the senior pastor, and his junior, of whose pulpit
-talents he was said to be jealous.&nbsp; The congregation
-dismissed them both, and appointed a Mr. George.&nbsp; On Sunday,
-the 3rd of August, in <a name="page30"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 30</span>the same year, there was a personal
-conflict after the Donnybrook manner, between the partisans of
-Smith and George.&nbsp; The friends of Smith being beaten drew
-off, and built themselves a meeting-house in Broad-street.&nbsp;
-In 1850 there was another secession from Stoney-street, who built
-themselves a meeting-house on the Mansfield-road.</p>
-<p>The Particular Baptists originally occupied an ancient
-meeting-house in Park-street: but in 1815 they built themselves a
-larger place in George-street.&nbsp; In 1847 there was a
-secession of extra-Particulars.&nbsp; These met first in a room
-in Clinton-street, then in an old building which had been disused
-by the Quakers, and finally, in a splendid gothic edifice, which
-they built for themselves on Derby-road.&nbsp; The old
-meeting-house in Park-street fell into the hands of a
-congregation of the Scotch variety of the sect, whose peace has
-only been disturbed by the Bethesdians, who joined them in 1828,
-until they decided upon setting up for themselves.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Thus it will be seen that of the nine new congregations
-enumerated above, not one was originated without a
-quarrel&mdash;a quarrel, too, of the worst kind, a personal
-one.&nbsp; Nobody can study the history of religious polemics
-without perceiving that the root of all that bitterness which has
-made the <i>odium theologicum</i> a proverb, is to be found in
-the tendency there is in men to transfer the indignation they
-might reasonably feel against error, from the error itself to
-those who hold it.&nbsp; If people would only consent to forget
-history and would conduct the argument upon purely abstract
-principles, even the Roman controversy might be made instructive
-and edifying; but somehow, before long, the debate wanders away
-from the truth or falsehood of the creed under discussion to that
-most irrelevant of all issues, the virtues or failings of those
-by whom it is professed.&nbsp; What shall we say, then, of a
-system which gives rise to controversies which, from their
-commencement to their close, are purely personal?&nbsp; Lest it
-should be supposed that the case of Nottingham is an isolated
-instance, here is an extract on which the writer stumbled the
-other day in a tract written in praise of Congregationalism, and
-stated on the title page to be &ldquo;commended by J. Bennett,
-D.D.&rdquo;&nbsp; It appears to be quoted from a work called
-&ldquo;The Library of Ecclesiastical Knowledge,&rdquo; and the
-scene of the incident is stated to be &ldquo;one of the principal
-cities of the United States:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p>A Baptist congregation, originally small, had
-increased so rapidly that an enlargement of the chapel became
-necessary.&nbsp; It was immediately effected.&nbsp; The
-congregation still continued to increase, and a second time it
-became necessary to enlarge.&nbsp; Everything still going on
-prosperously, a third enlargement, some time after, was
-proposed.&nbsp; The noble-minded pastor, however, thinking that
-he had already as much on his hands as any mere mortal could
-conscientiously discharge, with a generous contempt for his own
-interests, opposed this step, and suggested that they should
-exert themselves to raise a new interest, entirely independent of
-the old one.&nbsp; The people entered cheerfully into his design;
-nay, they made a nobler sacrifice than that of their money.&nbsp;
-For as soon as the new building was finished, one of the deacons,
-with a few of the most respectable members of the old church,
-voluntarily separated from it, and proceeded to form the infant
-<i>colony</i> that had branched off from the mother church.&nbsp;
-What is still more delightful, the two churches formed a common
-fund for the erection of a third chapel.&nbsp; This was soon
-accomplished.&nbsp; In a short time a large and flourishing
-church was the result; and, at the time our informant related
-this fact, all three churches were actually subscribing towards a
-fourth chapel.&nbsp; This is noble conduct.&nbsp; Who can tell
-how soon cities and towns might be evangelised, if this principle
-were sternly (!) acted upon?&nbsp; A somewhat similar fact has,
-we understand, been recently witnessed in a city of our own
-country, where some congregational churches have imitated their
-Baptist brethren of America.&nbsp; When will all ministers
-&ldquo;go and do likewise?&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>This is
-truly edifying and amusing.&nbsp; First of all, mark the
-<i>habitat</i> of this Nonconformist ph&oelig;nix, a congregation
-which has actually given birth to another without a preliminary
-quarrel.&nbsp; We must actually cross the Atlantic, and seek the
-phenomenon in the land where the penny-a-liner places his
-sea-serpents, and his other choicer wonders.&nbsp; To increase
-without envy, hatred, and uncharitableness is, it seems, to a
-Dissenter, something inexpressibly &ldquo;noble&rdquo;&mdash;and
-brotherly love is something that must be &ldquo;sternly&rdquo;
-acted upon!&nbsp; We may be quite certain that it is something
-the congregational sects very rarely see, or it would not throw
-them into such lamentable, and yet, in some sense, ludicrous
-contortions of surprise.</p>
-<p>Perhaps some Dissenter will be whispering, after the manner of
-Mr. Roebuck, the three words, Gorham, Liddell, Denison; but the
-<i>tu quoque</i> wholly fails.&nbsp; In the first place, it is
-the surprising peculiarity of the present Church controversies
-that the noisiest, if not the weightiest, disputants are not
-Churchmen at all.&nbsp; In the next place, those who are
-Churchmen, and enter with any bitterness into the strife, are
-remarkable neither for their number nor their influence.&nbsp;
-The great party in the Church of England is, after all, the
-middle party; and however fierce the cannonade which the extreme
-left, and its allies outside the pale, may direct against the
-extreme right, their missiles fly harmlessly over the vast body
-which lies between.&nbsp; The truth is, the recent outburst of
-controversy, so far as the Church herself is responsible for it,
-is nothing but the natural recoil of that conservative sentiment
-which must always be a powerful feeling in a religious community,
-from doctrines and usages which had become unfamiliar.&nbsp; As
-the unfamiliarity passes away, the controversy will also
-gradually cease.&nbsp; Already the doctrines and usages in
-question have been unconsciously adopted by many of those who
-fancy themselves most opposed to them; and, indeed, if our
-doughtiest combatants would only take pains to understand what it
-is their antagonists really hold, they would often find that they
-are fighting against mere shadows.&nbsp; The recent suits in the
-ecclesiastical courts cannot but open the eyes of Churchmen to
-the extreme tenuity of the points in dispute.&nbsp; Take the S.
-Barnabas case.&nbsp; Everybody will remember the language which
-was applied to the &ldquo;practices&rdquo; revived by Mr.
-Bennett.&nbsp; &ldquo;Popish,&rdquo; &ldquo;histrionic,&rdquo;
-&ldquo;mummery,&rdquo; were the mildest terms in the repertory of
-that gentleman&rsquo;s assailants.&nbsp; Those
-&ldquo;practices&rdquo; remain to this day&mdash;if anything,
-they have been elaborated rather than subjected to any mitigating
-process.&nbsp; Messrs. Westerton and Beal bring the matter before
-the proper tribunal; but what are the only issues they can find
-to raise?&nbsp; Such notable questions as whether the cross,
-which glitters on the crown, the orb, and sceptre of the
-Sovereign, which glows on the national banner, which crowns
-almost every church <a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-32</span>gable in the land, with which every Churchman is marked
-at his baptism, which the very Socinians place upon their
-buildings, is, forsooth, a lawful ornament?&mdash;whether a table
-ceases to be a table by being made of stone?&mdash;whether the
-altar which has never been moved these two hundred years, and
-which nobody wants to move, must nevertheless be
-movable?&mdash;whether the altar vestments and the &ldquo;fair
-linen cloths&rdquo; used during Communion time, may have fringes,
-or must be plain-hemmed?&nbsp; Even if Dr. Lushington&rsquo;s
-judgment should eventually be confirmed, if in this age of
-schools of design, Mr. Westerton&rsquo;s crusade against art
-should prove successful, the alterations that would be made at S.
-Barnabas would be discernible by none out the keenest
-eyes&mdash;so little can there be found in matters ritual to
-fight about.&nbsp; Even in the Denison case the points of
-difference are almost as infinitesimal.&nbsp; It is true that
-under the revived act of Elizabeth&mdash;compared with which the
-laws of Draco seem a mild and considerate code&mdash;the
-Archdeacon has been sentenced to lose his preferments; but his
-doctrine on the Real Presence has, in sober fact, never been so
-much as challenged.&nbsp; His opponents, passing over all that
-was material in his propositions, have only attacked a
-<i>quasi</i> corollary which he has added to his main position,
-but which is, in reality, a complete <i>non-sequitur</i>.&nbsp;
-Whether Dr. Lushington is right or wrong, it is clear that a
-person holding the dogma of transubstantiation itself might, with
-perfect logical consistency, accept the ruling of the Court.</p>
-<p>The differences between the highest and the lowest schools
-being so impalpable, it would seem absurd to suppose that the
-present controversies can have a much longer continuance.&nbsp;
-But whether that be so or not, there is a very important
-distinction (and one that is well worth the notice of statesmen)
-between the extension of the Church and the spread of
-Dissent.&nbsp; Church extension, as far as it goes, tends to
-compose differences.&nbsp; The consecration of a new church is
-almost invariably regarded as an occasion when party differences
-should be laid aside&mdash;the opening of a new meeting-house is
-too commonly the crowning act of an irreparable schism.</p>
-<p>Another lesson which the report of Mr. Mann ought to teach
-Churchmen is the necessity there is for insisting upon the next
-religious census being made a complete and accurate one.&nbsp;
-The next religious census ought to include all such institutions
-as colleges, workhouses, hospitals, and the like&mdash;it ought
-to be enforced by the same penalties as the civil census; and it
-ought to be understood that all the returns would be printed in a
-blue book.&nbsp; With these precautions the Church need not fear
-the result.&nbsp; Even if the census of 1861 should prove no more
-trustworthy than that of 1851, it will remove a great deal of the
-misconceptions to which the latter has given rise.&nbsp; As far
-as one may judge, the work of church extension is progressing
-just as rapidly now <a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-33</span>as it was ten years ago; the number of the clergy is
-just as rapidly augmenting; <a name="citation33"></a><a
-href="#footnote33" class="citation">[33]</a> and as all
-additional clergymen have now to be supported on the voluntary
-principle, we may presume that they follow the ordinary laws of
-supply and demand.&nbsp; We may, therefore, confidently expect
-that the number of church sittings open on the census morning in
-1861 will not be fewer than six millions; and if there be an
-average attendance (which there was not on the last occasion) the
-number of persons present will be about three millions and a
-half.&nbsp; That the Dissenters will be able to open any more
-sittings than in 1851, is doubtful; for it must be remembered
-that since 1841 the Church has been annually absorbing a
-population equal to the entire yearly increase.&nbsp; But
-allowing them the same increase as has been assigned to them for
-the decade 1841&ndash;51, they will not be able to open more than
-four million sittings, and they will not have more than two
-millions and a half of attendants.&nbsp; This estimate is formed
-on the supposition that the next census will be made on the
-voluntary principle like the last.&nbsp; If a more complete and
-accurate account is taken, the result may be very
-different.&nbsp; It is quite within the bounds of possibility
-that the number of church attendants may turn out to be near four
-millions, while that of the Dissenters may not much exceed
-two.</p>
-<p>Looking at all the facts of the case, there is every reason
-why the Church should take courage.&nbsp; Never since the
-Reformation has she had so much real power for good&mdash;never
-has she been so free from abuses.&nbsp; Each year sees thousands
-returning to the fold from which they or their parents had
-strayed; each year sees her enemies more and more &ldquo;dwindle,
-peak, and pine.&rdquo;&nbsp; Everything, too, points to a daily
-acceleration of the process.&nbsp; At the very time that
-Convocation is resuming its functions, the Non-conformist Union
-is compelled by internal dissentions to abandon their yearly
-meeting.&nbsp; What Mr. Miall calls &ldquo;the dissidence of
-dissent&rdquo;&mdash;that is to say, all in it that is
-pre-eminently narrow-minded, ignorant, and infected with
-bigotry&mdash;is concentrating itself, and is thus getting free
-the more respectable elements of modern non-conformity.&nbsp;
-Meanwhile the better class of Dissenters are doing all in their
-power to cut the ground from under their own feet.&nbsp; They are
-building &ldquo;steeple-houses,&rdquo; inventing liturgies, and
-adopting even choral services; in other words they are expressing
-in the most emphatic manner their opinion that the whole theory
-of dissent is wrong.&nbsp; For a short time a Brummagem
-ecclesiology may satisfy them; but in the end they will no doubt
-rank themselves amongst the best sons of the Church.&nbsp; The
-truth is, there is no other religious community at the present
-day which can bid <a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-34</span>so high for the reverent attachment of Englishmen.&nbsp;
-Whatever the claims of Rome&mdash;her antiquity, her catholicity,
-her apostolicity&mdash;they are equally the Church of
-England&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Her succession of bishops is the same, her
-regard for the primitive church greater, her conception of
-Christendom far more grand.&nbsp; The glories of the ancient
-rituals belong equally to the Book of Common Prayer.&nbsp; It
-contains nothing material which was not in them, there was
-nothing material in them (save only certain invocations and
-legends of the saints) which is not in it.&nbsp; The Prayer Book
-is, in fact, nothing but a translation (magnificently done) of
-the older offices, a little compressed and simplified.&nbsp; The
-structure is the same&mdash;the mode of using it the same; and if
-it has lost somewhat of the multiplied ceremonies which were
-anciently observed, it has gained far more in the majesty and
-breadth which it has acquired from its thoroughly congregational
-character.&nbsp; Besides, it is throughout a reality, whereas the
-office books of the Latin Communion have, to some extent at
-least, become a sham.&nbsp; Thus the Breviary has long since been
-practically abolished as a public form of prayer, and even as a
-manual of private devotions for the clergy, that which forms its
-staple, the Book of Psalms, has been virtually reduced to a
-fourth its bulk.&nbsp; In nearly a thousand churches belonging to
-the Anglican communion the whole Psalter is publicly recited
-every month, and in twenty times that number it is said through
-twice every year.</p>
-<p>If Protestant Dissenters boast of their enlightenment or of
-their reverence for Scripture, the Church may meet them on that
-ground likewise with the utmost confidence.&nbsp; The Prayer-book
-scarcely recognises a person to be a Churchman if he cannot read;
-and she directs some forty psalms and some thirty chapters of the
-Bible to be gone through every week.&nbsp; In a word, approach
-the Church of England from the most opposite points, and she will
-be found to possess exactly that attribute which a person might
-think is most admirable.&nbsp; The man who reverences
-antiquity&mdash;who has a taste for art&mdash;who has a passion
-for ritual&mdash;who would have everything &ldquo;understanded of
-the people,&rdquo;&mdash;he who insists upon ranks and
-orders&mdash;and he who stands up for popular rights, will
-equally find in the Church of this country the very quality which
-he deems important.&nbsp; Never was there any institution so
-&ldquo;many-sided;&rdquo; never one that became with so much
-success &ldquo;all things to all men.&rdquo;&nbsp; How she could
-ever have lost her hold on the affections of Englishmen is indeed
-wonderful; but, in truth, until lately, she has never had a
-chance of making herself understood.&nbsp; <i>Now</i>, for the
-first time, her theory is beginning to be appreciated; and the
-success which has attended her, wonderful as it has been, is
-probably but the foretaste of a future more brilliant than
-anything of which we can now form an idea.</p>
-<h2>FOOTNOTES.</h2>
-<p><a name="footnote11"></a><a href="#citation11"
-class="footnote">[11]</a>&nbsp; The above tables, it is right to
-say, have been obtained by subtracting Mr. Mann&rsquo;s tables
-relating to the Church from the tables relating to places of
-worship in the aggregate.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote19"></a><a href="#citation19"
-class="footnote">[19]</a>&nbsp; It is right to say that the
-decennial periods do not exactly agree.&nbsp; In Mr. Mann&rsquo;s
-tables they are from 1801&ndash;11, &amp;c.; in Mr.
-Bright&rsquo;s return, from 1800&ndash;10, &amp;c.&nbsp; It is
-not, however, apprehended that this circumstance would materially
-affect the calculation.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote25"></a><a href="#citation25"
-class="footnote">[25]</a>&nbsp; Neale estimates the
-Nonconformists, in the time of Charles II., at a hundred and
-fifty thousand families, or three quarters of a million persons;
-in other words, at about a sixth of the population.&nbsp; If the
-Dissenters had in 1801 only 881,240 sittings, their number of
-morning attendants would be considerably less than 400,000; and,
-allowing each attendant to represent three persons, that would
-give a Dissenting population of about 1,100,000.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote26"></a><a href="#citation26"
-class="footnote">[26]</a>&nbsp; The faculty of reasoning
-correctly in figures is not so ordinary an accomplishment as
-might have been supposed.&nbsp; Even so intelligent a writer as
-Mr. Henry Mayhew prints, at page 391 of his &ldquo;Great World of
-London,&rdquo; a table, of which the following is a
-specimen:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">1842.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Can neither<br />
-read nor<br />
-write (percent).</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: center">Can read<br />
-only (percent)</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Convicted at assizes and sessions</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">39.79</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">27.21</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Convicted&mdash;summarily</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">39.90</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">21.65</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">Average</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">39.84</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">24.43</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>&mdash;the average being found by adding together the two
-lines and dividing the sum by two.&nbsp; It need hardly, however,
-be pointed out that the result so arrived at could not be true
-unless the number of persons in each class was exactly the
-same.&nbsp; A man who had invested in the Great Western Railway
-&pound;900 which yielded him two per cent., and &pound;100 in the
-South Western which paid him six, might say, on Mr.
-Mayhew&rsquo;s principle, that he had invested &pound;1000 at 4
-per cent; but he would soon find out that he would have to
-receive only &pound;24 for his yearly dividend instead of
-&pound;40&mdash;&pound;2.8 percent. instead of &pound;4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote27"></a><a href="#citation27"
-class="footnote">[27]</a>&nbsp; Mr. Mann calculates that without
-in the least interfering with juvenile labour, and without
-questioning the discretion of parents who kept children between
-the ages of 3 and 5 and 12 and 15 at home, there ought to have
-been more than three million children at school in 1851.&nbsp; It
-would be easy to show that this estimate is based upon nothing
-better than a series of blunders and bad guesses, but there is a
-much shorter mode of dealing with it.&nbsp; The children of the
-middle and upper classes do not remain under professional
-instructors at home or at school for a longer average period than
-six years.&nbsp; Now, the total number of children in 1851
-between the ages of 4 and 10 was 2,484,866, or 13.8 per cent. of
-the entire population.&nbsp; The number actually on the school
-books was 2,200,000, or 12.2 per cent.&nbsp; So that either all
-the children in the country were at school, but the average time
-was one-eighth too short; or the average time was of the right
-length, but the number of scholars was one-eighth too few.&nbsp;
-The truth, of course, lay somewhere between these two
-alternatives.&nbsp; Since 1851 considerable progress has no doubt
-been made; but it unfortunately turns out that the effect of
-improved machinery is not to improve the general education, but
-merely to shorten the time allotted to schooling.&nbsp; It is
-found that if by better modes of tuition a child can be made
-sooner to acquire what its parents think sufficient for it to
-know, it is only so much the sooner taken away.&nbsp; It would
-therefore be vain to expect that the school per centage will ever
-be much higher than it was in 1851&mdash;at least, until the
-middle classes raise their own standard.&nbsp; Of the children on
-the schoolbooks in 1851, the per centage of actual daily
-attendants was 83&mdash;91 for the private, and 79 for the public
-scholar.&nbsp; In America, where the schools are wholly free, the
-per centage was still less.&nbsp; In Massachusetts, for example,
-it was only 75.&nbsp; In other words, the attendance in England
-and Wales in 1851 was 1,826,000 daily.&nbsp; If the 2,200,000 had
-all been private scholars, it would have been 2,002,000.&nbsp; On
-the other hand if there had been 2,400,000 free scholars, it
-would only have been 1,800,000.&nbsp; These figures will speak
-for themselves.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote33"></a><a href="#citation33"
-class="footnote">[33]</a>&nbsp; The number of additional clergy
-ordained every year is stated to be 300.&nbsp; The number
-required to maintain the proportion of clergy to population which
-existed in 1851 would be under 200.</p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TRUTH ABOUT CHURCH EXTENSION***
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