No. 1. Objections to Unitarian Christianity Considered. By William E. Channing.
No. 2. A Serious and Friendly Address to the Anxious In
One God and One Mediator.
The Apostles' Creed, as contained in their public Dis
No. 5. Two Objections to the right and duty of Free Inquiry and Private Judgment answered. By Jonathan Mayhew.
No. 6. Suggestions respecting the Formation of Auxiliaries
Ejaculatory Prayer, Daily Use of Scripture. By Jo- seph Tuckerman.
On Revivals. By Jonathan Farr.
Twenty Questions to Trinitarians, with Answers from Scripture. By James Kay.
No. 12. A Funeral Address. By Rev. Samuel Ripley.
Clarke, Rev. James F., his re- marks at the Annual Meeting, 266. Conant, Rev. Mr., his letter on
the importance of Western Missions, 256.
Coming of Christ, Tract 170, p. 57. By Rev. A. P. Peabody. I. I would take with an infidel the same course, which Jesus
II. Again, in Chris- tendom, among rival sects and conflicting creeds, we may know where Christ is by the same signs. III. Let us give the question of our Text a more immediately personal application.
Councillors of the American Unitarian Association, 247. Officers and Committees, 273.
Death of Christ, Tract 168, p. 1. Dewey, Rev. Orville, D. D., his Tract, 109.
Domestic Worship, Tract 174, p. 149.
Destitute Societies, the number aided the past year, and the whole number in New Eng- land, 253.
Executive Committee of the American Unitarian Associa- tion, 246.
Eliot, Rev. Mr., of Saint Louis, Mo., his remarks at the An- nual Meeting, 271.
took to revive John's faltering Faith, why men are deficient in
it, and the importance of in- creasing it. Tract 173, p. 133, by Rev. Henry A. Miles. Farley, Rev. Frederick A., his Tract on Sympathy in Congre- gations, Tract 176, p. 181. His remarks at the Annual Meet- ing, 269.
God's Providence, its apparent darkness, Tract 175, p. 163. No- thing is very important to us, as immortal and accountable beings, but our moral and religious characters. I. This uncertainty and ignorance must naturally dispose all reflecting minds to a habit of constant watchfulness. II. Another im- portant effect of the uncertainty which marks the doings of Providence, is to teach us to feel habitually our depend- ence on God. III. The last instruction to which I shall refer, as enforced by the mys- terious Providence of God, is entire resignation to His will.
How is it that ye have no faith. Tract 173, p. 133. Harrington, Joseph, Jr., Extract from his letter on Tracts.
Ingersoll, Rev. George G., his Tract on the death of Christ, Tract 168, p. 1.
Life Members, the number added to the list the past year, and the whole number, 253.
Livermore, Rev. Mr., his re- marks at the Annual Meeting, 267.
Miles, Rev. Henry A., his Tract, 133.
Moore, Rev. George, Extract from his letter about the good done by our Tracts, 250. Missionary operations, the num- ber of Missionaries employed the past year, and the number of places where Missionaries are wanted, 254.
Officers of the American Unita- rian Association, 246.
Porter, Rev. J. Scott, of Belfast, Ireland, his Tract, 37. Peabody, Rev. A. P., his Tract on the coming of Christ, 57. Progress of Unitarianism, in this country, Ireland, England, Switzerland, France, and Hol- land, 257 and 258.
Report-Seventeenth Report of the American Unitarian Asso- ciation, Tract 179, p. 241.
Short Prayers for the Morning and Evening of every day in the week, with occasional Prayers and Thanksgivings, Tract 171, p. 73.
Stetson, Rev. Caleb, his Tract on Domestic Worship, 149. Sympathy in Congregations, Tract 176, p. 181.
gion is. II. All this being ad- mitted, and being indeed most evident, the next observation I have to offer is, that all this ideal of excellence is perfectly realized in Christ. III. And I proceed now, in the third place, to observe that there is a yet further and more especial pro- priety in the meditations to which this ordinance calls us, because our hardest struggle in life is with suffering and sorrow, with injury and wrong, with calamity and death, 109. Unitarian's Appeal; three Ser- mons, illustrative of the Claim of Unitarians to the character of Evangelical Christians, in- dependent of the truth of their peculiar opinions. Preached in the Unitarian Church, Wash- ington City, by S. G. Bulfinch Pastor of that Church.
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