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duced the same pertinacity of conduct; and at the period of the Revolution, when the last grand attempt was made on this subject, the result was equally unsuccessful, though some of the most eminent divines and distinguished prelates of our church, were zealously engaged in promoting its accomplishment. It was during this eventful period, that some new Collects were composed, more adapted to the Epistles and Gospels of the day, and various other alterations were suggested as improvements of the Liturgy. The first draught of the Collects was made by Patrick, who possessed a peculiar talent for composing prayers: energy and spirit were infused by Burnet; Stillingfleet examined every word with the exactest judgment; and Tillotson gave the last polish by the free and masterly touches of his natural and flowing eloquence. Kidder made a new version of the Psalms, which is said to have been more conformable to the original; and Tenison collected all the words and expressions throughout the Liturgy that had been excepted against, and proposed others in their room which were either more clear and plain, or less liable to objection.*

*See Birch's Life of Tillotson. It may justly be questioned whether any alteration in the phraseology of our Prayer-book should be adopted, except where it was necessary to correct the sense or make it plain. To avoid the incongruity of changing fashions in dress, many painters have adopted the costume of Vandyke as a sort of general passport for all ages. Perhaps Scripture phraseology within certain bounds, might be continued on the same principle.

How much is it to be regretted, that such documents, the production of men so admirably qualified for the task, were rejected by the ruling powers of the day, and probably consigned to oblivion. But, alas! the spirit of the times was unfavourable for such an undertaking; and the Revolution itself had communicated a fresh impulse to unkind and party feeling. And thus, from the time of the Reformation to the present period, a variety of extraneous circumstances have invariably prevented the completion of that great work, which was so happily commenced and so far effected by our Reformers.

But surely "now it is high time to awake out of sleep," to shake off that lethargic spirit, and abandon that pertinacious retention of usuages, venerable merely for their antiquity, which have so long crippled the Establishment and disfigured the beauty of its Services. And surely never was there a period, when a dispassionate but thorough revisal of the Liturgy was so imperatively demanded. The increasing number, influence, and respectability of our dissenting brethren; the increasing requests of the best friends and firmest adherents of the Established Church; and the increasing facilities, which every rank in society now possesses for canvassing the excellences and defects of established institutions, and the improvements of which they are susceptible, demand it at our hands.

The circumstances too, and the temper of the present times, are remarkably favourable for such an undertaking. All civil disabilities are now removed from every

denomination of Christians. The episcopal bench contains men not less distinguished for talent and learning than for indubitable integrity and ardent zeal for the advancement of religion. We have bishops inferior to none of the Reformers in piety, superior to them all in literary attainments, and, without eulogizing our present prelates, or detracting from the well-earned honour of their predecessors, as well qualified to revise and complete our Liturgy, as its compilers were to frame it.

To suppose, indeed, that our Reformers retained no taint of that communion, from which they had just separated, would be to expect to find them more than men-in short, prophets and apostles under the immediate and infallible influence of the Holy Ghost; or to maintain that theologians of the present day had on no subjects more distinct and comprehensive views of religion than their forefathers, would be to assert that the world was stationary upon the highest attainable ground, and that all the united lucubrations of the most eminent divines during the lapse of three centuries, had been utterly useless. The fact is that, partly from the peculiar character of their times, which rendered every unnecessary deviation from the Church of Rome inexpedient,* and partly from the Reformers themselves being undecided on some

*During the whole of Edward's reign, Cranmer who had the principal direction of ecclesiastical affairs, experienced such continual opposition from Gardiner, and the leaders of the popish party, that he deemed it advisable to proceed in the work of the Reformation by gradual advances and by movements as imperceptible as possible.

important topics, in which Protestants have long since been agreed, a slight tinge of popish superstition will occasionally be discovered in their writings.

Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit odorem
Testa diu.

Whether on this occasion it would be desirable to apply for a commission from the Crown, or, which indeed appears far more desirable, for the re-establishment of the Convocation, those who are conversant in ecclesiastical law could best determine.* Let there be only a readiness manifested in the leaders of our Church, to engage in this important work, and the best authorities could be easily ascertained, and no doubt, as easily procured. All that the writer wishes to add on this subject, is, that as the principal responsibility would necessarily devolve upon our bishops, they should be fully entitled to the principal honour in its execution; and that for this purpose, they should be invested with full authority to direct, revise, and confirm every alteration before It was finally adopted, so that their names

*"From the establishment of the Convocation to the present time, the ordinary and legitimate exercise of legislative power has been vested in that body; nor can the long disuse of their services, be considered as more truly affecting their original authority and constitutional place in the church, than the determination of Charles the first to call together no more parliaments, could have made a parliament less a branch of the civil constitution of the realm." London Review.

might justly be handed down to posterity as the grand instruments of accomplishing a work, the direct object of which would be to promote the stability and efficiency of the Established Church, and the spirituality and edification of its members.

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