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care; who is infinite in wisdom, up ages after their death, enand in power, and in love. He shrined in distant cenotaphs, or can now, as ever, work miracles. perhaps scattered as relics through I doubt not his Almighty energy; a score of churches and monasteneither do I doubt that, if it were ries; with twenty authentick faithaccording to his blessed will in the inspiring radii and ulnæ of one present era of the dispensation un- much-esteemed individual, and his der which he has mercifully placed inestimable molars and incisors by us, he would renew the gifts of the hundred, throughout all the healing, the speaking with tongues, nunneries of Europe. However, or the raising of the dead; but I this invaluable Beaufort skull has see nothing in Scripture or in ex- been lately consigned to a mould perience to lead me to the conclu- of plaster of Paris, for the benefit sion that such is the actual fact. of modern cranioscopists; and so In me, therefore, it would not be it is, that a learned paper has been faith, but presumption, to look for read over it before the London miraculous healing, as much as it Prenological Society, in which the would be to look for a miraculous lecturer, waxing warm with his supply of food and raiment. These subject, magnificently exclaims, things have been, and if necessary "It is left to phrenology to estathey will, without doubt, be again. blish the degree of dependence to No, we may not limit the Holy be placed upon the assertions of One of Israel; but we have no right historians!" Now, I have heard to go beyond the sphere and eco- several mothers say that they edunomy in which he has evidently cate their children with much sciplaced us, to look for a renewal of entifick precision by craniosophy; miraculous manifestations, which, and a few clergymen, that they however gratifying to our self-im- preach by it; and a phrenological portance, would not in the least journal has undertaken in a very conduce to our salvation. grave and religious manner to explain the seventh of the Romans, on the principle that St. Paul had opposing organs-the conscientious bumps saying one thing, and the wicked bumps another, so that he had no rest between them;and Spurzheim's friend, Mr. Bailey, has lately published sixty skulls as samples of the art, respecting which specimens we find such pithy remarks as the following: No.-; a head in whose cerebral organization the Christian law is written:'-so that this man, who, for aught I know, was a heathen or a profligate, was a true Christian and a spiritually-minded man by anticipation: he needed not Bible or sacraments, repentance or faith, a Saviour or a Sanctifier; for the Christian law was already engraved on his brain by nature, and showed itself by ossific protrusions. All this I knew, and much more; nay, that some

"I forgot to notice just now, when writing of Cardinal Beaufort, that his skull is said to have been discovered at St. Albans, in the year 1701, and is still somewhere in preservation. I have not the account at hand; but I must presume that the identity of the specimen was properly ascertained at the time: though, in truth, such researches are not always very satisfactory; for, besides the want of printed records, and the mutilations and fragility of non-duplicate parchments, and the dilapidation of monumental inscriptions, the mortal remains of celebrated men, in former days, often underwent many migrations;-their tomb being here, their shrine there, and perhaps their chauntry elsewhere; their body in the Holy Land, their head in York, and their heart at Canterbury; their bones, real or supposititious, dug

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amateur has begun to regulate infant schools by the science;' but I was not aware that historical fact was to be submitted to this ordeal, and remodelled according to the notions of physiological grave-diggers. But so it is; for tradition, history, and, above all, Shakspeare, we are told, have mistaken poor Cardinal Beaufort's character: there is little 'dependence to be placed upon the assertions of historians!' for thus run his manifestations: 'Head large; the intellectual organs exceedingly well developed; yet others still more so, especially amativeness, love of approbation, self-esteem, combativeness; but almost unprecedented for destructiveness, firmness, and secretiveness.' It is well for the reputation of Phrenology that the Christian law was written in his skull, since it would have required a large displacement of history, to prove that it was exhibited in his life. I cannot, my friend, but think there is much evil in these reveries. I, indeed, see nothing abstractedly impossible in the idea that different portions of the brain may be connected with different parts of its actual exhibitions; but I do not think that even this has been proved by fact; and, above all, it is most rash, to say the least, to attempt to educate youth, or to recast history, or to interpret scripture, upon so vague a speculation. "But it is time to emerge from the crypts of cardinals, and the 'Holy Hole' of Popish wonderworking saints, to fresh air and daylight."

THE PRESENT STATE OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.

No. X.

In our third number, speaking of the committee to which was as

signed the nomination of a new Board of Missions, we say:

"Yet on this committee, which was a large one, not an individual was placed, who was likely to act the part of a friend and advocate of the inculpated board-the board of the preceding year. Whether had not proved sufficiently subservient to

the committee on the case of Mr. Barnes

the wishes of the moderator and the majority of the house, or from whatever other motive the nomination was made, is unknown to us; but so it was, this most important committee was entirely composed of those who were disposed to report, and actually did report, a nomination of a new board, most decidedly friendly to the American Home Missionary Society, and hostile to the existing Board of the General Assembly. A few, and but a few of the members of the existing board, were not displaced-on the expectation, we doubt not, that they would voluntarily resign; as we are confident they would have done, when they should see the complexion of the board entirely changed, and rendered subservient to the American Home Missionary Society."

There are two points in this statement, on which we are at issue with the Moderator. The first is our assertion that on this committee, which was a large one, not an individual was placed who was likely to act the part of a friend and advocate of the inculpated board-the board of the preceding year." We have already adverted to an apprehended error that we had made, in relation to this point; of the readiness we felt to correct it, as publickly as it had been made; and of our eventual discovery that we had committed no error at all; inasmuch as every member of the committee in question, had shown his feelings toward the old board, by his vote on a previous question. The facts of the case may be seen, summarily, by the following extracts (pp. 183, 184) from the printed minutes of the Assembly. "A motion 'was made, that in conformity to usage, or to the course pursued last year, a committee of nomination be appointed, to nominate persons to constitute the Board of Missions for the ensuing year. A motion

was then made to postpone this motion, with a view to take up the following, viz.-Resolved, that the present Board of Missions be reappointed. After considerable discussion the vote was taken; and the yeas and nays being called for, the vote stood as follows, viz." &c. Here the names of all the voters are given-The yeas 87, the nays 109. And of course-"The motion for postponement was declared to be lost." This was on the morning of the 1st of June. In the afternoon of the same day, the minutes state-"The motion to appoint a committee to nominate persons to constitute the Board of Missions for the ensuing year was resumed; when it was resolved to appoint such a committee. Dr. Hillyer, Mr. Riddle, Mr. Chase, Mr. Bronson, Mr. Garrison, Mr. Jessup, and Mr. W. Anderson, were appointed.”

66

The discussion which ensued, first on the motion to appoint a committee to nominate a new board, and afterward, on the motion for a postponement of that motion, in order to reappoint the old board, was ardent and considerably protracted. It brought out the sentiments of the opposite parties fully; and as we stated in our last number, those who voted against the postponement expressed their wish to change the old board, as clearly as if this had been the formal object of their vote." If the motion for postponement had been made, without clearly expressing its design, we admit that it would not, in itself, have been a test of the views and feelings of the members, in relation to the reappointment of the old board. But when the whole design of the motion for postponement was explicitly declared in writing, to be the introduction of a resolution "that the present Board of Missions be reappointed"-to vote, in these circumstances, against the postponement, was virtually a declaration, Ch. Adv.-Vol. X.

by every member who so voted, that he would not so much as consider a proposition to reappoint the old board-This, we think, is undeniable. Now, when the Moderator made his selection of members to constitute this nominating committee, he took every man of that committee from the nays, on the question of postponement; that is, every man of the committee was selected from those who had voted against even considering a proposition to reappoint the old board. Yet he says, "The committee appointed to nominate a Board of Missions was, in every respect, a fair and discreet committee." We maintain the contrary. For although it was decided that a new Board should be appointed, yet, agreeably to all correct usage, the minority-and especially a minority of no less than 87 voters, when the majority was only 22-ought to have had, on a committee of seven, at least two members. But it had not one; and yet this is affirmed by the Moderator to have been "a fair and discreet committee!" If it was, we cannot tell how an unfair or indiscreet committee could be appointed. Was it likely-for this is the single point on which the truth of our statement turns-was it likely that a friend and advocate of the inculpated board, would be found on this committee? have said that it was not likely; and let the impartial decide between our statement and that of the Moderator. The Moderator asks, "Did not Dr. Green know that the Rev. Mr. Bronson, a member of this committee, was one of their own missionaries?" We answer, that Dr. Green knows full well, that although the Board of Missions to which he belongs, has been opprobriously represented as composed of exclusionists, they have, in more instances than one, appointed men as missionaries, who they had good reason to X

We

believe were not friendly either to them or their operations; and he knows too, that Mr. Bronson's name is among the nays, on the question of postponement. Again; the Moderator asks "Can the Doctor fix on one act, that shows that Mr. Riddle, of Virginia, entertained any hostility to the Assembly's Board? If so, let him tell us what it is." Well, since the Moderator commands, we will obey, and "fix on one act," that, as we think, shows that Mr. Riddle, of Virginia, entertained some hostility to the Assembly's Board. It was this-After the matter had been settled by compromise in the Assembly, or while it was in train for a settlement, Mr. Riddle was an invited guest to a dinner party in Philadelphia; and in a company, of which a member of the old board, with his wife, made a part, Mr. Riddle indulged openly, with great freedom, and at considerable length, in censures of the old Board, as consisting of exclusives, as he called them, who ought to be displaced. We have this from the member of the old board who heard it; and who was at length constrained to say something in favour of the Board to which he belonged. Now, we do think that Mr. Riddle, to say the least, was not likely to act the part of a friend and advocate of the board which he himself openly and severely inculpated: and yet the Moderator seems to have pitched on him, as that individual of the committee to whom no possible objection_could be made. We say then-Ex uno disce omnes. Let the man the Moderator has selected, be taken as a sample of the whole committee. Had there been a suitable representation of the minority on this committee, possibly it might have been the means of giving some modification to the report, so as to have lessened its offensive character. But whether it would have had this effect or

not, we maintain that the minority had a right to be represented there, and they were not represented; and thus our charge against the Moderator, of unfairness in the appointment of this committee, is fully sustained-and our allegation is strictly verified, that there was not an individual of this committee, who was likely to act the part of a friend and advocate of the inculpated board.

The second point to which we have referred in the passage of our third number quoted above, is found in these words "A few, and but a few, of the members of the existing board, were not displaced-on the expectation, we doubt not, that they would voluntarily resign, as we are confident they would have done, when they should see the complexion of the board entirely changed, and rendered subservient to the American Home Missionary Society." This is the sentence to which we referred in our last number, when we said, that in our statement of facts we had seen nothing to correct, "beyond one verbal inaccuracy-if indeed it be an inaccuracy-no way affecting the substance of our statement." supposed inaccuracy lies in the clause, "A few, and but a few, of the members of the existing board were not displaced." The Moderator and the Stated Clerk have both affirmed, that it is so far from being true that only a few members of the existing board were not displaced, that a very considerable majority of them were not displaced; and they both have made a statement of numbers to sustain their allegations.

The

The Stated Clerk, on the 21st of October last, published in the religious newspaper, edited by himself, in reply to an article with the signature" MANY ENQUIRERS," the following paragraph.

"I have examined the original report of the Committee who nominated a Board of

Missions for the year 1831, and I find, that of the 171 persons named on the same, 99 were members of the board for the year 1830, and 72 were not members. These 99 were Dr. Green's 'few of the existing board that were not displaced;' and they prove to be 'most of the persons who are now members of the board.' If this statement is denied, or doubted, the names of the whole nomination shall be printed in the Philadelphian."

As the numbers given by the Moderator and Clerk are the same, we suppose they have communicated on this subject; or perhaps the Moderator took a copy for his own use. At any rate, they, we believe, are the only depositories of the precious document in question; and hitherto they have chosen to keep it to themselves, although a publick demand has been made on the Stated Clerk to give it publicity. We know not how many have "doubted or denied" the accuracy of his statement; but we are satisfied, that not a few have not merely doubted, but believed, that if the whole document were fairly published, a use would be made of it which the Stated Clerk wishes should not be made; and that this is the reason for its being withheld. We have looked for its publication, ever since it was demanded; and we were prepared to acknowledge our inaccuracy, if it should appear, by an authentick document, that we really were chargeable with it. We did think it most probable that we had committed a verbal error; and such, on the whole, is our present impression. But we still maintain, and think we shall show, to the satisfaction of every candid reader, that the free admission of this error, does not affect the substance of our statement. The case is this-The entire Board of Missions, consisting, say of 171 members, is formed of some taken from every Synod within the bounds of the General Assembly. This is done out of respect to the several Synods, and

in hope that the influential members who are thus placed on the Board, will, as they have opportunity, favour its plans and operations. But of this nominated Board, not a fourth part ever have been, or are ever likely to be, present at any one meeting of the Board. Such of them as happen to be members of the General Assembly, for the current year, attend, if they choose, those meetings of the Board which occur while the Assembly is sitting; and they generally attend the meeting which takes place at the rising of the Assembly, when the officers of the board for the ensuing year, with the executive committee, and the Corresponding Secretary and General Agent, receive their appointments. But only those members of the board who reside in the city of Philadelphia and its vicinity, constitute the active board through the year, after the dispersion of the members of the Assembly. This limited board has monthly meetings, at which the minutes of the Executive Committee for the past month are read throughout, for the approval or correction of the board. The board also gives advice and direction to the Executive Committee, in important concerns-In a word, the Committee is under the direction and control of this board; and we do not recollect since the reorganization in 1828, more than about half a dozen members, beyond the limits of Philadelphia and its vicinity, who, at different times, have attended the board at its monthly or special meetings. Now as the whole real efficiency of the Board of Missions, after the members of the Assembly leave the city, rests with this board, we confess it engrossed our attention, when we said that " few, and but a few of the members of the existing board were not displaced;" and such we now fully believe would appear to be the fact, if the report of the nomina

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