Imagens da página
PDF
ePub

THE

LIFE OF

REV. JOHN MURRAY,

LATE MINISTER OF THE RECONCILIATION, AND SE-
NIOR PASTOR OF THE UNIVERSALISTS, CON-

GREGATED IN BOSTON

WRITTEN BY HIMSELF.

THE RECORDS CONTAIN ANECDOTES OF THE WRITERS' INFANCY,

AND ARE EXTENDED TO SOME YEARS AFTER THE COMMENCE-

MENT OF HIS PUBLIC LABORS IN AMERICA.

TO WHICH IS ADDED

A BRIEF CONTINUATION TO THE CLOSING SCENE.

To Christian Friends this Volume makes appeal;
FRIENDS are indulgent-CHRISTIAN FRIENDS CAN FEEL

FIFTH EDITION, STEREOTYPED AND IMPROVED,
WITH NOTES AND APPENDIX,
BY REV. L. S. EVERETT.

BOSTON:

MARSH, CAPEN AND LYON

1883.

BX

9969

18

A3
1833

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1833, by MARSH. CAPEN & LYON, and in the Clerk's office of the District Court of Massachusetts.

1430 36-9

PREFACE.

The pages which compose the volume now presented to the public, were originally designed only for the eye of a tender and beloved friend.

They were written at the earnest request of one, to whom the author was endeared by many years of intimate friendship, and still more by those divine and soul-soothing tenets, of which it was his distinguished lot to be ORDAINED the promulgator.

For those who, like this individual, have dwelt with rapture upon the blessed assurance of the boundless and enduring love of a redeeming God, as powerfully exhibited by those lips which rarely opened but to expatiate upon the glad tidings which was the theme of the angelic song: For those, who loved the philanthropic the inspired Preacher, for the sake of the glorious inspiration; these sheets will possess the strongest, and most important interest: To such, and to such only, they are addressed. It is in compliance with their solicitations that they are sent into the world, and it is not even expected that those who turned a deaf ear to his consolatory message, and who knew not the powers of his mighty mind, or the pure and exalted benevolence of his heart, will have any interest in inquiring, 'What manner of man was he who told these things, nor what spirit he was of.'

Boston, May 2, 1816.

« AnteriorContinuar »