a-g THE SPIRIT OF THE PILGRIMS, FOR THE YEAR 1831. VOLUME IV. BOSTON: No. 9, Cornhill. 1831. LIBRARY INDEX. 22 American Education Society vindicat- Hints to Christian Ministers 672 215 621 592 451 427 Interpretation of the Scriptures 67 5 485 529 293 Jews ancient believed in a Future State 108 501 51 401 9 508 197 Motives of Good Men not understood 299 415 120 Obituary Notice of Mrs. Martha Ropes 48 347 118 338 186 Payson Dr. Memoirs of 29 442 656 617 125, 129 Professor Stuart on the xviih Psalm 107 622 428 Purposes of God Uses and Abuses of 516 99 Recent Publications 60, 107, 235, 290, :44 31+ 397, 457, 513, 569, 622,674 132 230 358 567 404 153 Revival in Yale College in 1807 290 405 406 408 467 49 379 581 280 619 349 135 263 266 333 Unitarianism State of in Englund 80 613 Unitarianism in N England. Letter ix. 61 479, 422 on Unitarianism and Infidelity 283 390 175, 335 58, 175 461 528 51 INDEX OF REVIEWS. Review of Memoir of Rev. Edward 21 31, 80 System of M. Champolliou 98–197 By Bernard Whitman 117 212 of the Synod of Dort 256 D. D. By Samuel J. May 272 326 373 428 492 554 594 Jeremiah Evarts, Esq. 599 659 667 Henders on's Examination of 112 Province of Reason in Mat- 115 116 Landing of the Pilgrims 236 290 an Established Religion 292 292 344 345 397 401 403 404 457 460 514 515 569 570 571 571 572 572 572 Temperance Society 625 the Phiosophy of Analogy 626 627 627 628 674 676 679 INDEX TO THE PRINCIPAL CRIT. ICAL NOTICES. Notice of Professor Stuart's Prize Es- say on Distilled Liquors 55 56 57 58 SPARED to begin another year, and to commence a new volume of the Spirit of the Pilgrims, propriety may suggest, if it does not require, the formality of a direct communication to our readers. We need not recur again to the object for which this work was instituted, or to the principles on which it has been hitherto conducted. Our views of doctrine were fully exbibited at the commencement of our labors, and as we have proceeded, we have found no occasion for change. The great principles of the Orthodox faith, as contained in the Scriptures, as explained by Edwards and his coadjutors and followers, and as embraced by the Evangelical churches of New England, are too firmly established—on their own proper evidence, and in the hearts of thousandsto be easily subverted or abandoned. Constituting, as we doubt not they do, the theology of the Bible, and the hope of the world, to explain, defend, and enforce them, for the edification of believers and for the conviction of misbelievers and unbelievers of every description, will continue to claim our chief attention. In this important work, we need, and we solicit, a general co-operation of the friends of truth. We need the assistance of their ablest pens, in discussing, as we hope to do more at large in our future numbers, the great doctrines and precepts of the Gospel. That so many of our pages have hitherto been occupied in exposing and resuting a particular system of false religion, which has crept in and spread desolation around us, was not because the resutation of this system constituted the only or the principal end of our labors, but because, for the time, this seemed to be the threatening evil of the church, affecting (as it does) the principal articles of the Evangelical faith, and aiming, confessedly, to overthrow them all. Should innovations equally great and alarming make their appearance from any other quarter, they will be met in the same spirit, and with a resistance equally determined. The progress of the heresy to which we have alluded has not been such, during the last year, as to excite any fearful apprehensions. Notwithstanding the frequent boasts of its friends-whose vauntings would seem to be in the inverse ratio of their successes VOL. IV.-NO. I. 1 |