The English Church in the Eighteenth Century Part 28
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Moreover, England, unlike her next-door neighbour, improved as the years rolled on. A gradual but distinct alteration for the better may be traced in the later part of the century. Many causes contributed to effect this. After the accession of George III. a growing sense of security began to pervade the country. An unsettled state is always prejudicial to national morals, and there were henceforward no serious thoughts of deranging the established order of things. Influences, too, were at work which tended to raise the tone of morality and religion in all orders of society. The upper cla.s.ses had a good example set them by the blameless lives of the King and the Queen. In the present day, when it is the fas.h.i.+on to ridicule the foibles and to condemn the troublesome interference in State affairs of the well-meaning but often ill judging King, it is the more necessary to bear in mind the debt of grat.i.tude which the nation owed him for the good effects which his personal character unquestionably produced--effects which, though they told more directly and immediately upon the upper cla.s.ses, yet permeated more or less through all the strata of society. Among the middle cla.s.ses, too, there arose a set of men whose influence for good it would be difficult to exaggerate. Foremost among them stands the great and good Dr.
Johnson. 'Dr. Johnson,' writes Lord Mahon, 'stemmed the tide of infidelity.' And the greatest of modern satirists does not state the case too strongly when he declares that 'Johnson had the ear of the nation. His immense authority reconciled it to loyalty and shamed it out of irreligion. He was revered as a sort of oracle, and the oracle declared for Church and King. He was a fierce foe to all sin, but a gentle enemy to all sinners.'[707] Sir J. Reynolds, and E. Burke, and Hogarth, and Pitt, each in his way, helped on the good work. The rising Evangelical school--the Newtons, the Venns, the Cecils, the Romaines, among the clergy, and the Wilberforces, the Thorntons, the Mores, the Cowpers, among the laity--all affected beneficially to an immense extent the upper and middle cla.s.ses, while among the lower cla.s.ses the Methodist movement was effecting incalculable good. These latter influences, however, were far too important an element in the national amelioration to be dealt with at the end of a chapter. Suffice it here to add that, glaring as were the abuses of the Church of the eighteenth century, they could not and did not destroy her undying vitality. Even when she reached her nadir there was sufficient salt left to preserve the ma.s.s from becoming utterly corrupt. The fire had burnt low, but there was yet enough light and heat left to be fanned into a flame which was in due time to illumine the nation and the nation's Church.
J.H.O.
FOOTNOTES:
[Footnote 648: In 1705, 1706, 1710, 1711, 1714, 1715, &c. &c., there were High Church mobs.]
[Footnote 649: c.o.xe's _Memoirs of Sir S. Walpole_, vol. i. pp. 24, 25.]
[Footnote 650: A glaring instance of the blighting effects of the Walpole Ministry upon the Church is to be found in the treatment of Berkeley's attempt to found a university at Bermuda. See a full account of the whole transaction in Wilberforce's _History of the American Church_, ch. iv. pp. 151-160. Mr. Anderson calls it a 'national crime.'
See _History of the Colonial Church_, vol. iii. ch. xxix. p. 437, &c.
The Duke of Newcastle pursued the same policy. In spite of the efforts of the most influential Churchmen, such as Gibson, Sherlock, and Secker, who all concurred in recognising the need of clergymen, of churches, of schools, in our plantations, 'the ma.s.s of inert resistance presented in the office of the Secretary of State, responsible for the colonies, was too great to be overcome.'--Ibid. p. 443.]
[Footnote 651: Bishop Fitzgerald (_Aids to Faith_, Essay ii. -- 7) stigmatises the impotency and turbulence of Convocation, but entirely ignores the practical agenda referred to above. See Cardwell's _Synodalia_, on the period.]
[Footnote 652: See the introduction to Palin's _History of the Church of England from the Revolution to the Last Acts of Convocation_.]
[Footnote 653: See Cardwell's _Synodalia_, xlii.]
[Footnote 654: Hodgson's 'Life of Beilby Porteus, Bishop of London,' in vol. i. of Porteus's _Works_, p. 45. Another thoroughly good man, Bishop Gibson, was, before he was mitred, Precentor and Residentiary of Chichester, Rector of Lambeth, and Archdeacon of Surrey. See c.o.xe's _Memoirs of Sir R. Walpole_, i. 478.]
[Footnote 655: _Anecdotes of the Life of R. Watson, Bishop of Llandaff_, published by his Son, vol. i. p. 307.]
[Footnote 656: Id. ii. 349.]
[Footnote 657: Paley's 'Charges,' vol. vii of his _Works_, in 7 vols.]
[Footnote 658: 'Charge of the Bishop of Rochester,' 1796, Bishop Horsley's _Charges_.]
[Footnote 659: Bishop of Oxford's Second Charge, 1741, Secker's _Charges_.]
[Footnote 660: Remarks on a _Discourse of Freethinking, by Phileleutherus Lipsiensis_, xl. (edition of 1743).]
[Footnote 661: _Anecdotes of the Life of R. Watson, Bishop of Llandaff_, i. 159.]
[Footnote 662: Quoted in Kilvert's _Life of Bishop Hurd_, p. 97. Dean Swift, in his _Project for the Advancement of Religion_, speaks of curates in the most contemptuous terms. 'In London, a clergyman, _with one or two sorry curates_, has sometimes the care of above 20,000 souls inc.u.mbent on him.']
[Footnote 663: How n.o.bly and successfully a domestic chaplain in a great family might do his duty in the eighteenth century; the conduct of Thomas Wilson, when he was domestic chaplain to the Earl of Derby, and tutor to his son, is an instance.]
[Footnote 664: Bishop of Oxford's _Charge_, 1738.]
[Footnote 665: Secker's _Instructions given to Candidates for Orders_.]
[Footnote 666: Mr. Pattison's Essay in _Essays and Reviews_.]
[Footnote 667: _Lives of the Chancellors_, by Lord Campbell, vol. v.
chap. x.x.xviii. p. 186.]
[Footnote 668: _Anecdotes of the Life of R. Watson, Bishop of Llandaff_, published by his Son, vol. i. p. 157.]
[Footnote 669: _Letters from Warburton to Hurd_, second ed. 1809, Letter xlvi. July 1752.]
[Footnote 670: Boswell's _Life of Johnson_, in ten vols., 1835, Murray, vol. v. p. 298. See also vol. iv. p. 92. 'Few bishops are now made for their learning. To be a bishop a man must be learned in a learned age, factious in a factious age, but always of eminence,' &c.]
[Footnote 671: See Bishop Newton's _Autobiography_, and Lord Mahon's _History_.]
[Footnote 672: _Memoirs of William Whiston_, by himself, p. 275. See also pp. 119 and 155, 156.]
[Footnote 673: 'A fact,' he adds, 'so apparent to Government, both civil and ecclesiastical, that, they have found it necessary to provide rewards and honours for such advances in learning and piety as may best enable the clergy to serve the interests of the Church of Christ,' a remark which we might have thought ironical did we not know the temper of the times.--See Watson's _Life of Warburton_, 488.]
[Footnote 674: _Anecdotes of the Life of Bishop Watson_, i. 116. He quotes also a remark of D'Alembert: 'The highest offices in Church and State resemble a pyramid, whose top is accessible to only two sorts of animals, eagles and reptiles.']
[Footnote 675: _Lives of the Chancellors_, vol. v. chap. clxi. p. 656.
Lord Chesterfield makes some bitter remarks on the higher clergy 'with the most indefatigable industry and insatiable greediness, darkening in clouds the levees of kings and ministers,' &c., quoted in Phillimore's _History of England_, during the reign of George III. Phillimore himself makes some very severe strictures on the sycophancy and greed of the higher clergy.--See his _History, pa.s.sim_.]
[Footnote 676: The Life gives us the impression that he was a firm believer, that he strove to live a Christian life, that he was very amiable, and that he was quite free from the paltry vice of jealousy at another's good fortune.]
[Footnote 677: _Memoirs of Bishop Newton_, by himself.]
[Footnote 678: Bishop Watson was a decidedly able writer, and he never allowed himself to be the tool of any party. He says of himself with perfect, truth, 'I have hitherto followed and shall continue to follow my own judgment in all public transactions.']
[Footnote 679: Raikes established the first of his Sunday schools in 1781, but it is certain that one was established before this by Hannah Ball at High Wycombe in 1769, and it is probable that there were also others. Mr. Buckle says they were established by Lindsay in or immediately after 1765. (_History of Civilisation_, i. 302, note.) However, to Raikes belongs the credit of bringing the inst.i.tution prominently before the public. It may be noticed that Raikes was a decided Churchman. His son contradicts almost indignantly the notion which became prevalent that he was a Dissenter. One of the rules of Raikes's Gloucester Sunday school was that the scholars should attend the cathedral service. There was a strong prejudice against Sunday schools among some of the clergy, but it was combated by others. Paley, in one of his charges, tried to disabuse his clergy of this prejudice, and so did several other dignitaries. But Bishop Horsley, in his charge at Rochester, made some severe remarks against Sunday schools. See _Life of R. Hill_, p. 428. The evangelical clergy, of course, warmly took up the Sunday school scheme. In this, as in many other cases, the Church was responsible for the remedy as well as the abuse.]
[Footnote 680: Bishop Wilson made vigorous and successful efforts in the Isle of Man to revive the system of catechising in church; and strongly urged every 'rector, vicar, and curate to spend, if but one hour in every week, in visiting his petty school, and see how the children are taught to read, to say their catechism and their prayers,' &c.]
[Footnote 681: Blackstone, though endowed with many excellent qualities, is said to have had a somewhat irritable temper, which, as he advanced in years, was rendered worse by a nervous affection. Bentham says 'that he seems to have had something about him which rendered breaches with him not difficult.' Lawyers are so accustomed to criticise arguments that they are apt to be somewhat severe judges of sermons. How many clergymen of the present day would like to have their sermons judged by the standard of a great lawyer of a somewhat irritable temperament?]
[Footnote 682: See vol. vii. 'Charge VII.' in Paley's _Works_ in seven vols.]
[Footnote 683: Similar complaints are uttered regarding 1737-8-9. H.
Walpole writes of 1751: 'The vices of the lower people were increased to a degree of robbery and murder beyond example.'--_Memoirs of the Reign of King George II._, vol. i. chap. ii. p. 44.]
[Footnote 684: _E.g._ Archbishop Wake, in his letter to Courayer in 1726, writes: 'Iniquity in practice, G.o.d knows, abounds, chiefly in the two extremes, the highest and the lowest. The middle sort are serious and religious.' See also _Robinson Crusoe_, chap. i.]
[Footnote 685: Lord Hervey's _Memoirs_, ii. 341, in reference to the Bill to put all players under the direction of the Lord Chamberlain.]
[Footnote 686: See, _inter alia_, the description of a small squire of the reign of George II. in Grose's _Olio_, 1792.]
[Footnote 687: Quoted in Andrews, 18th century.]
[Footnote 688: See chap. lxx. of Lord Mahon's _History_.]
[Footnote 689: Skeats's _History of the Free Churches of England_ p.
465.]
[Footnote 690: _Parliamentary History_, vol. xiv. p. 1389.]
The English Church in the Eighteenth Century Part 28
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