THE PANTHEON, Jvd Ricketts's Amphitheatre, 4 For Equestrian and Stage performances.. Corner of Chefnut and Sixth-streets. ■ THIS EVENING, THURSDAY, o For the Gazette of the Unitid States. of 1 PHOCION—No. X. "* WE afe next informed of Mr. Jefferfon's " at tachment to the RELiSious rights of mankind,*' and are referred for his sentiments refpefting religi • ous liberty to his writings, bis conduct, and partieu j larly to the "aS ejlabli/hing religious freedom," drawn up by him. 'P Hampden would have aftcd more wifely, and j more conformably, I am persuaded, to the wilhes of his patron, had he pasTed over this tender fubjeft in ' ftlence. It wa» certainly indifcrect to mention The ee mas Jtfferfon and religion in the fame parat;»a{ih,pf 1 an eulogy.—Rtligibus freedom and (freedom from re ligicrt are now becoxne convertible tcrm« with most $ modern philqfophrrs, particularly tliofs who h3ve been educated in the philofuphical schools ot France. MY.'Jefferion has been heard to fay, fine* his return ' from France, that the men ot letters and philoio- ' phen he had met witb in that country, were gene- ' rally Atheifis. The late impious and blafphemeus ( works »f Thomas Paine, reviling the chrijtiaa reli- ' gion, hav« been much applauded in France, and ' have been very indultriouljy circulated in the Uni ted States, by all that class «f people, who are c friendly to Mr. Jefferfon's politics, and anxiously £ desirous of his els&ion to the Prefidencyi Mr. Jef- c _ ferfon'»~friendlhip for Peine has bfenalready men tioned ; that anti-ibrijian writer barf apartments at £ Citizen Monroe's at Paris, and (hould Mr. JeSerfon r be President, there is no doubt he would return to r this country and be a conspicuous figure at the v President's table at Philadelphia, where'this cn- . lightened pair of phiiefophers wotild fraternize, aad 11 1, philosophize against the chrijiian religion,and theaa- e furdity of religious worfiip.—Whatever new lights " e they may have acquited in France, it i» certain that a Jefferfon had nal nrally very good prc-Uifpoptions on the fubjedl of religion. In his notet op Virgt- r; nia, page 169, in discussing the fubjeft o{ a freedom, he makes this witty observation—'" It n " does me no injury for my neighbour ts {ay there ' " are twenty gods, or n» god ;it neither picks my 11 " pocket nor breaks wy leg ; if it be said", his tef- h rt timony in a court of jultice cannot be relied on, n " reject it then, and be tb« liigma on him In " page 170, he fays, " millions of innoccnt men, v n " women and the introdvSion oftbrif. v " tianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined and im- 1 " prisoned." In page 171, speaking of the state h o( religion in Psnnfylvania and New-York, he fays, 0 " religion there is well supported, of various kinds e "" indeed, but all good enough ; all fufficient to pre- F r " fetve peace and order.'' • Which ought we to be most Ihocked at, the leoi' n ty or the impiety of these remarks ? "it docs me no injury, if my neighbour is an atheist, because it does «. »t break my leg !"• What ? do I receive no injury, as a member of society, if lam surrounded j with atheists, with whom I can have no social in- 1 tercoutfe, on whom there are none of those fslipi ous and sacred ties, which retrain mankind from the C perpetratian of crimes, and without which tics ci- V vil society w&tild soon degenerate into a wretched * state of barbarism, and be stained witb scenes of - turpitude, and with every kind of atrocity ? Good r God f is this the man the patriots have cad their _ eyes on as fucccfTor to the virtuous Wajhington, who, ' in his farewell address, so warmly and afFectionate- ly recommends to his fdlow-citizens, the cullivati on if religion. Contrail with the above frivoh.ue t and impious quotatrons* the following dignified ad- a vice from that true patriot t "of all the difpuGti- B " ons ard habits, which lead to political profperi- » " ty, religion and morality are indispensable sup- Cl = " ports. In vain would that man (he seems to f «« point at J-tfcrfon !) claim the tribute of patrio tism, who Ihould labor to subvert these great pillars t of human happiness, theftfrmeftprops of the duties of men and citizens. The mere politician, equally with the pious man, ought to K*fpcft and to cherish them. A volume could not trace all thcif eonn/xi ons with-private and public felicity. p Let it /imply be afited Where is the fcenrity for property, for reputation, for life, if the sense of * rettgnus obhgation dejert tic oaths, which are the tnftrnments of inveft.gation in ccur t« of j u fti c . e j » And let us, with caution, indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained, without re/igwn. ?' Whatever may be consedcd to the influence of fined education on minds of peculiar flruflure tea so I (on and experience both forbid ns to expeft'tha' f ° national morality can pvevail in exclusion of relin- P" (SS ous P'inciple. Tia fubftantiaUv trL-,, that Virtue * or morality ,s a necessary fpr.ng of popular govern- ta ment. Ihe rule indeed extends with more or lefa ac force to every species of free government. Who N that is a Jincere friend to ii can look with indfffer- Cl ence npor> attempts to jbake the foußdation of tlw be ; o'' T5 a " 11 be ' that Prov has not con nected the permanent felicity of , nation with it's th virtue? The experiment, at least, i»recommended by every fen;,men, which ennobles human nature; F alas . is it tendered impofiible by its vices >" What fublirae sentiments, what admirable ad vice ? How must ,t fink in our eyes the pretended , phiiofopher, who could attempt to degrade the - m il; re hg lo n by charging to it the murdcr of in ml lions, who ceuld view with such the 1,1 ; m ® n y alarming mnovations on the mild and ftmple ** religion of our forefathers I « There are religions of wtms, kind, indeed, fcys-our phijofop'herf W ,' & ALL GOOD ENOUGH.'* or I Good enough indeed for one who effablift.d and A • patronized a newfpnper, one ohjeft of which w as ? ■ v-'l V , C il r anity !,h ,s not 'orgotten that the National Gazette, publiflied by a clerk in (b A re . cretary, loft no convenient opportuurty of makieg " Q ■ * Contrast even an observation of bis own in nn. bis letters, already referred to, where he fays, « the cUrat '°n. religious faith (hall be unpunilhed does not give impunity to criminal aflj Jiff , , , aD « religious error." He then b f l,7"d thal W 'h° ror would produce criminal atfs - In d vet „£ "* r 1 z I eh "• it mockery cf religion i-, ~nd viHtying cv of the Country. It is will observed by a modern writer, "that patriolifm, as a moral principle attaching itfelf to political society, depends, like every other moral principle, on it» relation tc religion. Ihe creator it- of man.has bound the social to the divine virtues, ; and made cur devotion and »ur reverence ro hi.a ji- felf, the ground work of our duties to our brethren u- and to our country." rn The ltd for tflab/i/bing religious freedom, in Vlr- ginia, (the nrcefflty for which is not veiy obvious,) . has been.much extolled by Mr. JeffVrfon's panegy -1 f rills. l aik them what good effitfts has » pro duced ? Does religion flourilh in Virginia more r than it did ar more than in the eadern dates? Is public worftiip better attcaded ? Are the ministers of the gofp«l setter supported, than in the ealteru jj. (lates ? jj , e That aft, which is nearly all preamble, setting o e Forth a fctifs of principles, some of which are j n proved by late experience in France to be very qn f tiotmble, has, in nty- Opinion, an immediate ten- o dency to produce a total disregard to public wor- ( jj ship, an ahlalute indifference to all religion whate- £ ' !i. ver. It dates, among other things, " that wc f( J ought not to be obliged to support even the mini* j. I fters of our own religious persuasion, aiad that our - e civil rights hav« no more dependance on our reli gious opinions than oil «ur opinions in physic or gc ometry theaft then declares, " that no man (hall be compelled to frequent or support any reli lt gious wotfhip or minister whatever, and that all n men (hall be tree to profefs, and by argument to 0 inaintain, their opinions, in matters of religion, e without diminishing their civil capacities." I will not accuse Mr. Jefferfon of having been j influenced by f'ljijh jyitws, in getting this aft pasT ed ; but th»fc acquainted with h:s conduct and opi s nions will agree with me, that he has fully taken , advantage of every little of the preamble and enac s sing-ciaufe : he has proved his leligious freedom, or, rather, hi? freedom from religion, by his condu£l ; s and by his opinions, his rjgbt to maintain by argu t ment any opinion whatcrer, in matters of religion. C 1 e Who ever few him in a place of warfliip ? The r IBan who can fay he has seen such a phenomenon, is [•_ himfelf a much greater curiosity than the elephant ! now travelling through the southern dates. n But how inconfident, not only with truth, bat , with'themfelves, are these vifienary philofop her*, who are thus always Unking out some new doc- j t u trine ? The states, that our c'rtiil rights p k e have no dependence whatever on our religions opini- a . ons J and yet it immediately after admits, thatrt|fe--ut, a leering and hankering after F e petfonsof the other fex.adefire of finery and faßiion, . a neve, ceasing irot after new places more advan on . tageous for tieaimg—with a number of contingent P c , 'ccompltihnieiMs that do not suit the ffl , Now ,f any pernor persons will restore to the own ■ u'T r CrU < U "" e fiy a "d Indufiry which has m ' ; ST.,, hc or thc Y receive ' F ' ve Hu "dred Dollars, beside , the warmed Lkffings of many abused and insulted v I p ~ . HOUSEHOLDERS. , Providence, C 3. 1756. MOT. 1 A gentlematyvho poffefied a much larger qua\ _ ' " Ju'T' n r ' atUre »fu*Hy bedows upon A i n F contrived ,0 make it more enormous b' ! ar^aCh ,? n, '° thc boUk ' wh,Vh co . Wet t wuh emeralds and rubies. To add to 1.; r J, ui.1,1, a»a the other of 2V CC W ft, k.ipl .■ : reason. " 1 , . dcn,amJe' ,h! Philadelphia. at » THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER j 7> Died, yesterday, Mrs. Sarah Emlen, w if. „* J Mr* Samuel Emlen, fen. now in England. . n . *)•'* mormiig, Mr. Joseph Sharpless, mer chant, formerly a reputable Schaolmafter in thiscitv. r * AT a meeting of a refpeftable number of the ci '> tizens of Philadelphia, held at Dunwoody's ta. , « tn - for ,he purpose of fele&ing suitable pcrfor,, . c as ele mrn» of the legislature, wlten after d ' to fapport the following ticket, they ag * commend ft to the fepport of their filld Thomas M'Kean, ctty of Philade" Jacob Morgan, county of do. 1 James Boyd, Chelfer. fi ,r)a » HattzeH, Northampton, * jofepfi Heitler, Brrks. 1 William M'Clay, Dauphin. : James Whitehill, Lancalter. > William Irviu, Cumberland. f Abraham Smith, Franklin. William Brown, Mifflin. John Piper, Bedford. r John Smilie, Fayette. P Jsmes Edgar, Waftington. , . C?' The printers throughout the (late are rr» j qaefted to giv' v • abiSi" '■< Vets a place in their ps« I pers. . . i The Ed.ito >■ ■) Star,,a paper jjrin ted at Belfaft i .is • t Tie other printers in that town we :■ ri 16th S»pt. on a charge of high ucaioa.—, military force ac companied the civil officers—when as the editor of another paper fays, a common couftable might hare done the htifinefs, no one being djfpofed to refill . the authority, —■■ "TV "*" The new French minister Aubert Dubayet, has arrived a; Confiantinople. Mr. Hammond, on the igth Sept. embarked at Cuxhaven, on his return to England. Col. Crawfurd who is mentioned in the Hani burgh papeis, was wounded in an action on the 25th Aug. he was exchanged, aud the Eng'.ift pa pers date, was in a fair way of recovery. _ v Louis the 1 Stli, has found refuse in the tlomin.- ons of the Empress of Russia. The English pa pers fay that the King of Frufiia would not con firm to his hrihg at Brunfwick. Lord Dorchcfter and family are arrived at Port!- mouth England. The gartifon of Q.fahar confilfs of 5600 men. Reading. Berks county, October 11, 179^* Mr. Fenno, By publijktnu the following Rcmarls and Return jo* witloblige , A Subfei'ber. General Daniel Heifler, who, it is wt>l known* | voted agninft making the appiopriations (or catrv ing the treaty with into cfifeft, h""* ing his condu(£i not approved of by-his coeffituents, resigned his (eat in congress fcquecceof which, the gcrernor of this (late iffoea his writ*, dire&ed to the (hetiffsof Berks and $JO zerne counties, commanding them to hold an elec tion for a person to fcrve the next session of c.lit i«, jvafr decide y in favour of government during the inf«rte£lio r > the westward) as a fcnator for Berks and Daup 1 counties, in oppoliiion to Gabriel Heiller, v - >0 thinks with his brother Daniel. Every exerlioa { wasmade,.on both fides, forupwardsof two rno.; previous to the election j and on the day, G— *'«