IMIEIM ,#: , • • , - 0;.1'..•••=4; A •) ' • •:‘ .0, • • !:;1,, t.ti • Ne:', ..e.• . , ~.. , ~. , c--. 4. ,; ••' ~../..-: -.. „„:„..:;;./.,•,..'l.-1-41; ''';': r f ' . `+‘'.., , 4 ~-, li.'-‘•-•.,-'.%:.-e•-•. ~•.;.‘:', :;,..,...'''... t,,,, ',.c . .t. .• /7. *.i•.- , :i' ~,.,,;: i ../.. 1 i:v . ), ; • •4 1 . - i: - ... 1 ~ :""i ~',:' •: ~1 44.4 e.. ,'Z'' ' , 1' ,.. • . •:-.., ....,,, -,4 .^-a. ;)::::::,.. s;•;•••,,,,-- ::4!,,;;.1/;;;C v 7, ', * • „dii„, *13,1•,.fi•',-...-', i'fri‘ikitet'lr •'''' ... 4 -,;',..'•'4,'.:!4' p.. • - •:•;; .... POPERY AND OUR FEES INOTITII TIONS. AY PROFXOSOS JACOUVR, •Of Mc. Western neologiug„ &mina ,A very large and Ditelligent audience mama • bled in'hlssortic Halt, on Tueeday' creating. to , . • - listen to an address which was deliver'ed by . • tensor. J.C . .ICUS, of that Western TheiptogrealEi S i minor", on ••POpery and our Institidiont! ..„. The Rev. Dr, Dutton announced - thicthe Meeting would be 'aliened trith. prayerlithe ' Rev. Hum J. Cianx, D. D., of thelidathodist •Episcopal Church. ' .4 , • ' Dr. liftman then 'mid th P eider Winos, ' who would addrus th tnyettiug, had re cently returned from through Europe, .„. • where.he had enjoyid , opportunities of acquiring informarieig relattire , :to the important enhjectentehich he was about to lecture, es be ytrited.ltatnan Catholic countries, bud nun _ .4, k . ...thettnehticed !erokkings• or that syetein of reli• • - gipu.lrovements.,, The revereindgen.. tieutatttAinirielnt:uof*rofesfartiiiidrffa lathe ' - A t te nottillsW Pridadantootintor , liOt Our in ' • eleuidooncouttlefOrtiethiNglitatid speech •.' night, 'a I,oon - of - Pretestant-tibertY,' such or „ -> tall! Papal •worlif - knowemothlrig at . Can any. ; roplibuy,of the Archldshoplitialidatethelaer;.! - - - thatirwaeere met within thtilmaidedStiiVii* the`Chittuti - this assembly witald' bibrolies Is' . - . tupon hint' armed pence; and 'Aden natiourniti,;; "t• . l olo,conitillstion. in giaranteelhe to tut thatten.R. ti te"idedtellif civil, right, mate ad and open Pro":? • "t' ifi, - tek# , fist the whole polityientetaef-. preen has, too, latelicled for no null of the more open strocitiCit or Papal En • ntettld pain your feelings by re-ital, . . whit* hursitist came to hand, of a summary: .ejection fromilimgary of Prnestant Scotch - min, inters, to all whose remoisitrance the otity'veply • woo, "There le nothing against , you but the en - - wily of the civil .governee-who is a Romanist and pupil of the Jesuits " are protill to think that in their report of so much suffering. they., proclaim the fact that the American - Minister, at Vienna gave them every lasful'aisistatiee, lend nobly pat bin:Unrso at their disposal. Pretest. ant Americans, wherever in the _world their...ore, must be the,patrons of liberty. It testriffsladtly startling that. hi the hrfned and' •aptal day of such doings, thu Papal functions , rice in thin country, with evident 'concert; are just.now claiming an affinity in - their eystem for • free' tinstitutione—nay, even a paternity in 'them all. But the Catholic chapter in the hie ,. ~ tory, of the. United Statee in now written; It has gone forth with the irsprionseer.of that aim Ito , orish functionary in our lab& the Archbishop of Sew York. Research and sophistry have been pat to the stretch to swell its dimensions, end 'what in the rude That theronan one Catho Lc Commodore in the Nam, one Catholic rer of the Deriaration;rthat there is now one ea- Mono Jed* on theifiriproine .Rettek, and that fairistoptier Columbutribmovered:AMerical ' Has the direhhiehlip - forgotten thei Catholic! chapter in our twolitionary A:toggle for tree in. stitutions, that of the fourteen Colonies then platted • there wee one Catholic coleny--Canc. • . ' Jar - Did It join with nein achieving our 'Thor riu: Vibe's the rights of a G were alike meo aced and Jeeparded by the British' Crown,. and those very free principles were se, stake' did it rrily with on on the side of /ache to 'oistebiet and conquer? No! but stood aloof against all ' cur entreaties adremonstrances. the foothold l and ]rilltag aeoomplies of tyranny., tiere. !allude rut that the soldiers of Catholic, France; fought With us against a common enenijr„. in ' '• dia; bur-Okit of Catholic America, as embo- • died in thatnorthem colony, indhaving !Tette' ibierest. - y,ou would think, if Holy Mother hi the parent of free Institutions? there Iles Catholic • Canada, pri,,heyond the river of the thetatind • iglu, tagbulegoontrast to free America. -lie engage, by the way, to find for,the Dish. ops'imd their, people a broader, bettor claim to . liberty on these shores, then any they, have yet . advanced or dreamed of: 'tis aground of claim, - 'however. Which they must allow us to stati from aproscribed book, - the Weed of God; 'a ground . of claim which 'would apply equally to Protest-, sate litpatn, Italy,. Portugal and dusts* end to thaultatubi of groaning Papists at Home. That, " it Watt, because men are of one religious kith inotlter, not became they sailed or not, or fm4hlltntot , in acquiring the land, but because our hie prinolplesnre a revelation of God to the rite for inisessal weintre. Will they, ac cept the liberty of our heritage and on Oils on. . ly ground where they at stand? The op &elates that the great eleintats of oar :;,.:'.. 3 '..3. - ... t..: - .• ~ $« ~...4: : • j.: 7 ~::_l- . , 4-1,1. ,, %.. . •1 .7 ,4 liti, • ..i. 4 • ~..., i ; ! - 14, ..:::.; ; „:,,..,.: 4., , ,' .... 1 f : : ..i "' t '"‘.:ll('' '4.7; ..,+,, L41,......-.: . :'.. :M • ri-.4, :-. . c : .4 - 4. .:. z...,.) p ;• ; V...‘, N :-', - ,: . _...;., ~;...........,:,. I ' l t :, i?. - - - . 4 . -..'.... 4 -• lt!'4 , ;''.4. s ; ', /:::.i;: - ,::.!;:...:..,i ,, ;,..: : .... - ,n : t .1.".i.'...firL...-Jii.:,. 4:4-..:::!,-;(4, . 4.,.4'440:7'..."4.1-::.).1i,,.:.• i '' o. 4 %4l, lkl!`.;ii'il!'', ; : 611i,t* -1 . 1-. • s ::iic: 4 l . ' 4. lit ',,‘44 4•oi 1,:l . 4 , , , ,, --44.6,4:1:1i34:::: . 11 k .1 - 4.4,.. - ..00.'i . .. , :..; . :15.ii: : , 0 ' . ; , ..i.i';' : ti• 4 4 i te):ii;i.:;;ll-4P';J ,;:..,.;i , 7 ' , 1. n , 1i . .1 4 ) 1:•:::::`‘ . tql.!1, , , i ;4;1 , , , Iki;.;I•: - .1 ' l l 7 fl;'t'n' l, ;4 - -:';4' . .','4"'? : iii' - ' - ' .l .:,-," . ',i,i,:k L:i-.;:!..ii.::!.1 f :,3,V.: 4 :;ti,* :. . 5 ...f ,• ~iii.,:•4. i 5! , . .,,:, - - . ,1 ..,,,1 . ,..,:. : • . ;1.41.::,:.,.;;;-.::.; , 5i... ':'i '-'' 1 ~ +:~ .I'~'..':~\~~ • .2' '•iC7l.• MEE . , v . •••• 1 0 5. - -1)• ' .., vi ~ - f • pl'lTsisliß(4l GAZETI Vti 1.1,1,4111t10 w 1117 1 .• 4 0. FITTLBIIROTI T!!!Tpxr , moßmilim, APRIL 16.1E*1 ntiatimmic and Whig County Convention acki"!Thn Whig. and Anti-11E01mi, of Alle yin meet on Manning. the Zit.h of Hoy nee at it. lomat Owns or holding primary meetings in intrie Memo] elitetion Jo the tonsuiltine raved/rely at 3 o'clock. P.ll. to •d• $, urn It 6. etnent townsbia. In the !I . ..tonight and Pitt township et 3 o'clock, P it.. . 1, Minn. it 7 o'clock; and In the to oral warts at 12 11.. to Miriam at 7 o'clook, the election In ths •erda lobe.II.( ballot. Each of lb: election districts to orlect two drhogst., to • county convention. to be held al the Court Boum, on Monday. the god of Can. follooloic. e. nt Pi...clock. A. 111, to nominate • ticket to be sunteirted Li the parts, al the catalog October election. 0, 40P1ALI 4 41 Clmirouln of Counollte of Corroopoodenle. .401411/111AL 0 24./MMINSIONEk. • JACOB HOFFMAN, or BEMIS rp174111 - 4121CSIDILITIAL ELIWTOII.I4. • .4•41 4rozi4L. A. Z. 1.14,44, Jusla-Pouocz. •• ....... NT•TIvi. 1,1,141,14. I:ll44ielt. I. WiLIJAIK Y. Ilau4 - 14. Jualai 11. 1 2414412412.. 1442.1 24427414. l5. JAI 11.. P 42202, J J an W. Mose, • lb. Jun K.'l/410Htar, I. Jon Y. 2[144.24. P. J/eo. Aletlmoullu A. FriErta Melt:24l3M, 12111.1.14 DutZ, I. Junts W. Wuu./.4, IS. Jon} Lured& 7. J 4.10.1 hon.& Al. A5 , ..4.1 , 1. ILnalam,2. F. Juil, 2n44.244, 21. Tima44 J. 6 100 AX, LI, JOOOO .1124.4.44. 22. lanns 1.. Inns. Ow4tts 1. 1441.444. Si. Iltilutm2o 1114,44.4. Ams. D44141‘ 1 . 110.11, !I C. hintell.. 3. NIAlieL A. N144..4. 2r. Huh ..I.l.polahatura. virREA DING MATTER 1141;I:Ll E. POPNA ON }•.4 CB PAGE OP Tlll3 P.f PER The Journal ewleuvoru to oxense ito conduct up_propriating our property iu the adilt4uei or U:. by oharginfens, with u similar of fence in'copying the opinion of Judge Golan, •in the Ecouonir case withorit credit. The cases ore entirely dissimilar, and the Editor of the ..7entnal, was well aware - of it *lieu he penned miaerible;-an Spoil:Ty tor,bia itoroolon of our publigf document, each as Jndge Oa, 'a opinion, to public property. The-J o u r tifrstennired no right in it by publishing it brat. 'Wily' more than the National Inteiligenc, does in a President's Messege,when it sets that docu ment npfrom the manuscript. It cost the door nil nothing. It used the manuscript of the pub lic officer, and- it wee fully repaid for any oxtru lahor by having the first publication. The moo of a reported speech stands en entirely differ eat ground. Reporters are employed nod fur- =EM=I '. owing to ouch expenao and labor. Jt thus he s'' • come. the property of the paper which be+ the enterprifte to ferule), it, as much so as its ate eaurials. The Journal's excuse, there, r. , ro, only adds to the onginal offouLe. It clot' evidence that the editor was conciaus of his but instead of atoning faril, Lo seek. to Iltliate it by trumping op n groundless charm , opined us. • AID FOR TIM Cut taceritt; .131. rro no es. art requested toaive - notieo to all who have out yet contributed to the relief of the sufferers by tte late terrible fire which de,titt,ol the town of Chpicothe, and reduced h'undreds of its pt,- pla to poverty, that ' , lessee! PALStrit, lIANYA df.f.to ,-corrter of Third and Wood streoLv, will receive and transuill their coutributioue. II is very important that there should ho no delay.. buffering humanity ought not' In be required to nay long for relief. l'Freons at tv distance iota. ace disposed to Aire, can do so by remitting Ateircontriliatitus to-the Odle:lieu named, who . tare been appointed nor altannere; and no ear . neatly solicit such gifts, ,be they ever e 3 amine We again urge the chime of the people of Cidlienthe upon ,thoso 4f Pittsburgh. When . iris city wax prostinted, seven years age, by e Lee terrible catamit,g, the people of erdlicothe —a - little city compared with hi.—rare over i ,- 2000 tee the relief of the sufferers ; then surely we cannot do leap, on the score .1 simple yuvire, to lay 'nothing of charity, than return to them, la thiir their day of calamity, thrir munificent contribution with compound interent. There ern a areat number of persons of gen arse* hearts, bac of limited means, .who would perhaps blush to offer a single dollar to nieli a cruse ; bet let such cal to meld the cerameada ti on' bestriared upon the ridolq's - and hesitate nu longer in beide wing_their nit ts,_hows_ over small, throigli ihe amount we heave indi cated. The ',Tent proportion of the charities. of the church nail or the world aro made up of tiese little oflerings.. • rations were all the inventions of Cathidice a line, and' thnlilinhop.mmerts that they are sub i tantially the work of Catholic hands. .And yet, immediately, as if camaions of the contradic tion that such I. free system should have =oh a !Mires, be says, •'And if 4 difference existed be ' tween the civil institutions of Continental na. tletts;arid those of England, Catholicity in just ,ly entitled to claim the whale credit." After just , English history fur the purpose, end taking to Itomanism the credit of ell the free principles end institutions,erhich have dmernd• ed there, be claims them Men as contrasted with llone itself. This in, indeed, by the diviner pre rogative of forming light and creating dark neon. Rome, forsooth, is alike the parent of despotism and freedom, of the Anathema and the Magna Charts, of the Inquisition and the Trial by Jury, of the common law, and.the can on law, which mileterts and annuls it all. Rome can make capital of both. _She disputes not a bout the children before Solomon, but claims them both, the good mother's and her own. She has begotten alike both 'Michael and Beelzebub, every thing human and inhuman, but Protest antism. The Bishop, observe, has not gone on in his historical argument to find tree iustitutious fol. hiring, in the back of Popery. Ile ban not thus 'proved to us the irtherent,tendency of that system to work popular nod political freedom! Why hart ho not rh own us bow, everywhere and always it has produced there blessed results— how it has planted free principles wherever it bay prevailed—how the history of Papal State. is the history of Republican Liberty—no" polism, on trammelling of teen's consciences, tto cunloviog-of the mind, no lording it over the people, but on the contrary how despotism has thwo at its approach—bow popular suffrage, popular intelligence, and popular 'government bite arisen under its magic influence, to glut. don and bless mankitor Sow the dark and iron ,400 of the world have paosed4 away before it, aml now the poor slave of priests:raft, bigotry, and superstition has started up to the dignity of freemen' Iles he explained ht 00 the ration ole of the matter, to show how, from a bitter fountain can issue sweetest Ashlers—how vn avowed principle of intaleratioe brings freedom of conscieuce—how a priestly inquisition of (hr try 'thoughts begets independence of Mind— how a blind subjugation of the will to despotic authority produces pereoual liberty' Instesol of thus tracing tko history of Pope ry, and marking for tot its Idessed alevelope wogs—instead of showing us the Papal Itepub , licanisto of Southern Europe, he hoe-seised up , con solitary , instance in which Popery did not utterly trample out the life of liberty, atlit here Otnnt4ll9, at this dap, has. presumes to claim all the liberty as its own If, even hi this one in sionce,Popory hail t coo foetid to bear such golden fruit, the obscure. of all sinology, would make it out a freak of nature, and an anomaly: tint it is not an exception to nature, so notch as a de imitator in feet. • Yon hove seen a child tie a cherry to a thorn bosh, or it bunch of grapes to yi bromide to mate you think it grew there, but you detect that deception You have seen stone upon the field, and under it 1110 struggling plant, borrowing and finding the light, notwith standing. tint what man would tell no that the clone has produced the plant—that the prate,. tiog germ has sprung out of its bosom, instead of crept front under — it, sod grown In despite. A favorite point with thesellishops, and the on ly hinierical point, in, that free principles date hack In Catholic finite. And eito dues the morn tog date back to the toght, but has the night therefore produced the mot - nine inn truce of' the 'banish paganism, when, tit Cleat old to'y thithigy of the Orphiu Lynne. night woo said to t.e the Itlothcr Gods and moon It is antler 'its pretext that the Bishop clouts, thr Common Lin fir •lic Church, berstr, he says none ho re beta 0.10 t., tract it to any other oonme. Pot he points nein the fountain of represen rAive geternmetit rahnii in the chsr-Ii lint! het us lebk, he says at the institution.; which. have grown Up in the Church, to find the sour ces of repuhliCan principle Hear him—.•Cv ery rdipents Nhirr in a rephblie, which elect. its own coirer+, non Ito buperior. - Menetreue! to refer WI to the internal polity a Itornish Mon barnee. whirl you Duty ser reerywhere in In pal Inn+, like 00 tnaby town jails, planted in ,he most remote places, away from the Labile lien: of men j (70 to tlic bott,iii or a troll to tin.] the dayliihr Who would ever think that lephlilietin liberty was horn within those prison walls, and those Iron gratings, where solitary monks in their cello lire in unknown ways! lint no no of lie man nay that they have not an elec. five polity. Vet what is that to the world 7— ' Parent I::yolilicanisra thie—that the flotnitil• can safer, with thumbscrew and rack, elect their own Superior: And who are three functionaries of a toreigti power, who arrogate the special patronage of law. and who with sophistical ad. 1,..., ell im now for Mother Church the parentage of our in -dinitionn Is net this an atilt preface to an other claim of sovereign:A over us, and prapetrey in net The late Papal aitgeinsienin.Englaud ell citedtfithat t. ~ ~ .. ' • un• Ito .t - tre .• . &anon rroi rapers...ding 'dm "Smartt tipostotie,". by a batch of Bishops In the Papal establishment there, was this— that to the Bishoprics belong the administration F of the canon law. And is canon low? It is best defined to you ,•y +nollification of the the cam son and civil ft In favor of the Vapo r 4y—that it in the code that rules, and is en forced chore all law, wherever Popery has the sway---that it is the product of Piiestly ingenui ty to evade and invalidate all righteous legisla tion It even exempts the clergy from criminal jurisdiction. And the chief feature that roused -as the indigtintion of the British people, is that ',a this orderbelongs the enforcement of the in quisition. - .Yon will not be startled, then, if I 'read II you froth the Borneo Pontifical, the very terms of the oath under which the 'Bohol-w or/tong:UN are 'morn to their Papal Sovereign. One fialterlCt will nage: "Heretics, sclasmaties, or 'rebels against the came, our Lord, the Rye, or /us successors ofsiresaid, I mill persecute andlight neoinst to the utmost of erypoterr." . And when an Indignant 'Protest:Mt public Confronted Cardinal Wiseman with these teaser the ease, What do you thiuk 'he pleaded!' That the Pope had made. 'll4landisspeciat erMrption, and even slamed his •challengers, Dr. Cummings and others, where the pen woe drawn over these words in the copy for 'swearing the British Bishops. Itut'does thin relieve our ease? • It only proves the plain mean ingor the oaths as applicable to all others and IL , e.t.' Will Bishop O'Connor nay that iAmerica, too, is excepted? Will be show no inhere the pen ban been drawn over these shooting words, in the copy by 'which he was sworn? • And the law rends "that ifs Bishop shall 'have been negligent or remise in purging his beetle of heretical privity, es moon. is .this is 'evidenced, he obeli be displaced by a fit person, ..veliplieffl and nut." I pretend note° , Say why . . .1111115BiTe Cathedrals among no are under -. liWCerith . ranger of dark cello and deep vaultsi , . Sii,SeTidier to thin Banish architeetore; but thlil Ag . ;the olden) which nry*lmithe "paternity sad Tratronageef oil gond , leguthwirwand all popir. *liberty! . ...- • Hot it steal not legate tte to find the tfrigin of free .principlcs in immemorial times. ft needs no sorb doubtful deiliatiOn. <W'e take 'broader. ground thanlbe date of a particular code. We look for the primal, pereneialsonree. Whence mime Win tight of low and libeitty upon the world,. Seal ado art Ito-legitimate inheritors? We pen "tiolo, then: to trace the principles of our free iestitutions to their true origin and fountain in Ail! Mime: to Wei, ' , foout, ; That the great . .elements of • civil law and liberty, aro retina revealed In the Bade, •In'th(lftbrew CommonwesalWi—tbe twelve Del-, tedllbwes of-larael. ' '..-814 - 4111DLY, That Popery is in avowed woe with the' Sittitb - as n hook for the profile, sad An the lauds of popular education anit-govarnttient. and -that ea it aaa lay no elairri to the !latent of .eivil liberty taught in the Beripttiren; and employed pro-cminentty in oar land. • THIRDLY, That -it in every way at variance will. free prineiples,und -- FINALLY, That' so far from one institution. hriog ••io harmony with .ho geiiiim of Popery," the sway of Popery in this Conntry mutt be fatal to oar liberties. • The Common Law, - lope the Bishop; •ia wholly the production of Catholics." But consider. the principles of rs wise, jririsprodenee, ouch sts the experience of ages has most approved, 'hate had their firm revelation and their perma nent embodiment, le the Book of God. Heath en nations, each as Greed°, and Egypt, and Per sia, felt the inflriene,e of the Jewish node. The Homan Civil Law, en compiled by. Justinian, re duced itself to the great elements of .justioe • here rayed revealed; and the refund table of God's own written demslogue, comprises all the great rudiments of social right—:is the;basis of all criminal statutes—and each' an the Most tip proved legislation nen only ro-echo and re-enact, In asserting and defining the rights of men. And the cirri/ rock or the: Hebrews. creblidies the' elements of perional right in" the transactions of common - life. As regsvis the law of Um- Lion—most lenient and considerate, according to man's posseemiuns, and OeVerarnally enthrals& As regards the dividing of Inberitancess re. garde debts siihdAkiir accumulation-4e mania the Important laWnt bailment, which Sition ju 2 risprudence hoeinserted--we and great leading principles laid down in all distinctness and eke plleity, by the blassio statutes. The law of de positaries or trusts, which hoe entetedllo exten eiiely info ail eubsequeut elutatetenta, ie found ittre,,anbetantiallythe same an has been adopt • .ed by all Vine and eafelegislition. ' In regard to. the law of dtriaitr, Sir 'Mathew Hale, in his history of the Common Lew '.of ,gogland, deolartenhat there is no almost exult resemblance between 'the Ilebrelr and Greek cloaca So wo might trace the tame Scriptural element into the .RAUISin yaws; and Sismondi, labia !Tan of the Roman Empire,"iellevethat whin. Alfred the Groat rained a republication of Saxon awe. hilnairted WAIF i itatetee al token from J 90810codc,. to, giro new itiengiliuntocenoi to liite:PAlinip!mi of mar - laity. So, .in the legislation of the early Freak", :divers 7ewish Jaws, from the BOae of bilitter-' anomy acid 'Leviticus, were Introduced. So, also, the early English reporters make frequent reference to the Mosaic laver, and meet learned jurists and scholars, such as Fisher Amen, and litichattlis, have declared that no man could be a sound lawyer who was net well read in the Mo saic Here, then, we find the primal source of juri,. prudence, to which all goalies is indebted. And when, in the early history of the New En gland colony, the Mosaic code was recognized as the basis of law and justice "their motive," says an accurate historian, “was, in providing for a complete and vital independence, that they should adopt, at once, a system of laws, which was in every man's hand—which every ruse read, and, as he was able, expounded to his family: and with which every subject of the ju risdiction could easily be made familiarly ac quainted." But where have the principles of republican liberty had their origin! The Archbishop de clares "that they ore the inventions of Catho lics alone." But plainly representative govern ment, and the electoral franchise were revealed to Moses in the wilderness. When the chosen children of hod had come out from among a succession of despots, who hail filled the throne of the Pharoalts, and were now separated as a people, to take the form of a state, thin was , countril matter of sufficient moment for them and for mankind to be the nut.ject of special revelation. This, therefore, was the divine constitution by the hand of Alones. I read from Deptronomy, I. 11 and 14: "Take you wine mon and understanding, and known among your triter, nud•l will make them rulers over you." ••And ye answered me and said, The thing which thou host spoken is good fur us to do." Thin elective government was to he their glo-• ry as a nation, and to cloud as the pattern of a representative system for all time. The vote was directly popular. The rulers were to he from no privileged class, but to he chosen from out of all the people. They were to`stand for ottice on the ground of a high personal alterna tor, an men well known and true, and thence forth we find in the congregation of Israel the chiefs of the trilust nu the representatives of the people; and thus the pia of popular nulfrage wan perfected on principles which the ages to the present hiker MOM fully proved. And again, Mc independence if the judiciary, lens it unto( Catholic origin? nays the Bishop. We ought, perhaps, to excuse some ignorance of the Bi ble in those who - have so much set it .amide, but we quote again. from the gleriptures. Deu teronomy eft. 18.. ...dodges and officers shalt thou make thhe in all thy gates, over thousands, over bnotlreils, over fifties, and over tens: who shall judge the people at Aid/wantons." Read the Monsic code, and you will find that thin wee public and popular justice—the tribu nals were of readiest access—to be "in all the gates" for prompt and universal administration. And en, also, the principles cf evidence, and of verdicts, and of trial by jury, are found more or lens developed here, an all time has heitdap proved them; and we challenge the Bishop to examine ilia Bible for himself, and nay what ele menu of our free institotionn have not their precedent and origin here And Magna Marta wan pOtterned. in a written conhatutton for the Commonwealth, defining and securing men's rights for all time, an no other charter has Jove. The Archbishop has the effrontry to call the Engilvh instrument an niers/ton of Cathatier alone, when all history mimes that it was never had lint in spite of them —owl never held but in the Nee of all Copal anathemas—when now, an tore, Popery is the ewer,, foe of written constitutions, no tbo world ha, Milt Neer', and When e'en that Magna Chu te of mankind, Gon's written rode eel Bill f Right', in the notable dread oft le Paproy The Italievim the first written constitution for a pattern state, far a glorious republic, which tiourinhed 440 yearn The people were to "ob serve to do sit that no: written 'n the nook of the tam_ These features of civil government 1/1:1 be found ti contain the cardinal principles of all eq nty to the State. Nationn have bran hapPyand free to proportion as they have copied them-rag, before Popery blighted the world, were they in living force. People in ell time have orne where struggled after the enhvtante, and most palpshly after this °rand Model have our own glorious loslitutions been framed fili.terve The Bible itself, as then cutout, woe delivered to that nation as their conantutioa and law, and in Ito careful and pious keeping was their prosperity laid. It was when the Law of the lord wax not found in the !sande of Steamiest. and People that their glory depart ed Item then. it is found that the Bible is the authorized text book of popular liberty . Clod's Book is this, to teach it to the people, to net guards abglitx it, and arm it with Dieine Sane doll.ll-40 instruct men in all civil relstincor— a Inculcate a genuine public and personal man - ore rsZn n as 447..had'tro to sar tit eguard fres'in stitutions. It is the free cumin:m[llM Holy Volume, Its habitual, unrestricted was in the community where it goes into every hand, is opened at every fireside, and is lisped by the children of every family—it Is this popular use of the Bade that at once educates arid adapts for mailer liberty. The history of nodes which may change with the next generation, is of minor consequence, compared with the nee that IS made of this original and permanent Revelation, which holds in Its bosom the prin ciples and substance of whatever is good in them all. But we are now ready to show, secondly, that Popery is M avowed war with We Bible a, a book for the people, sad am the basis of popu lon silos:anon and. government Thank-of (hit ',ahoy about popular viyhte by shore who deny .to. NCR the fint and Aiyfint right of having Cod a IltoelalioriP Upon whatever pretext this policy may be tialeated by the Papal Church, it can; not be denied that this Volume iv forbidden to the conlinunity. • If this Book him anything to do with civil liberty, either for its finding not, pr fur its preservation, Wen can Popery lay no claim to'it whatever, and is it not plain that in this question of popular right, the Bible an a popular book, is a vital nearsaity 7 Has not all history divulged the fact, that where this Vol ume bas hail free circulation, there civil liberty tine most prevailed?! Look now at England, Holland and America; as contrasted with Spain, Portugal and Mexico. Do these Bishops pre tend that there is popular government in Rome, or that the Bible has any toleration there? I do hero testify, that when a year ago I spent a mouth in that city, one of our company par ! ' poorly searched it throughout inquiring at every book store, for a copy of the Scriptures in the' language of the people, and ono each copy was net to he found. - And is It otherwise in Portu gal er in Spain? You may ask-intelligent pet sons of the lower climes *boat the Scriptural,— the Bible—the Oldor New Testamentf;and they - will not know to what book you hawfitllaifidi so is it, we' see, that in web a oink even the bright and otrong light of the Bible goes ant' Have we not just lieard•of an Austrian inter , . din erela upon Englieh Bibles? And th a t, by she government, that seeks through the Leopold Foundation to plant Popery in our American Stites—the government of Chtralirr Hultman. Hear the report to the Pope of the Papal • ItiSholis, Snabled at B Et ouonia, after the Refor mation Cjtieftili. "The Seriptierm" may ahoy, "is at Book which, above all others, bath raised Weise tempests and whirlwinds with which we are almost carried +my.° "And in ' , WIWI-they edd,.: - a NMI one diligently con eiders if; rind compares it with what is done io our Church, he will fled them rely contrary to each other, and our doctrine to be not only vary. 'different from it, Nut repugnant to it!' •-:-.; :, ' Hear Pope Leo AIL Reinert the Bible Soolety;' "Yonaremwore, venerable brethren, that sigi tain Society, called the Bible Society, strolls Wilk effrontery throughout the world, which Sockelyi contemning the traditions of the Holy Ifai4arc, 4 4 and contrary - to the welt known decree o , s. Council of Trent; labors with all its neigh ' by every means to, translate tho Holy Blld o fej the common langoagos of every notion, to area whit% plague, our predeeineorn published many ordinances, aid in his latter days Pins VII., of &Ward memory, vent two briefs to show how sto.rioui chit-mat wicked novelty it, to both faith and morals. We also, venerable brethren, in Conformity with our Apostolic duty, exhort you to tarn away your flock by nil means from these poivonom partscra." 1 . To this Papal Bull, the Irish Papal Bishops responded, In an address to their clergy and people,lbus: " As to the hooka which are die ' intuited by the Bible Societies under the names et Bibles and Tntamenta, se they trent of re- ' Rgion, endue not sanctioned by us, or by any competent authority in the Catholics Cistroh,the use,tin,pernaskthe raiding or retaining of them, Is entirely, aid without nay ekception, prohibl gied to 'you" And in Papal Ireland to-day,you might see the glaring handbill. placarded and 'distributed in the street/4 by We Papists, in these words, "Have nothing to do with Scripture renders, drive them away by making the holy sign of the cronetwhich they hate,and which the. Devil always from Meld them as you would We Wicked one whose ministers they are." 1 And yet now, in Ireland, with a way opened for the Word of God among the people, thous made are becoming convene to Protestant Chris tianity; aid if any proof were needed that lit. Patriot was a Protestant, wo have it in the fact that the Itemlak 'Synod of Thanes lately; in their alarm at the epread of Preteetantlam there, have dropped St Patrick as the Patron Saint, and - elected the Virgin , Meryl What will our adopted clamps of Erin say? Did not their Bishops impact that their ancient guardian Inn not safe to be trusted as the Patron against Pro teetanUend lint the latest news, and worst, IS that of the burning of Bibles by the Fiend in Ireland, last byinaf. Do wet:lntl:now howlste; ly houses heretical searched from garret to eel; lay, in Pherenoe and Naples, tor.ttils very'NO: tome, and nobles Mai torn from their families and thrust lots loathes/time dengeons, for the high - mime of reading this Book—nay, of harboring it—until the heart of all Christendom has sick ened at the tale of snob atrocity? And as in this Book is contained the charter, pattern, and preservative of free institutions—as herein is the leaven Which must pervade all society, to St it to be free —thelight to guide the governor and the governed alike—the fret possession of this Volume by the people, is a vital condition of, free government How else is it, that a nation, which more than once has achieved bribloocl the name and form of a Republic, has found it only the shell and shadow at late Because their Papacy had denied the Bible to France, end so had seen to it that the house should he founded on the sand, knowing wall that when the flood thoald come, the fall of that bonne wottld be great. Let it be noted that the same Pope In nocent the 111 , who anathematized the Barons for their demand of Magna Charts, who pers. mated the Waldenses, and who founded the In yaisition, is be who is extolled by the lost Pope, in 1844, as of AdYP!/ memory, and eulogized fur his zeal against the vernacular Scriptures. Will any protest that these are not, cannot be the proscriptive doctrines of our day, urof our country! Ilear,Archbistrop Hughes, in his lec ture on the Decline of Protestantism: "There are 2110,000,000 of Catholics ncattered over the face of the globe, and I run no risk in saying that out of all these there could opt lit found ten in whose inmost souls there exists the slight. est deviation from the actual and of eourne or wine' doctrine of the Church, in regard to the Ite;eledion of the Sou of Coil." Say not that the Popery of Ore ,lark ages 1,18 share so horrible, while the same Pope, Greg ory, -quotes a Lug ILA of Lis pr.ic,ss.r. the Piusereand Clements, and what not Ile utters special anathemas against the ChriThan Alliance of Amer.C.l, in these words: ••It is their inteu• (ton," he says, "to inuitter Bibles in the popular tongue, unit to diasetninate war. boot. still." And here we ask,. the Pope, as Pilate asked of the Savior, Why, what evil bath it done? Observe, now: it is Jost beeßttne this volume in too source and basis of free institutions, just tie.. cause it announces and authorize s them for the State, just because all its prineiplro favor them, ' and all its morality fumes them, and all history hits shown that it lays the ground work nod op ens the coy for them, that the Bible is the dread of the Papacy. This is that which confessedly prompts the hitter denouncement of our Amer icon society, for sending the Bible to Italy. Says the same Gregory, in May ; '44, •Let on not doubt, brethren, but your exertions added to our own, will be nronded by the civil authori ties, and especially by the most intleential sov ereigns or Italy, since they plainly prrrrere bow. much it rollers-n.l them to frustrate these sectitif- . ag combinations. These nien nvuw' rays hcithat ones liberty of interpretalion obtained, and with it, what they term, hOrry of romeiencr, mong the Italinas, thesedant wilt naturally sous unfair, patrimi hh , rty'" And so I could chow you a list of ten prominent ettizeus of Fhr cocr, who, within the five months tireerding last, were imprironed for roading the Bible in Tuscany. The wicked dental to men of their picnic judgment has been mainly to refuse, if possible, •Yit divine 'extolling of free polities, and petitions*, rights You remember in Kew York, the determined policy of this Papal eye. tem towards the rieriptuirui When this ,ten Archbishop rallied all his political fore,', to op• pose the noble neheme of Common - &boot eta cation, because this book was taught to the ria ing rare; and it woo in that contest that we first heard the Bible ilitnotall,l in this country no sectariaatiook, tangerine in popular in struetion. The ballet, only ile•piscs it, the l'ritA 11(0.1r the very shailew at it Anil tell our, if is way,this revel di.. of (10,1 to man favored I•:t -pai institutlims, it it ever taught thou, it it hay ahem, encouraged theta, II a,, principles and teachings were ouch 1124 1,, snarl o u t promote them; would not the Par., follllll with /ale Orte y/ellly leas chrrrney .Irord of nod? Only rot:Randier now, that during our American revoluuun, the Coniereeu, will, all their preening want of money fur the war, judging the rant of Bailee, a greater calamity renolved . 11141 the into of the Bible burin univerestl, and It, Im portnnee no great, IttgOini Bibles he imported from Houdin., tiecrtal.iii, or eleorh ere , i nto th e Union." We demand; then, that Popery, or to dielinetly denying to the people the great elm,. ter .and tett .hook, of free prinelphie, cu, Icy no claim whatever to the eyhtem of popular liberty, taught in the Bible, and enjoyed on pre eminently in our own laud. Bat, further, 11111101-1, it iii eyer},iirly at to, with ;ll free principlen Let It hr Irtarhr'i u, at P.M)/ is a political Pyi.tent, Vert, in it, plant , anti despotic In its principles. Il ie a an a ehrih• lion church that it elands before 11,0 or even as a State Chnrch, holm a monstrosity— a compound of Church and State—a Shae, under the gniee-of a church, a political hierarchy -- . :Atirldl saw this in the late Papal aggrevsi,ms. Olga jos seen it sadly.. ..gee past. The Did,. .alioolv,hmagullvlAik. - . 3 101 . 114 ' Iflout; of State policy. ester three prelatical' robes all spangled and sprinkled, there is e.m cealed the sword or tbo sceptre. The keys of St. Peter are avowed to ho the keys of cabinets and of prisons --11 N well as of Purgatory and of Paradise. .And ws a polities/ system, yet claim- ng protection and ectridcration, 10 only n church of •Christ, it It to tho hest degree the peril or a free people; for, otaierveyou how Mg Ek secret political system it hoe crowded the En glish law with enactments; restraining nod fee. .1. reting out this oomph ' and Jesuitical pow. or. Look at the atatu of INOriffltiill . taxing the legal ingenuity of many parliaments, to check their grasping , i . i.ricious poliCy. Look at the abjuration oath;:and pros/lionise having an eye to this secret alteilanco, and to this irn pilings in !impel°. The Sitocresive statutes of it bore upon those verynnitetishments of the nom , . lab Clergy, and upon . their assumption of au thority in Engiand, by tirtni of papal provis- ions. And let me ask, It Americium usk, if the Papacy be neck n politicil establishment in all its; genius awl essence, dieeseo only iu religious robes, how do the titles from the lope coutiMt with our Constitution, which expressly provides that “no citizen of the United States shall no, cept, receive or retain Any OITICO or title of hon or from any Emperor, King, Prince, or Foreign power, else he shall cease to be a citicen." And no a political system, Popery is essen tially despotic. Reed ,I prove this when we have seen it a religieus despotism, tin:Meriting •the word of God. Rat look tikthe nature of its tem poral claims. not to spank of those divine titles which the, blanphentonsly arrogates: he claims to be temporal prince, sovereign, pon -tiff, dispenser of orowneand governments, and their best authors so lay it down on principle. 43ellarmine teaches in these words: 'Chat Christ vested Ht. Peter and his successors with all tem poral as well as spiritual Power, leaving him at fall liberty to exert it when Its thought expedi ent and necessary for the good of the Church." It Is only not yet expedirti4l.or porrible here, ne in Italy. .Dowe not know **the late republic in Rome which so enlisted' a energies of that people, and was pat do ',Only by French ar mies, teemeded to the , ' 7, spiritual iligrd ty, denying him only tie' , "government, and yet imet.he horror of Pe : - Lirsiesintative - rights! 1 read Ilareply in his own words: 4 " , We fulminate the • communication to be incurred withintlitrith taloa by whimver shall fake part hs:st ~ General National Assembly", for the RO .' . te, to establish new political forms," 4rit : -- t:,1" I could tell 'inert/10p evenings in Rome 0... among eVEry poopliti. ho.were crushed in :their - attempt at liberty I the prison gratings eiroWthiKerith'citiloni, yeeting out their hands ti en rot' alms,,And. heeded there togetheeby Atippes of thousands riii..thil high crime of peek rii*lAtti civil liherlYZ',soloheet. at home— the y ir °We: own peoplei.:-.Ak't ' ' . If.' there is any thing iongenlal with 014 Air. personsl liberty , to the Pupal Oorentmbert: Vito Worn. the Ito. I man Frees, thimomoolit . ‘.4.cionld speak oat, under the Republic. 14 Xikii..'the words, pogo PO, of the Roman Ailverairef,.March 10, 1849: , . "The people of the liotissi'atate were deeiroue to reform. their polities,' condition, and the Re public was itiolituted, and Wore this front sh ~ . e of the.Allitnitobleuortrel ly of the people ell the poet has 'enntiumeil nn iniftie.bed away. The people willed it, who is soc rior to the People? (Ind alone; but God oroaletyhe Peoplo for liber ty. . , , • ; . "The people have willcd,: - and bite will has no need to neck for SO illStjficattiou fr o m the p as t. Its rights are prior to Menet' institutions. - "If we tern our eyes back, we may Contem plate the fall of the Papacy with tran9ulllty, and the more soles the` Papacy itself anitenot tranquil when it became planted-on the ruins of our an cient political grandeur. The history of Italy teems with ;Motion, and to the Papacy much of it la to be attributed. •Nakenhaless when the Papacy came forward andjlaced the cross up on the summit of the National Standard, the world eaw that the Italians Vera ready to forget its faults; and In the name of ; a Pope the reve lation bolum. And " now it was clearly proved what the Papacy could, an& what It could not effect. The predecessors of the 'lest reigning. Pontiff were too wary-to roe the risk of a sim ilar proof; their power was only measured by the evils heaped upon the People. The Not reigning Popo !colored on the work, but he was dogmas to draw back, when he saw that he had revealed a fearful truth, which was this, that Ne Papacy vas potoerleu lo pipe liberty, iadrpen• &Wes and ylory to the Adios notion; and he whal ed to draw back, but it was too late. The Pa pacy had pronounced its owe sentence. This was the reason why the failsof the Papacy so immediately 'followed ire glory: the glory of the Papacy wan the Aurora Borealis which preced ed the darkietw. : "w o lipped, nevertheles;.bues system orre action was the answer that came from the Pa. piny, The- traction' failed.. The Papaw, at Bret had censurer to dischnulation.iav the pi 'Wks bearing of the people, Auld del A nt i i n I to flight it toot - with It the cestal e Vof Causing a civil war, it violated the p2litibl oonatit n n oin .• r Mil MOE left us without a government; drove away the meseengers of the people; fomented discord; threw itself duo the OM/ of the nest ferceirmr , ny 0. 1 May, and foully excommunicated IlAe Priorii. The facts were sufficient to show that the Papal Sovereignty neither could nor would admit of modification; it remained, theta fore, either to eubmit, or to overthrow it. It Was overthrown." The history of Italy teems with afflictions, and to the Papacy much of it is to be attributed.— And now it hat clearly proved that it was powerless to give liberty, independence, and glory to the Italian nation; the power of thu pontiff is measured only by the evils heaped up int the people It threw itself into the arms of the must ferociotis enemy of Italy, and finally excommunien led the people. Had these Bishops among us any sympathy with this? How imme diately, when the Popo had tied to theta in din guise, on a coachman's box, before the dread spectre of popular freedom, did those very Bish ops inotilute Peter's pencain America, and vend cocci thousands to furnish bullets for the Amon. and French musketry, until the Re public was battered down. I beg you consider how, at this moment, in Europe, as absolutism advances, trampling upon free constitutions and political liberties, Po pery ill seen throwing up its entrenchments be- - hind it, while all the influence of the l'ope's le gitms is iipplted to make new exactions, and strew - then the hoods or despots. It suits the Bishop iu this community to speak of the French usurper with disparagement. But do we not know that it in he who keeps the Pope in his unitsly'srat by his ten thousand troops, do we not kniivt'how his 1101i131`01, hailed thee.), d'eta/ with joy' Asti the Romilh prevs.ot lit: Louis :souks w.ilL exultation of the feet, that. "every semblance" of a republic is swept from France, and the republican leaders banished from French sail Wby, its the Archbishop here declares, has Popery never recognised any civil gavorn• moo' Ix it Itecnol+e all 'are alike, unmolested? No, butt because all are alike held ,111.614/illtlie. There is no place for nay of them in fL system :lint claims all gimerninent to itself, and would 11.10 kings only on passive instrumtuts, and yet is it it question what kind of government has the greatest nlfinity to Romanism? To whose lemon, does the Popo lice for protection from the —.dear people" but to that of the Bing of Naples! the Caligula of .r day. This reign ing, overshadowing despotism in the Church, attr.ts In itself the same element in the state. The Pope fled before the very shadow of a re public, and to•dny you may see the masses of Ramat citizens prof... Minis against the forced compulsion of France, and the temporal domi nation of the Popo together. And France her self, why in she non hound to despotism, though struggling within for Republic. Myth- • totiont.? Ileetanse yet the priests have power, and the whole system of Popery is In away. Ono Protestant alono'is found in the Bench of tit :treaters, and ode alone in the Council of State Bear alontalembert, the chief of Ito maiti.g tape. tinder Louis Napoleon: "No mimes man," be says, "will any longer rely opon these new theories, which pretend to 11erive democracy from Catholicism." The Ro tnish author. Ida Toconevillr, who writes upon itnr nstitutions, sop, "In France I hail almost w..)0 .4'll the spirit if rißigien and the spirit of freedom persoing onurmrs diametrically op. pestle to each ether. pint in America I found that they wen, intimately united. ..1 that they reigned in runinum over the sante country." it was just because religion in France was Papal and political. and religion le America Protimutet and spiritual Despotism belongs to the one, and freedom to the other Root: mists at4ond theumetvis, we see, admit it, but he, it 1, Con venient for the pushups to say ;lint Papari and Republicanism are tit tki obvicim for Is Alts, further, that Popery ix , IvetruLliwo I he gol•alor rhlrarler and writ It in the nature of a true repohlietnivna to work 3 ilevelopemeni of the people's energies, to en• lighten awl iditoninte the indi•tiliol mind, and, hr giving to each hi-s part in the government, to' invent him with the rertionsibtlity nod dignity of irceonth. elo it is, hitt, under nosh a system popular right, there Must he popular culture. Anil popular energy is the result. And even whore a form of republicuniam might Clint. this nould not be enough without the foundation in public knowledge nod morality. A scheme, they shire, which keeps the mind to bondage, and she cut Heaven's own revelation front a free ncoess to the tool, must be the toaster .urse of the world, So hue Popery been found. Noth ing eine cao - explato the aspect of European ilisotiun Tint oat Rome her mighty monuments of onsient art? !lee Pantheon and Colosseum, sod aqueducts, nod arches, to annulate the peo ple 11 come generous' otoulattort of the ancient that) , Iles nut the Pope's Vatican the richest remoitis of tlreek and Roman sculptures, from the elMist . of prouder title Yet, u down trotl• den peep!" can have little commerce with such treasures of groins among them, heemtse they , tikiliitn'atfifelant — lfriiellilif re% • doom! ton mercantile marine, where whole ton nip, is eyed to that of lieu of our ocean sten- Inert. I,ok tot Italy—whet outpouring natural a‘l• Vantages—et to tie the glorious garden of Eu. rope--with summer skies and fertile soil—no Domain of rook like that of our New England, et of the sta'rmy North. But the uncultivated tracts held in raorhaairs stretch out for mites to gether, and are almost wholly neglected; Atte net forests untouched; the vines yield their richests juices, with scorer an effort, to the hus bandman; and yet they are not known beyhnd ,I . the frontier. Tmineral riches of the lan lie he m unexplored, and the Gulp-life-like spot el out home woo where an English company, last yr , r, were pushing their enterprise, with special eon. sent of the Pope, to Jig up some remains of art from the old Appian way. Any traveller on tell you that the wretched depreciated paper money of the Pope will not pars a mile out of the city, and is worthless even along theqlon tine marshes, and at Naples itself Does the Bishop ask that New York or Pittsburgh shall be like Rome—commerce dead, and the yet ow Tibor, that mice bore royal argosies upon ek heroin, choked with mud? Industry dead, in. tellect stilted, conscience enslaved, and the gI ry that once shone around her in Patton days, put oat by this midnight of Papacy. Look at the Swiss Cantons. It is no elan er to say, that, with all the disadvantage of P ,ot errant liberty in -noel an isolation, and sd in the very bosom of Papacy, you can _know 'the boundaries ef'it, as when you pass out of be sun into the shad, • Look at Protentant Holland, where the (eve of, liberty hos sometimes let the ocean in upon her low lands, to defy the Spanish Papal sulijn. go:ion. The most wonderful country under the son for its poular industry. Ito territories !re claimed from the era by dint of iron pereever once, cities with their churches and mansiinus founded on the mind and yet standing. Whor ev er elao was the sea higher than the land, or where else were the keels of ships above the chimnies of the house'? The grand Canal of Venice, fronted with marble. palaces in their weeds, is plied only by the gondola, while (+hips of every land crowd In to the very heart of Am sterdam with richest cargoes. Could Spain me none England any more with her invincible Ar mada? Look at Preabyterian Scotland. Look at the North of foolonol, alwaye to'be North of 11.4mill—blest no by tbo proximity to Scotland that it ban become like a different land and a Mcrae' people from the South of the same little into. What has given ouch Inipulse to manufaeture 'awl commerce as to have placed the world's me tropolis in the ocean bom of Britain, but that it has nobly shaken off the. Papal bondage, and the people are free? And the famine that pitched upon Brio, and that America helped tn reboil!, found the abject Papiet paying not his lost penny in tax to the privet; and lying down to die. But I oak further, where under the son of Heaven, in a lend claiming to he clan:ed, is there such n degraded population as in Italy; where, with all the hoast of church hospitals, and religious inatitntiona, beggary in the grand profession and trade of the people? Look nt Pisa, along the beautiful Arno, where one of the wooden! of the world, its leaning tower, at• tracts 4the traveller; but its streets are like the grave-yard, and the troops of beggars aro niar dialled every morning by the poliCe to their respective stands at the bridges, the hotel doors, the cathedral steps, and on the thoroughfares. How often I have pointed them to the priest , along the street, and saw thorn beg in vain.— And what must he the state of soolety, think I you, %here young children. are purposely de formed by their parents to make capital for the trade, and to practise upon the sympathies of And !Lilo the poor people are starving under the eye;of this mother of the people's rtghts, the jewelled mitres, 'and croilars, and signets, and crricitliess—the. 'splendid, gilded furniture of the Vatican and Quirinal—the stately equip age of scarlet cardinals, are untaxed for their gond,. silver lamps, and either Virgins, and relics sledded pith gems and gold, have tatty laughed at the people's poverty. And yet the priest filaties'his pay for masses and'indalgen ces front the veriest beggar. aml farther, Popery la every way, at variance with free prizielples.—,Where, in foot, is all'its boosted patronage of liberty! Is liberty of eon- Faience, acknowledged? They glorify it now to us, eo though it were a jewel from the Pope's ring or diadem, when the whole world has seen It trampled under foot in all Papal lands sit a thing ,of the sty. The Bishop charges upon Protemontlem that it felled to adrenee after the fleet 110 years of the Reformation. Lot nut read from a late etandard Tiotaish author, a para graph which may throw light upon the facts: "Afterwards mane the Protestants, upsetting all Europe by,means of their Bibles. Philip the it; let Oa not forget was one of the foiemost defend• ens of the Balballa Church; end in hint was Pei . edmiltd thfk Poltoy of the faithfttl ages, amid the vertigo, which, under the impulsed Pruteetant‘ ism, bad taken poesession of European poliey.". What - wordsthave happened to you if Proteatan tism bed been introduced into Spain aa into France, if the !legman, had been able to count on the assistance of the Peninsula? What would) haie happened in Italy, if she had not been held in respect by the powers of Philip! Would not the sectaries of Gertnnny have succeeded in introducing their errors there Then I appeal to all men who are acquainted with history, whether, if Philip had aimed:Med his much de- - cried policy, the Catholic religion . would not have run the rick of finding itself, in the 17th century, under the hard necessity of existing on: ly ON a tolerated religion in the generality of the kingdoms of Europe." You will remember Philip by the auto do fee of the t And when the Bishop charges protestantism with lack of vitality, that it numbers only some 1 50 millions, let the 60 millions more, that this eiterminating power hos sacrificed, rise and tell how their generations, in all the glorious repro dm:Uri:nese of Christianity, would have swelled the ranks to this day. Will the Bishop eubscribe now to the doctrine in question? Say, Bushop, is it every man's right to worship God according to tho dictates 'of his conscience? Is this hilt civil right, ea be ' ween man and man, and without human force or penalty? Why, then, cannot foreign Protes tants men speaking a foreign tongue, be allow en. their houses of worship in Rome? AL! tread knit upon the mil, come within the shadow of it, rind :slavery of conscience reigns. :.It is just I diecanse lwltticnl ntrairs enter so the very life and 0/18011cs of that Papal Church, that any other worship, even in an unknown languago,-is a hind of treason to the State. I know of an instance in loin is which a Christian parent asked to leases Elltlllllo inscription on a dear child's gross, 'She sleeps in Jesus,' and to have it in any tongue:own it woe refused. Why must the old man of the Vatican grow so on easy, mil have his dreams so haunted, end muster Mr his another:lm that the Poor Wal denses, bunted in time:: pact, should, at length, have the liberty of building a Christian church at Turin? and lately rei you know, the British Government, negotiating for a Cemetery at Toledo in Spain, are forced to the degrading condition of haring no service of theirown Per formed, even in the retired act of burying their dead. \ But, nearer home than this, hear Bisho p Hughes himself, in Ida reply to Sir. Greely:—' "Liberty of conscience," he goys, "in your muse, if extended to the papal dominians, would require that the Pope should become, ni directly, a party to every species of error andimplety, and the overthrow of his own authority both as tem poral prince and sovereign pontiff.", And iernot this an admission, by a man who claims the pa rentage of all free principles for the Papacy alone, that it can never alloi Liberky, of Con sicence where it prevails, and that, if it should allow it, this would every way jeopard Ito exist emu. So the Bull of the last Pope, in \ 1832, speaks of that "absurd and erroneous doctrine or rather raving, in favor and indolence oflib! rely of Conscience—that moat pestilentialer. ror." "Hence," he 'adds, "that pest, of all others most to be dreaded in a State, unbridled liberty of opinion." The ban applies, you nee, to Liberty of Thought. "If any one should pre • come to teach or think differently from those de . orees, (said the Council.of Trent,) let him he as • Carved." ' If you could me the caution with which men speak in their most familiar circles in Rome, Lest something be dropped against this State Church, in the oar of some spy or iutormant, you would understand the privilege of free thought and free speech in our Protestant land. Ile is liberty of the press guaranteed? flear them:l:kilobit:4.f the Roman - people from the pa per which saw the light and could speak freely for 11 brief season while the boasted Father of Liberty wax in exile. We read the very words: "Ti,,' present liberty of the press subjects the Pontiff's doings to a scrutinizing examination which it hue never yet been allowed to undergo in any Catholic country." I have had every printed page taken from my trunk. and Pockets by the police of Italy—even the railway guides alVictionaries—all swept away into the in ane. es ofnce, until they should bo examined and registereil. Speak. of any prom, free \or bonill,in Rome! tine newspaper, a poor, coarj, pigmy °beet, and only one, is published Were in the capital of three millions of people. Apa, that a mere bends supporter and organ of n o most ultrw despoti s m, the only condition of its being allowed. Why speak of reading says Father Oavaxxi Is not the • Invention of printing sought to be neutralized.' altogether! Is not typography the great bushearaf all! "That damnable liber ty of the prerur' Bays one Pope " that worst and never sulliotentty to be execrated liberty.of the pre.," tayit, another, Whitt are the free inatitutions of Popery ! Where are the unison and congeniality 'at our Alherties ! Arrests dietlceft • • would Americans Boyd° have their letters opened a t the popover to Jr\ delivered or perhaps, even to be produped in evidence on an accusa tion of some unfaithfulness to the church or State' I What IN Ilse ca,linary;XuAttfr in tho Stofeo of the Church I speck not now of the In quisition. Within nine prisons for convicts under the eyes qr the Pope, an overage num ber of thousand 'persons are immured in ordinary times. No limits to imprisonment on suspicion or tothe kinds of offence, milibers. non or . buil the most indefinile , delays of lri• al, often finding the Prisoner dyad in hie cell before ho khows the nature of the charge against him. No power to bring the case to judgment, and 'ao possible appeal. That is tho common law in Ileum! What would you think Of the personal liberty, to be presented from leaving this city.undl you had procured a tier. ti6cato from n priest that you had attended, rcgala.ly at confessional. and hid noehade of heresy on your character] Youhavoheard from Oladstono's letters the revelations of darkneesln the kingdom of Naplca— the refuge and • shelter of the \Popth-----111en —noble men; the pride of the people, condemned I to perpetual imprison ment, witkout accusation, and with no way of knowing of their offence... Is this the affinity of Papal Vovernments ferffree institutions 1 . You may l'udge how universally this revolte,' Promatant hynericane when I tell you thee, aw we found ours Ives, a largo c rpatiy; returning home to differ t quarters of our happy land, and on the ace talked of what we had seen end heard of e ociwrongs, the n'eep feeling en. pressed itself in en unanimous memorial to our government for theymose of humanity. • Iles not the-,Pope a word to say while 'all Protestant and free Christendom shudders? lie whoileposen Kings fee not persecuting heretics, for not Worshipping the Virgin, has he ug voice to raise nor finger to lift ea behalf of the thous .ands whose cry comes arose the Pontine mar shes to hie ears? %The \is 'Common Law,— where is Magna Charts in ante or Naples? In the very home of the Pap y—tbere, where is its ark, its Uri,* and Thum im,and Holy Fire, Its Aaron's red and pot of m bus—there,where there In en eeclesiastio of so kind to every thirty parsons, ‘ and'a priest t 'ovary "illy or seventy—tbere;. where we look 'for Its amplest and beet friltal-where, we ask again, are its free institutional\ in there security to life and • property? is there anything which litcounted a safeguard in society? Will It he said that any adequate religious instruction islurniebed to the people in lien of lite word. of God? The Jen. uita are the ehlef preacher' in Home, and in the Church eervice whin wonder that the priest turns his back sal matters a dead" linguage? lie has nothing for \ the \ people. And whaklif knowledge and morals meth., basis of soeiallit, dot! .. To tell yon_of kite authorised canonical ignorance and immorality in Home would shook \ this audience ; Where, everyday, you bear that no domestic *ire% is sacred from the intrusion of the prieskoad no domestic confidence can be found, where strolling motiv , ates khrongkbaci- Sy, and the-confessional Pries lino all secret household affairs. " I saw the,Corneisn the fish • bath, thronged with horses driven, furiotudy, With ribbon, streaming and 'hutrahii ringing,' Making this day a chocking desiccation, and lo! on the•poreh of St Anthony's, en old meek wan baptising every mane horse or. donkey \at ten cents a head, the Pope's State caeriago,leading the train. And thin Archbishop *tut in Home on that day, preaching on the Pope's anpremgey. Two days after came the bletudng of a ludic( lambs, under the auspioes at. Agites—fioip lambs, to furnish' the wool for the pSilitun this new dignitary of New York. I saw poor peasants, at all hoins of tie day, walking up the nave of fit. Peter's, and kissing the toe of as - Iron image; some kneeling before, it, and with clenched hands, praying*, tt. And this was the measure of Chrictian knowledge, and the fruit of religious instruction from all the priesthood of Rome. • Is there any guarantee of popular liberty in the\ State where this politioal church has the 'way? What is the latest Mabry of constitutional, free dom in the Papal mu:unties of Europe? Grant ed, ono day, at the popular uprising, but ,re , yoke" at the first moment of returning Flier. The catechism of liberty in Naples answers to every each question, that, as thu king la invest\ ed, under.the Pppo, with all temporal power,' ho is at liberty to annul the Constitution as he pleases. And is this in tlaiao/1 with our free itunitutions, where the.powor emanates from the people, and liberty is scoured to them by an Instrument which binds vintner and gov erned alike? We contend, fisaily, that not only in Popery at ouch utter variance with onr free Institutions in alrits,olements and fruits, bat that it iv a 'most dangerous ',sten, incompatible with our liberties. Thie,. indeed, to already laretra— Plain to that either the Itotennist or the RO• publicanTrinuiplo must yield. The sovereignty . of the people is our doctrine—tbe Sovereignty of the . Pope; is theirs. We live by the liberty As t of,oplulea , d speech, claiming to enjoy our sentiment 'expremethein, and to.propagate tit\ them. ls tie vulszeorstlon.of Popery. ~.... „ " • • 2 '." `. ' I • \ * <. ~`. ~ ~~ .~ a..~. .; _... OEM This it would stifle and trample on as upon a hydra. The doctrine of Rome is that meti must not tbiuk.fokthemseleas—must not discuss the measures wh ich concern their persooal, social, civil or religiOts interests. Passive and blind obedience in ttke creed: Life, liberty, and , the pursuit of baYpiri ass, with the securities guar anteed by law, are not popular rights, in the eye of this polities! church. ' I say to that part of the American press Slid loves to setter Po pery for the hope eit,ita influence and votes, you MOW not what you do. If you sholdd help It into power hire, its Heist 'business would be to .muzzle your freedom,',to banish you for your opinions, or put you to n the inquisitor's root Rot, well may - we dread a system among us, which, abusing the religious principle, and with such mock of all freedom, puts the whole mem bership in a slavish unity at the feet of a de signing priesthood, who are sworn io a forciA State. I can only refer you to some features in its very religious polity, which make it so much the peril of our iostitutions. It tampers with the obligation of an oath. Thin lies at the root of public and private morality. Oar rulers swear to the Constitution, and our citizens give evidence under this solemn sane. Gm Our law is that an Atheist—a man whose religion is such att to make the oath an empty form—cannot be admitted so testimony before a Court of Justice. But whet better is a religion that absolves from the obligation in on °alb, whenever this Church can be served by ouch means? What is the oath of allegiance, but an empty name, if it can ho waived at the will of the priest? And the acknowledged motto of Ito: monism in: "No faith is to Le kept with a heretic or Proitstolit, where it may conflict with the in terest of the Pape." And so, on the impious Trinclplo of the end sanctifying the means, dis honesty of any kind is legaliaed—fraud and falsehood become canonical virtues, if only in this self same. service. What underitanding con he bad of such earth..? Bow are words to ho token with such deep mental reseriation? What Guy Fawkes' plots may not be laid, at, any time, to spring a mine wider the fair fabric of our Institutions? And the system of elissiution-whkh iS de.: fined by them ns the powei.of follicles ore., tabling sins—takes away trout the•mosseiencM the auctions of Divine. Lew, robs society otitis chief securities, and putt the worst prinelplea and passions at the service of this corrupiletab liahment. What a Catholic chapter in history, 'wh e reA this art has been plied in courts and cabinets, to set all good (nab at defiance. So the `einep- Meilen in the Honey of Lords,' on the Mite: of Ireland, in 1825, disclosed the fact that all aread,l of future retribution was removed from the "Mail Ple, by their confidence in this priestly abnolu , , lion. And nothing more Characterises this tame priestly power than the 'chime of bidall. pence. (ser the doors of the great Suffices et' , Rome, null every where through Papal coutariea 1 have seep the inscription—lndulgence Daily and PuPritteftenaro Indulgence. The 'histnry of thin traffic, in which impunity In sin iit bargain ed for, hos given its mark to the Catholic chap ter in history, I have crossed the magnificent bridge at Drendeo, built by Teasel's sale' of in duleeaces; and Lcould !letterset how that iolole• • sale peddling of\ criminal privilege helped to built another bridge than that—a bridge aver the great gulf of Papal abomination ' to a Pro testant nod Beforieed Chtuch. And nutter `it polity like mire, laid so upon the public virtum and fidelity—so mucitdependent upon the inili- • Tidied conscience—thliVn a means of popular corruption and crime \ ‘ hich iii enesteppallingi And thin indulgence is 'Oen artist upon the per.` pie in all Papal lands, thancrease the sway of a religion which irould . hobLeonl and body at Its control.' On n,arooden croiti, evenly the old ruin of the Celositeum, \I saw adiertitted, '',"it hundred days' indulgence te any who' . 11 kids the cross end say Ave filaria" ~ And so, alto, l'etrnalary is •( earful ',agent in the hands of the Priest. The thrror. of an utt seen 'world are sumaroned to Whatever? work may be planned, and fees are niched from the, poor, oppressed people to carry on \the plots of State policy, and to onpport armies for the Church. You should nee te picture of• Purga. to along the roadside and t the altar. , At St Stapice,' in Paris, art has eau levitated upon it \ the cancans to, depict the worof tomato, with the`, angel fl ying doves to the 4 \ lion , gates, and iu his hand the keys to race* the snifeiers, the piiest being first paid of coarse, and under Abe paintidg the inscription, •ThiC Maas teethe dent rthinine the deliverauce of rattail who cut', the in Nirgatery.' And yet, these beating shepherds are the men of whom the VArclabitlarp deeltmes that hey did not duchies the gat( of Cal. rforriM, ' , Kati. l they tor, looking op tit . Dearen,' and that thijr\motad not hare discovered It if they eyed& \ I hevaseen the money boxes, situ the great eathedriant Friberg, with • o piaturn over them of Mee in•fismen, and the words, 'Pity me my frit-mai, Pay nie,' Making appeal tor . pritat4 \ keeping - the conscient - Teiiiia - Eiii iia, - 4 -- s a. iiiiiil"Tir bondage, pad what Mips is there in the popular, vote, in the .publie mentlity, or in a regard for. our free institutions? 'The Church becomes by thin moans politically omnipotent, nod this, 'as we have seen, mast be fdr despotic ends. Yet., crowning all in this device of priestly domination is the Coaliational, _where every snob thing, titled 'end evilAis unborn:treed to the Priest alone, A police is Malt over the inmost thoughts, .no pa that nothing ehall escape the knitirledgehnilmoutiny of this same lordlypoir er. No possiblitelusion of their schemes shall come to peas. The secrets of families Muth be disclosed. Spies fur the Church shall be in every, houdehold, ice , the penal of every good' Catholic man- or maid, and a kind of omnis cience tibial be securedlhe Letter to accomplish any undertaking. So Amalie is the fianc— ee ramified ere. the operatiens--so deep are the devices—no coneentrated \tis the interest—no perfect is the management throughout. 'So this 1 the Jesuits have alwayneaidoGive as the Con-` I tensional and School, and we .nll be mestere of , the world." ,\ , \ , I might speakher of e penan ce poly as shoii ing the power coil developing thafruit, evenln• , our own lend. Think of a nun\ or Meter of charily, taking the therareeneorthe Itetaistri Church in the abapeof a public whiliping,nuder the canonical Itish of a Prleal, as lately, In the front yeril•of a Westerriaiennery , --and• when an indignant publio interfered, it was vindiested and preelsted,in on the'ground that it was a strictly relish:Ms observance and entirely at her ein.will: What subjugation of the sag go further. ';, ' - \ - ' We are compelled by all history, \ and by the present facto to leak upon the Church 'et Rome amougus as porter-colossal ',steed, with the bead in. Italy, having designs upon our free *tite r boos. Bons. The only 'civilized land 'never yet ravaged and • desolated by it, we are :else \ the very land most easyttf \ theess and most inward ly exposed. Our citizens .know hothinirof 'its atrocities as the childrdo of other lends; have been told them by their gearing sires. OurAtar typoliticionshave oarrassed and crouched Math consolidated interest, as bolding often - the bal ance of \ power, that they \ the dictating already who shalt be nominated to 'pahlio poets, and the krockling millions are marshalled by these Bishops Ito the polittelll arena. Alreedy,the press at. the Capital dares not, offend them, and the Arobbiehop, with ell bla Itomish party satiates and \ foreign alliances,, chathinges us with the fact that our laws make diatinction of religious. Jesuits, whoie very name is a niothyst for plot, craft audpolitteal intrigue, throng our great eines, build their riot religious houses through the growing glorious Wool, and hang around oar halls of Leation. What is a secret political society In g o \ Biala if it Be leagued under oath toe foreign peon ? Is\ not this treason, and will these Bishops thy that \,,, they themselves are not, sworn to the Pepe to seek hie enpremacy in on loud?, Apd does he not claim to be temporal As wel an spiritual ruler? Can his headship in the thurch be p meted without so far involving the Blithe? IV , else was It that. Cardinal,, Wiseman struck fro , his Church service the prayer. for the Queen Because it was 111 heretical government for whose prosperity, be: would not pray. And does not then tho accession of every million of Ro roaniats from the Old World just es far Peril our liberties es they are true,' to tho Papacy.. Then who does not see that they have' only toy, flock hither from their own down trodden land" turn this land of liberty end beauty n into elitist ouch ti degeaded, wo.begone-land as Indy -- a land of priests, soldiers and beggeze, and then to extripate Protestants by Are and sword yet let them come,' but let no meet theist with •In open Bible. Itomardsm, hated by all but" despote, may. yet need -an asylum here. I. warn you that while tho Archbishop la).ely talked- of Ids two millions of people_in our country, , he now ventures to reckon them at three millions., Popery marsballe her gees d'armerie ofeminks, abbots,, friari, coat:more. and Jesuits by hundrdreds of thousands; and. they are every where a line of express and telegraph around the world: tied so this Arch bithop is.bold to say that he expects this Conn try'to become thoroughly catholic. Ah lif the sad day should ever be when 'Mean claim the majority as we have it now, wilt he say that this is sot a Catholic land as he now denies that it ia Protestant. This brings us to the other chief point of-the Bishop--the mischief of Priest/ ./e4etent. Let it not, then; be denied thstLiberty ilpinion is prolceibed by the Itomish Church. The DilirhoP admits it, end ►indicates the. proscriptien. Ile argues the mad out direful volt of this liberty to think. from .tWfillit t Pasie wider anCh a system of freedom ; " tipixdons here eprium up, and fro m coasequesce th at MA is thus left with'etothtliiitia to Heaven. Dukes to the , guide! -litteestifit,:.-phriethaity guide. It Is this hetet; haltp4 Bible. It kri s ■a authority.: It is Ood'a'aitherity. , Will the Pope, ,the . ;boseted mfaUjblp , guide—or the dumb . : al ' somo other* of thud teach—wilt then ofthese be any safer, mires guide to Hes. ►en. How . could we , know that either of these , , were guiding us aright but by the Ifible, Gant infalhble Revelation to monkitult Yon bumf well enough what kind of a gold* they 000 id offer nei when they never yet hove settled it among themselves—whether, it - is the Pepe alone, or Pupas and Cornelis, or Popes, Coun cils and Church—or how this boasted infallibil ity an be reecticiled with the glaripg diversity among themselves!, Resides—is that agoras et 4 14 the, instead of gkidoky us, would &lee tta by the civil arm to adopts particular belief: Con outward compnlaion ever induce the belief? It may chain a man to the Pope's pillory, bat it cannot compel him to the Popes creed. It may torture him by rack sad faggot till the poor suf. fend; flesh should to worth recant. Bat, plaia ly, if a roan be left to bL choice of tit guides, ' then is he left free to think for himself. There. fore it is not a guide at all, tootle goad that they offer us. And what'gain is there in opluivie limo o re mtaprifett Every where there Must he the event and bsyonet to keep these morktlplUiol3l in their place. So it is now at Home. The Lay 4 / 4 6ht guide 'for the, !lotion people, iu the very bosinn of the Papaey.—in the very Stites of the Church, is put the infdlliblo French bayonet, Bo has It come to peso that under the very eaves of. St. Peter's you may see the Popv's Inquisition', charging upon you, with ibiziorniy walls and , window-gratings, to keep the faith or the laurels. It is part of tho very pile of buililinp in whisk -. the Pope has his pylons., tutil,tinn Church beird tars. Disaent then, if yeti dory! 1. And as to the reslyirons clortnnrc which have sprung up under the the ayslem of private judg ment, is then:any thing more nououi and blas phemous than klllillsprung up under the despotism of Papacy. With whet grooo o once this holy horror of false dontriue front the Wallop of a Church, whose trinho, , perversions, end supir ti Duette, hove done more trnn 41 infidelity to bring religion into disrepute. -Weil may May gimlet that `- they offer sacrifice in the lilass,for toy sacrifice afresh, the Loolof The religion of Rome is the religion of the\ Virgin. What another Gospel have they made by making the Queen of Reason, the great Geddeatbatiove k'attier end. Son. Talk df Calvinistic dettadttor•obasing the froe will, when the Jesuit creed Mot lb. tens obedience is "to bees a corpser or "as the staff of an aged man iu the hand, lit the' pries t, 4. And ' that _what we see to be white tie obould believe I to be: blactif tho llierarrnical, Church no lie does7L - \Row is the outright denial or \ Chritt's Divini ty any whit Read than thy. hriptied denial which places the Virgin Nary his stern? any wois'e then to melte a ficid ut the Pape, nay, to tasks gods as 1)11[1101r0111. IS these of lho Pagano, by woushipphig imaputattd plcturea! Is this Unitarirn tenet that Christ is not GoiWony more !Mocking than the Romish tenet that a wafer is Gott—and that the priest tine made it to be ttod? , . , 'What winked impiety to pot the palest above , thirgeripturit--or to deceive the pi opts by grew- • nit impostures which Coolie iill, Bible religion. •., mid. \ I have Ween crowds' of oil and young, Ihronging to the marble Virgin to 1116 'Church , .f Bt. Atignstine'S at Rome, and hissing, the sil ver foot, betanse they arc taught . that it is • nitre-Wino image4-nittbers dipping a Gager in the oil 'a n., the .liitir that bunts beside it, and crossinglkeir children with Itin filtbf,eil—and- , poor Men hying down their peed. on thh shrine, Find the rich 'twinging their jewelled gifts as vu- ' tive offerings.' Do•nut the prinito t euw.that this marble statue is neither gamma., nor the .nark f St. heir, as they say? 'line san,thee Pope himself, as lately at Naples, olliciated. in the • • Shameful imposture of the liquefying of. It. .. • anoarius' blood? . . \ dud let it be remembered that the aCcesisions -•.. • in this church' are to such a f ail', of falarhootiv; Makin, progress must be • great,' 'a mong - the most ignorant, the hindrance inning setae Pa gansheing chiefly ibis, that it Cella them to worship a women. \ In the ehoreli of • the holy l'araily it Nastfmtb, I asked it honk • Low the trick hiintie of Joseph nod Mary, Mould 'bare gotten tti.Loretto in 'linty. Ah! add he, Aloil can do ill thing..!And ouch puerile tnitiite.as„ 1 that apostate, church has taught, without num- ter, have thmwn contempt on the .i,hlime Won- der.workiuga•hf the Sou of Pod And ,erat in Callow. one, I'll - ont] thin 'same pi ienthood; pea. dling the twigs front the Old tdirr:., end outlive- . ting room for thei..4lothr, 01 God. What no, ar-.. .; remotion of pined regret at the errors COEI/61 , tjIICIA upon pritte\forilymttot. when the Bishop Allows that the fooleries and ntoordltke which . • Cie church compels men to belies-•, are innerad ureably beyond there, all • • • , . ,' , • What tenets moremischievous hi, society • k ' than that of doing tionanceto a priost--buyiag '. Baena° in bill ivemoney—getting, absolution for ‘,. crime bypayment of a fee—'getting release from ? oaths and privilege for perjury? What doctrine 1 more blasphemous thou that of the tirleits poie .' 5 ." er to forgive eta, which la claimed .bY God . fee. -. ' 4 • What' grosser immoralities were eier'.."litteiti - , in any comemeittak'..ALly : - .;m.t.r..4.C...1- , Trittl'ityttrit----f eititolomments ? Bo that the pr....aeat Pop, in . his bitter dips, was Moved to institute a cornt:.... mission for their correction. Let them ocineult the antiquity \of 'their church aa to peiseetttioit Joerelistious faith, add they will find that time lit the mother of this, and that all-other yes either patterned by it or prumpted 6EI on the defe,n\ivii. Aid 'the only , connexion '.between 'infidelity and • pridestant chrinPunity; as we Shall \ thou,. is that infidelity, has been found to prpttat \a*Alnat Rome, and. so thristlanity has done. Bop thin make iefidelliy add protestant chriatianitY one? lf, ern; in the bosom' Of the, \ profenarit Phurch, infidelity has 'appeared Wail extentleiV;th is, nut therefore proved, owing to • proleatiatili until yea can hhow that infidelity, in not also dt il in the bosom of Papacy itself. '. . Thirltishop chn genus with Modern rationalism. • • 'lour the teethe ny of Dir•Tocquoville, the Ito- manihit nether-A e eays, “41n the pSesent tine, mortifilian in any recoiling one, Roman (lathe- ' ' lice are sore to' lop into infidelity.7--Vol. 17 &., I point you to the \evidence that htifideUty;,.' both in. the • State, and \io the Chereh e has teitell -iidlectki by the very andabnuilnidiasof•': Pcitery% Rho does not know Bud Booltdisilit anti fr . , 1k 6 .1 \ Republicanism have'grown,in 'the' Pupal States as in a very hot-bed? ttlegehianst took toot where the free cant of ruitehak been. troth: . den &tin under the iron heel of Newry,' Whence:' • hive tlise Mischievous' dewiness, come tans' •:',' From the 'States of theßonsialt,Chialtels, from?`. rips! Italy and Pranite , :riihk'aelirnewinl ' era* informed' hot year-that there*iii'.3oo.ooopo-", liticoUrefitgees In SortUnli, nearly' allfrenithir. ' \.'. despotism of tower Italy. The Ameilikti Co.). - , i .‘ rut at Martell/es told , me that there were ten thousand in mi that city; mostly Italians, waiting . for an, rased iu R ome .' , And iti t&latidellty in • -. Refigi.on, who does not knoW that dm' French • ~ 'coign of Ittniscio,.eith nil its atrocities, - , sprung ; out of the corruptions andabates'of the Romish Church. , The, argument vim a - sheet one: If • . this Is Christianity, with Its deep - wimp, ileeep . - , lion, and barteivif boors down, wit n it. • Thorn ", . '' - nix be no taligion. DU. test priests rue into- . , thecarnage \ and \bishops \ propose the 1ittrib1e....... - „: , measure of dethroning - the G .-..-. ml of Ve&Veol `Dom not the Biehdp boos 'ef the hlcoMilholice Movement of Rouge •, in 'Germany, that.dpromg ' , net of the ;Popish r Impositions of the ..Iltily . - , ..4111 wonder that itooge protested, and lo a lot- 1. tos s to Bishop Arnold,"dtelared - AT ilctiV ercen bi-• • ' Beni in etch things' without, lasing \ lini. reap:lt' •-, . Lae o : reason to lose."",This• breught,:about a .• hew albeit° Church , which is new isifidel.-. • Dlit.'. that I fidelity clone from'Eritlectintirin? ?free, - .. it pretested,, but in its mendsion at rue* knot- • ,L . - led Rouitiniem, it - rejected Vtaistieni,ty:ltself.. 1 13n bad Paindy , begotten Ibitiotisbuni;, anise the time of theTheoPhltatithniplate of,Etstiesi, and - ... os 'theat\ . Witi birth It totienitn;breocht forth. • ' the reign, ofteatioat,...and. the isiks,.4 . terror, it. . ttoubly, , career \ ilia' world; It' la notoiioyes that ' • abatis the'latelligent Rommisis ie.grance, and Germany- 'infidelity abounds: , :Whi,tu - we have sect\ the , Pope carried;, on the shoul i fern of Ala - r • ~... cnmsoned'autralicrit, likei:doretitti. through," ...: 1- St iteter's; \weduate found but, few :WIWI people Ar...-; .to piiltoulageit, he piwicd,'.wiii chit'tly Wheel- i dierr,`Rwelitigend'pFesenting arms ` , ..tlitinhal;: - .-1 leege n'ttenialvf 'the\ fact•thatac to the divine . - r.....,..,1 , euthosityar the 101 t ',ltainsnists end Itation.,. ~ ;1 alistaalike reject id , ry tida l nt iiinetilti- - • 1 .:!',I Mg the - ininifiaiency \ Wf . he Retiittier = -the has . ,'• i 1 pleading for \ traditieTp•odifr roT "rvaet*; hal . . • 1 troth alike nothing koi the Won/ ef.. Md.. - I.tetut,",. ..,', lig,' the,Baticinalist,\ id the surceases of\tls ;.. ' Scriptures to be an itkientba of the , gairicil , ,of '," -, Nice. that the ,Iteruish ' author titaphylus, de. ,'. '..,i charm it to be skinvetdiott of\te Itefonuatimt ~.. . - '. Roth cry itsPintion. ' H dOwns`` li en that PoPeri•-; . •• -•'• .. illinot acknowledge theiWonl of tied, man al, timaterulediti not erca'so innit nano, it ht' '• "i•, thieltght, during itiCown dant rig • of,the World, .:-.,. \„. ; and that when that Vital trail' trad'rseuenatell .: .- \ - 1 by the Reformers, It was tramplc.l . cot ItyPonei ' . '.. ry. and charged upon 'Protestantism as Wpm° , - insentient . The pretence of Romanian' Ittithit . the Pope and the Priesthood Stand itt men ;is`c . - .1 place of - the Bible,- and Ilia \ bast set ignsicteneef., \ .' 1 fectively as the Rationalism that 4.Ftilvl9 B la' \ ,\'' ' I say,to Americans, our fm.inslitidloilehaso. Nt s .*s come f ro m the Bible, and ant safe otilkettont`• .; '1 cleave to this hook , give it peat eldiiiiWiJi : \' ' '• • .:.t too world t . , wily, nein VU goal faith, we' op . , Slitil'Mloot:., \. ~I est inittaity that Would beidelt.. dllbli f .f7iii. \, \ ' dad Bite 4rchliinbep, wooer_Natediest., \\ 4 in the Sistine Chapel it Rome, ert:eiribig_k , ' . ..., - ; ..., die to get it blessed at thereat Of tliedielfilits. 't. l .. returns to vindicate intoletioeaßz thePoisteadi \ ~,, - his priesthood, nod to claim the felleitWitWing;\. , from us. We see him just now. laboring ORM'" A,.. Cure a. law which has beta tee of thenitAllierw, '•\ i sinus secular abeam in other laschs4Anni which shall the property s of all‘thelrpittffin - .:-.. s y s ' latiltations•Lelhis ollodal Suomesion fog piaPti-: ‘ , .7z . , ! °11 1 . .7 * Akin g at Mu. en ilitSnetwP Wi4 10 4Wrder.:,.. 7 ...IL among tus--a power. ottinhadaititi that of thee ` .. - - Ic llorevutzient knelt liktk Whilldeteefpriestry : ..'• 4 . ";", amitudiett in his twkirctin on thisieirbjeette hie .... ..t . people... ~ .ft would be no difficult matter he . ••,:, nye, “to have appended thoilicortaioaredik. AN ., 1 , , - . ! ,:,.,, . ‘.. , ~ -'1: :\ • - 7. - .. `A:-: 1 15., • ... ~ ~ , ~,, -.,. \ .. : '.....,....„4,..1..,...,,e4er..,..yar.,,,,:k..-A:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers