Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/127069
Title: Faith, hope and charity. The substance of a sermon preached at the dedication of The Catholic Chapel at Bradford, in the County of York, on Wednesday, July 27, 1825
Authors: Baines, Peter Augustine
Keywords: Catholic Church -- Sermons
Catholic Church -- Doctrines
Faith
Hope -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church
Charity -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church
Catholic Institute of Great Britain
Issue Date: 1840
Publisher: Catholic Institute of Great Britain
Citation: Baines, P.A. (1840). Faith, hope and charity. The substance of a sermon preached at the dedication of The Catholic Chapel at Bradford, in the County of York, on Wednesday, July 27, 1825. Melitensia Miscellanea Collection (Melit-Misc. vol. 63.3). University of Malta Library, Melitensia Special Collections.
Abstract: Preamble
When we consider the misrepresentations of the Catholic religion, which are so industriously and widely propagated in this country, we are filled with astonishment. But our astonishment subsides, when we call to mind, that the character of Christ himself was misrepresented: he was charged with blasphemy; with breaking the sabbath, and with forbidding tribute to be paid to Caesar : *-- that the apostles and disciples of Christ were misrepresented,-they were charged with speaking blasphemous words against Moses and against God, with exciting sedition, and with many other grievous offences entirely devoid of proof ; and that misrepresentation was the general lot of Christians in the first ages of the church. The primitive Christians were first calumniated and held up to public contempt, and then persecuted ancl deprived, not only of their civil rights and privileges, but of their property, and even of their very lives. They were charged with idolatry, with horrid cruelties, and other flagitious crimes, even in their religious worship. In a word, their whole religion was described as a system of folly and superstition, grotrnded on no one rational principle.
St. Justin and Tertullian, in their Apologies for the Christian Religion, endeavoured to dispel these misrepresentations, by exhibiting the real doctrines and precepts, and explaining some of the sacred rites of the Christian religion. They showed that these injurious misrepresentations were, in many instances, the inventions of men, who, unable to withstand the evidences of the divine establishment of Christianity, endeavoured to excite prejudices against it in the minds of the people, by holding out its doctrines as absurd and impious, and its professors as the causes of every public calamity... [Excerpts]
Description: Tract, No. 2. [Published under the superintendence of the Catholic Institute of Great Britain]
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/127069
Appears in Collections:Miscellania : volume 063 - A&SCMisc



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