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. / 6
that the ge entleman with the
: ether failed in his efforts to},
has treated our do-
and altogether
“as L trust I have done,
us has altog
%
oe : and ‘ givin,
ae only mediate alone” and “ hus being eu:
e * nine eet
ellics are persecuted: that
‘UNITED STATES CATHOLIC MISCELLANY.
t in his pontificate, © howe
“Tho most important even tn oe r
* took. Place 1582. Tha at was the reformatio of d he .
countries we was rajestod |
aati els, 2 who us pr rather t
n to be sot right by the Pope, and it
(England)
“ datly rcv i in all
«by the Protest
has
wa! not admit ted in this country,
115
3
Pas
ord or r two about Italy and Siterland a
membered that Switzerland is os much Pr otestant as Cal
VOL. 1X
‘ merciful unto us,’
ny,’ says * does
* Catholic Misceliay ty but
line with it, “to
He will see, I
[the utter
Tho first be
B.
ot to the sin plication addressed to
to that otherwise party addr ese in in the
a2. The‘reader will judge forh
think, i in ‘the strange charge of garbled d quotation, |
dices
rse, of the prev: venting: power of preju
‘There thing wor fal effrontery in the. charge here brought
ay, ae CATHOLIC, Nor ROMAN.”
ct
lic: that, in the Catholic Canton! tho
annoyed: that in several of the Proentant ant
ta learned and e
Haller w as lately driven from his public ‘
untry, a Protestant ( Cantom because, and on!
Go id
ons, Coe.
ablo man, ae tr
"cfhoes and nati’
IRELAND.
he facts t
| secured in the British meropolis, yot_ ag they chi efly re-
ofer, | ipall:
y
of downright idolatry.”
i ‘ I shall proceed to consider his
: my next, and remain, gentlemen, Shout ‘any inten
tion of adoring you.
Your obedient humble servant,
B.
Charleston, (s. C.) June 29, 1829.
U. STATES CATHOLIC <M1Is OELLANY|
“CHARLESTON, JUL JULY 4,° 1829.
BIGOTRY AND IGNORANCE. u
ly because he
dyise you
7
to let Soligerand alone, : me .
As to Italy. Itis more a country of science than is our
own. Mathematics, Arithmetic, Chemistry, Anatomy, are
no whore better cultivated, | and more extensively known.
n dato; the records of ages exhibit a a galaxy of ‘align
iterate and however the -facility might exist in certain
for the
which he hates, but does not know 5 My will continue to
n eligible.
gard Ireland and its concerns we have placed their notice
ead.
un
der th ha
OC L itis know: .
Mr
ers of Clare to serve for thefr county in Parliament, and pro-
pt. h ddressed a | the
| the house of Commons. to exhibit the grounds on sa which he
ut taking the.
obnoxious oaths then odin. - A previous question
rat the time of the contest ho was
of the House ‘vpanimously reported,
and the house mveapted the repost, that he wae eligible, and.
as duly elected. Thus fully entitled to his seat, the obsta-
ale now remaining was, a requisition, whether legally or not,
it isnot our province to Says that he should make a declara-
Such
of the Gosren M: , di
’ ’ of the present’ month: which article ve cairo as it appears only for her perfection i in the liberal arts; but tale pared ‘her
f the said work, a1 .
invwh f ih tetand : article are 1 bhi lar in his doom, when in opening the pat! ath *
p. 22 nos OM across the Atlantic, he marked a road which in after times
“ Conversion of. Roman Catholics. ——A number of these i in} was to be traversed ‘by the ungrateful calumniators: of his
the city of Wi
* Protea Pathe Hv been received into Protestant Com- structed by ; Napoleon Bonaparte across the Alps, have re-
‘ m8 ‘got and Ignorance in the last number of Silliman’s moved his eagle and defaced his namo, but. though the lat-
Journal of Science and Arts, we find a letter from an Ameri-
ter be obliterated, the road and the recollection of its con-
0 can gentleman to the Editor, dated Hofwyl Switzerland, | structor ramain.
(Bee 2 182, in whist peaking of Baron de Zach besaye|” rho good got
swear “that neither the Pope nor any other reign prince,
prea’ state or potentate , hath, or ought to have, any spi-. :
ecclesiastical or civil power, authority or P pre-emaie
nence, ithin the realm: this latter is called the oath of su-
prem: nacy— Mr, oO" Connell being a Roman Catholic could
plain, if 1
told hat th igned, hed d of the Pras
sian ambassador for his banishment, by the. Sardinian gov-
' . pal, the revolution of the earth around the sun, which was
direct contradiction with the decrees of the {Roman Ca-
tholic] ‘Ghureh! !_ Itis almost incredible that such darkness
should prevail i in the midst of light, us one finds in Italy, and
even in some parts of Switzerlan:
5 At would oblige « us very much if the good gentlemen who
“treat they readers | to such specimens of bigotry and igno-
rances be
h ist inthe R Catholic church
crees ouish contradict the theory of ‘the revolution of the
earth round the sun,’ and if they do, where those decrees
. might be found ; for kh 8 truth, we'are under the.impression
d painful 1 i
= This is indeed making a point against us!
e
Good ‘gentlemen, we adviee you to let italy alone.
ad
bo true, were
nottrue. He also knew it to be a fact: that ‘the Pope, who |
was a foreign Prelate, had within the realm of Great Bri-*
tain and Ireland, spiritual and ecclesvastical, though not ci-
of persons whe ‘avowed that ho was theie spiritual and ec-
d, knowing it to be a fact that this body with-
To the ‘Editors of th United States Catholi a;
Genruemen— Will you oblige me by giving insertion to
the following communication from * A Catholic not Ro-
,” to the Editors of the Gospel Messenger.
i give him joy of his ingenuity. So,we a are forced to mean
what we | do not _mean, because the dis-
red 0 his taste.
Ho i is w
etus to his conscience
, Really this anbotng after the name * Catholic” is also
¥.
> . . %
e must be; we do believe, that be I ric
man, tbe Baron de Zach, and one of his friends, thee d does
exist the Statement of # the thing which i is not.”
of the
‘hat
. “the celebrated inithematiien, phpsicin and astronomer, “
: . 3 . 7
‘y maine! n old maxim which I have long sinc
ndeay 9 follow, is.to prefer the thing itself to its
name.
Yours very truly,
Charleston, July 2a, 1829, : B.
CATHOLICISM. .
TO THE EDITORS OF THE GOSPEL MESSENGER. ¥
The writer of th to an.
Roman Cat! tholice ne is dete rmined, in
| trovers:
not to--and satisfied that itis to expect, any thing Tike
ae
2
te,
elcome |
to all the benefit it can give his cause, Will this give a qui-
oo
in the realm, sunita themeaves to his power and obeyed
his authority. Mr. O’C, felt that he could not swear that
not to bea fact, which he leew wasafact. By this he was
also 2 Zeauired to swear that the Pope ought not to have this
or pro-eminence. Asa Ro-
to have both;
3.
ond it would be swearing against hie belief, to swegr that
bea Roman Catholic & committed perjury : he war not dis-
| posed to doeither. He stated that since the year 1800, thera
was no law compelling a member of the United Parliament
totake this oath, orto make this declaration, though it had
been and yet was customary 10 make the one and ake the
other. But a new state of things had arisen, Parlia
was now engeged in discussing the propriety of relieving
the remnant of a code of cruel persecution,
The member for Clare then very properly determined not
to embarrass the friends nor to irritate the enemies of con-
said revolution of the earth nd the athe!
? h earth rou 8 was born at tenn them and Protastantoy he would, if he could,
russia, on the 19th of January 1472 hat his| Withhold all others among us from the controversy, as ui
name was Nrcnouas- sCorgrnicus; that his uncle, was Ro-| profitable and vain,
man. Catholic, for there was then no Protestant, Biabop of
mprov-|
me himself i in ,sciones : that the said Nicholas Copernicus
a Ro
. :. Warmia’; that he went to [taly for the purpose of im
“tholie Cathedral that the other Roman € holi
His object at bresant is, to shew with
how little regard to‘truth a writer inthe “ Cal thalic Miscel-
the “
ommunications; a
vented ta with how little reason any thing better can
be‘ ox
ted d to be found in the further stages of his cours
ciliation and justice, by pressing forward to take his scat. It
tended to exclude him from its benefits; and it was proposed
by 8 somo persons: to suggest such a change of diction as
Upon the same princi-
“lle which he had before adopted, he properly requested
those who made the propostians to eave the pro unen-
\ . lecte! im as their representative in thé assembly of the|
.
Statens or + legislature at Grodno: that he
Paul of Middl
who was chairman
was employed b
the yea:
that it is not, and find
no e aieulty 1 in a nerstandng what it means,
But to the point in view; the er charges the * Fro-
testant Catholiy with misquoting and gurbling
Cat!
his case es were acc cede. d to.
But when the bill was drawing t vane its latter stages,
Lord Tenterden, the British Chief Justice observed a defect,
njend knowing Mr. Peel's wish to exclude Mr. O'Connell, de-
ired to add a cl, forth but the clause
burg Roman Catholic mse of Sempronia, the Rom
mittee for the reformation o} that thetic Missal, in the mr of it which is
the Cslendarsin the Roman Catholic Coun of Lateran i in Alter admitting that the era San wa with then
5, b: os
gree, to to make the necessary researches by calculation of tu-
nar variations; thus when in the subsequent period of that]™
W
cont ary Pope Grogory XUI. had the Calendar Foformed, the
the word:
—* make intercession for us”—and that ben merci unto
us? belongs to the continued line.
wT have referred to tho place jin the Missal, and, your rea-
introduced: and the Bill became a law.
is law it was declared that the declarations against
Catholic doctrine ought not to be e made, and ¢ ted that
for all, h
ng tor is of fair r controversy, i in defence of ihis church, from the
tophe hat | follow: Teprosentation. The Saint
: Couns neelta addrosved the prec of of his work, to the} #24 Angela, in ia string of som fifty or sixty lines, are pray
} Popes to whom it was dedicated.
It isa little
‘ foun testified b Y a gr reat number
. for eir oyes ld deli
that there exist decrees of the Roman Cathlinat church in
direct contradiction to ie theory. Yes, so it is! They hav
2 : saidit, It must bo tr:
: . Apropos! As the go:
. 80 very temptingly i in the way ofa
blow; wa cannot t but
: I
; he most partial compiler against Pa:
Strange .with all these facts, whieh will ‘em
of Fi
rood gentlorion aro placing thieir heads
t lay
ORY
I. in Aikin’s Biography,and PAikin i isa protestant ‘and a
apists
en and Wo
Sor “a? and a
fal nto us,” In the came. ‘lino, it is trae, with
“ be merci iful unto us,” is * Spare Lord,” and then
Ard Hino, “be morciful unto us tne whole is print.
tu
ss All ye Men and Women Saints. of God, make interces-
sion for us,
“* Bo merciful unto.us. Spare us 0 Lord,
“eB tal ’
cs ce See pp. 263-264 of tho Missal, translated.
ed to make them: it also declared that Cathotice. svhe
should after the enactment of that law be returned to serve
in the House of Comm
5 y iy q)
was whether Mr. O'Connell. having been returned before,
and not after the Passing of the Jaw, could com me ne his
oath,
e oath .
of eupremacy, "His, own opinion twas that evon’ bare the
new law he might have taken his seat, without either mak-
ing the declaration, or taking the oath; but it will be s seen
a his lettor which e
doning this ground;—he contended that under one of the
‘clauses of ite new law he jis clearly adil upon taking
thenew
* the writer under the sig-.
was clear, at an early period, that the framers of the bill in- . ,
ons should not be required to take -
~ tho oath of supremacy, but an oath enacted as a substitute
forit to be taken by tk Sothat he onl ;