Popery: The Accommodation of Christianity to the Natural Heart

audiobook

Popery: The Accommodation of Christianity to the Natural Heart

by Edward Hoare

EN·~1 hours·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

Transcribed from the 1848 J. H. Jackson edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org Many thanks to Ramsgate Library for allowing their copy to be used for this transcription.

1:16:48

Description

Delivered before a mid‑nineteenth‑century Protestant forum, this lecture opens with a clear statement of purpose: to examine how Catholic doctrine, termed “popery,” seeks to align Christianity with what its author sees as the natural inclinations of the human heart. The speaker frames the discussion as a moral and theological inquiry, inviting listeners to consider whether such accommodations truly serve the faith or merely compromise essential truths.

In a measured, rhetorical style characteristic of Victorian religious discourse, the lecturer outlines the perceived dangers of these adaptations, arguing that they dilute the purity of Protestant belief. He calls on fellow believers to awaken to the issue, to defend their convictions, and to engage actively in public and parliamentary channels that could counter the spread of what he calls “popery.” The address is both a historical snapshot of its era’s religious tensions and a thoughtful appeal to reasoned faith.

Listeners will hear a snapshot of a passionate, organized effort to rally Protestant opinion, presented with the formal cadence of a public lecture that still resonates as a window into the religious debates of its time.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (73K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2013-03-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Edward Hoare

Edward Hoare

1812–1894

A well-known Victorian evangelical clergyman, he wrote practical religious books and sermons shaped by decades of parish work in Tunbridge Wells. His writing is direct, earnest, and closely tied to the religious debates of 19th-century England.

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