
audiobook
by John Perowne
Transcribed from the 1853 Wertheim and Macintosh edition by David Price.
In this earnest Victorian treatise, a parish rector takes up the contentious debate sparked by a recent pamphlet from a prominent schoolmaster. With palpable reluctance, he steps into the fray to defend the view that the Sabbath remains a divine, perpetual command, challenging the author’s claims that the Old Testament law has lost its binding force. The opening pages lay out his frustration at the lack of scriptural support in the opposing argument and set the tone for a measured, yet impassioned, refutation.
Listeners will hear a careful walk through biblical passages, both Old and New, as the writer argues that true Christian observance cannot be divorced from the commandments given at creation. His style blends scholarly citation with heartfelt conviction, offering a window into mid‑nineteenth‑century Anglican thought and the broader cultural anxieties surrounding modernity and religious practice. The pamphlet invites reflection on how doctrine, tradition, and personal conscience intersect when faced with changing societal norms.
Language
en
Duration
~57 minutes (54K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2020-11-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

A Victorian church scholar with a gift for Hebrew studies, he is best remembered for making the Psalms more accessible to students and general readers. His work joined careful scholarship with a clear, readable style that still appeals to listeners interested in biblical commentary and church history.
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