
audiobook
Transcribed from the 1852 Burns and Lambert edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
A vivid snapshot of Victorian religious controversy, this work records a heated exchange sparked by a public lecture on the Jesuit order. The Rev. Edward Hoare’s sermon—delivered to a Protestant institute—raises accusations that Jesuit obedience could compel members to violate their own conscience, prompting a detailed rebuttal from a Jesuit insider. Through the ensuing correspondence, the reader witnesses a clash of theological interpretations, legalistic language, and personal conviction.
Beyond the polemics, the text offers a window into 19th‑century attempts to reconcile emerging scholarly methods with the Church’s evolving vocabulary. It lays bare how notions of authority, obedience, and moral responsibility were debated in a period of intense confessional rivalry. Listeners will gain a nuanced appreciation of the era’s intellectual climate and the enduring questions surrounding faith, discipline, and individual conscience.
Full title
The Jesuits A correspondence relative to a lecture so entitled, recently delivered before the Islington Protestant Institute by the Rev. Edward Hoare, M.A., incumbent of Christ Church, Ramsgate A correspondence relative to a lecture so entitled, recently delivered before the Islington Protestant Institute by the Rev. Edward Hoare, M.A., incumbent of Christ Church, Ramsgate
Language
en
Duration
~36 minutes (35K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-05-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
An eighteenth-century British cavalry officer who also turned his hand to satire, writing lively political verse during a turbulent moment in public life. His surviving books suggest a sharp, combative voice shaped by both military service and the pamphlet culture of the 1780s.
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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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