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The Olden Time Series, Vol. 3: New-England Sunday - Gleanings Chiefly From Old Newspapers Of Boston And Salem, Massachusetts by Henry M. (Henry Mason) Brooks
page 11 of 113 (09%)
According to the "Salem Mercury" of Aug. 12, 1788, the ministers of
Connecticut, in convention, publish an address on the "increasing
negligence of the Publick Worship of God," etc.

SALEM, AUGUST 12.

The Ministers of the State of Connecticut, convened in General
Association, have published a serious, sensible, plain Address to
the People of the Churches and Societies under their pastoral
care, on the subject of the increasing negligence of the Publick
Worship of God; which they consider as one of the most painful
and alarming, among the various instances of declension and
immorality, which at the present time threaten the very existence
of religion in this country.--"In what manner," says the Address,
"does this evil affect the political interests, the essential
wellbeing, of the community? All the branches of morality are
indissolubly connected. From one breach of moral obligation to a
second, to a third, and to all, the transition is easy, necessary
and rapid. From negligence of the duties we owe to God, the
passage is short to contempt for those we owe to men. The
Sabbath, in the judgment of reason and of revelation, is the
great hinge on which all these duties are turned. When the
ordinances of this holy day are forsaken and forgotten, the whole
system of moral obligation must of course be also forgotten; the
great, substantial and permanent good, of which religion is the
only source, is effectually destroyed; the political peace and
welfare of a community, the salvation of the human soul, the
infinitely benevolent designs of redeeming love, the institution
of the means of grace, and the obedience and sufferings of the
Son of God, are frustrated and set at nought. Thus, by one
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