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    Preface

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    It is difficult to say of which there is most in the world, a blind
    belief in religious dogmas, or a presumptuous and ignorant cavilling on
    revelation. The impression has gone abroad, that France was an example
    of the last, during the height of her great revolutionary mania; a
    charge that was scarcely true, as respects the nation, however just it
    might be in connection with her bolder and more unquiet spirits. Most of
    the excesses of France, during that momentous period, were to be
    attributed to the agency of a few, the bulk of the nation having little
    to do with any part of them, beyond yielding their physical and
    pecuniary aid to an audacious and mystifying political combination. One
    of the baneful results, however, of these great errors of the times, was
    the letting loose of the audacious from all the venerable and healthful
    restraints of the church, to set them afloat on the sea of speculation
    and conceit. There is something so gratifying to human vanity in
    fancying ourselves superior to most around us, that we believe few young
    men attain their majority without imbibing more or less of the taint of
    unbelief, and passing through the mists of a vapid moral atmosphere,
    before they come to the clear, manly, and yet humble perceptions that
    teach most of us, in the end, our own insignificance, the great
    benevolence as well as wisdom of the scheme of redemption, and the
    philosophy of the Christian religion, as well as its divinity.

    Perhaps the greatest stumbling-block of the young is a disposition not
    to yield to their belief unless it conforms to their own crude notions
    of propriety and reason. If the powers of man were equal to analyzing
    the nature of the Deity, to comprehending His being, and power, and
    motives, there would be some little show of sense in thus setting up the
    pretence of satisfying our judgments in all things, before we yield our
    credence to a religious system. But the first step we take brings with
    it the instructive lesson of our incapacity, and teaches the wholesome
    lesson of humility. From arrogantly claiming a right to worship a deity
    we comprehend, we soon come to feel that the impenetrable veil that is
    cast around the Godhead is an indispensable condition of our faith,
    reverence, and submission, A being that can be comprehended is not a
    being to be worshipped.

    In this book, there is an attempt to set these conflicting tendencies in
    a full but amicable contrast to each other, We believe there is nothing
    in the design opposed to probability; and it seems to us, that the
    amiable tenderness of a confiding but just-viewing female heart might,
    under the circumstances, be expected to manifest the mingled weakness
    and strength that it has here been our aim to portray.

    We
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