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And nearly thirty years later he still makes the same complaint.For it picture of kush is a curious fact that while the Church as an establishment was most popular, her ministers were most unpopular.Archbishop Secker, in his charge to the diocese of Canterbury in 1758, complains of 'the non resident clergyman, who reckons it enough that, for aught he knows to the contrary, his parishioners go on like their neighbours,' and attributes to this, among other causes, 'the rise of a new sect, pretending to the strictest piety.Bishop Newton, picture of kush the amiable and learned author of the 'Dissertation on the Prophecies,' mentions it as an act of almost Quixotic disinterestedness that 'when he obtained the deanery of St.' In 1797, Hayley wrote to him (saying it was Lord Thurlow's expression), 'Your writings have done more for Christianity than all the bench of bishops put together.The good sense, however, which characterised the picture of kush political conduct of the clergy on these and other occasions was, unfortunately, exceptional.Some clergy struggled manfully and honestly against its pressure, but others fell into disreputable courses.At the early age of thirty four he was appointed 'to the first office for honour in the University, the Regius picture of kush Professorship of Divinity.' Bishop Watson writes in a very different strain.To those who look upon the Church merely as a State Establishment, picture of kush 'moderate, and, when the Ministry require it, yielding,' would represent its ideal condition.' 'His income was amply sufficient, and scarce any bishop had two more comfortable or convenient houses.Not, of course, that this picture of kush is in itself an evil.Our clergy pray and preach.' From the point of view of this writer, whose sentiments on religious matters picture of kush exactly corresponded with those of his father, nothing could have been more satisfactory than this state of things.For instance, on that very important, but at the time most perplexing, question, 'How should the Church deal with the irregular but most valuable efforts of the Wesleys and Whitefield and their fellow labourers?' it would have been most desirable for the clergy to have taken counsel together in their own proper assembly.