The Annual Monitor for 1851

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The Annual Monitor for 1851

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Title: The Annual Monitor for 1851 or, Obituary of the members of the Society of
Friends in Great Britain and Ireland, for the year 1850
Author: Anonymous

Release Date: June 4, 2006 [eBook #18502]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ANNUAL MONITOR
FOR 1851***

Transcribed from the 1850 C. Gilpin, R. Y. Clarke, and Co. edition by David Price, email
[email protected]
NEW SERIES, No 9.

THE ANNUAL MONITOR FOR 1851.
OR OBITUARY OF THE MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS In Great
Britain and Ireland, FOR THE YEAR 1850.
LONDON: SOLD BY C. GILPIN, R. Y. CLARKE, AND CO., DARTON AND CO.,
AND E. MARSH: GEORGE HOPE, YORK.
1850.

INTRODUCTORY ESSAY.
We have again to present to our friends the Report of the Annual Mortality in the Society
of Friends, in Great Britain and Ireland. It has frequently been observed, how nearly the
number of deaths in each year has approximated, but we have this year to notice a
considerable diminution in the annual return. We are not disposed, however, to attribute
the diminished numbers, chiefly to any special cause connected with health, but consider
it rather as one of those fluctuations which are ever found to arise in a series of years, in
the mortality of a small community. The number of the dying, however, may be expected
to bear, as respects the average, a pretty uniform relation to the number of the living. And
if the fact be, as all our late inquiries lead us to believe it is, that we are, though slowly, a
diminishing body, we must expect that our average number of deaths will also be found
gradually to diminish.
We have often anxiously pondered over the question,--Why the Society of Friends should
be a diminishing body? And we propose to give in this place a few of the thoughts which
have been suggested to us in the course of our consideration.
In the first place, let us notice the natural causes which tend to the decrease of our Society.
We have formerly shown that the mortality among our members is less than in the
community at large, which so far as it extends, is of course a reason for the increase
rather than the diminution of our numbers. But then we have, on the other side, the well-
ascertained fact, that whilst in the community at large, the registered births exceed the
deaths, by 45 per cent; in the Society of Friends, the registered deaths actually exceed the
births! The cause of this fact is to be found, not only in connection with the number who
marry out of the Society, but also in the operation of that prudential check on entering
into the married state, which will always prevail amongst a moral people, where the
means of subsistence cannot easily and with certainty be obtained. But to whatever we
may attribute the cause, the fact itself is a complete answer to the question--Why we are a
diminishing rather than an increasing people?
It may be said,--Why are not our religious principles aggressive?--Why, if they be true,
do they not find converts among the various Christian communities of our land?--Why, as
in the early times of our Society, are there not numerous conversions, and fresh bodies of
warm-hearted, and sound-minded believers, added to our numbers?--These are deeply
important and very interesting questions, and we are willing to offer a few thoughts upon
them, with the seriousness and modesty with which it becomes us to speak on the subject.
We believe, that a mistaken view prevails, in regard to the truest Christian principle being
that which will be accepted by the largest number of persons. The experience of all the
past ages of the Church contradicts the assumption, and shows clearly that there is in man
a deep- seated opposition to the acceptance of divine truth in its purity and simplicity.
True vital religion has ever called for the service of man's heart to God, and in every age,
this allegiance has been the state of the few, rather than of the many. The history of the
ancient church is full of illustrations of this truth. Whilst Moses lingered on the Mount,
whence the children of Israel knew that the law was to be given, and from whence such

evident demonstrations of the divine power had been manifest to the people, they were
employed
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