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Dr.

No. 4.

Treasurer's Account Current.

SThe Miffionary Society of Connecticut in Account Current
with Andrew Kingsbury, as their Treasurer.

To amount of Cash paid by

order of the Committee,

arrent}

Cr.

By balance in favor of the
Society, January 1, 1805..17241 18

as per statement, No. 3......2517 49 By Contributions in May

To balance carried to credit

1805. as per statement

of new account.................?
...21196 94 By Donations, Intereft,

............2816 66 &c.

as per statement No. 2.......3631 60
By Cafh refunded by Rev.
Thomas Williams, being

money advanced to him
as a Miffionary, he not
going on the miffion by
reafon of fickness....................... 25

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· A particular List of the Contributions, received in the new settlements, contained in the general statement, No. 2.

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Further account of the Sales and Profits of the Connecticut Evan

gelical Magazine.

Whole number delivered to Messrs. Lincoln and
Gleason, Jan. 1, 1805, of the four first Volumes,
and the six first numbers of the fifth Volume,
Returned by Seymour & Woolhopter,

20034

54

20088

Printed by Lincoln & Gleason of the six last num

bers of the fifth Volume,

19800

39888

Of these, there have been sold to subscribers at

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Printed of the six first numbers of the sixth Vol

Of these, there have been sold to subscribers at

ume,

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18450

13171

879

523

868.

3009

18450

22319

3009

25328

$3672 00

195 89

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Do. 1763 at 9 pence,

Amount of Sales,

Expenses, Printing 19800 Vol. 5, six last num

bers at 66 mills,

Do. 18450 Vol. 6, six first numbers,
Sundry bills for postage and transpor-

tation,

Paid for Christian Observer,

Total, Expenses,

2552 63

Profits since last statement,

$1315 26

The above amount of profits is due from subscribers, and also nearly 400 Dollars more which is due to Lincoln & Gleason, being the balance of their account for printing, &c. above what they have received.

It is hoped that delinquent subscribers, when they see what large sums are due, on this and the former statement will exert themselves to pay their balances soon, that the money may be paid into the Treasury of the Missionary Society of Connecticut, and be put out to interest.

1806.

Donations to the Missionary Society of Connecticut.

Jan. 31. Israel Day, contributed in new settlements,
Feb. 5. A Friend of Missions,

7.

A Friend of Missions,

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31.00

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Thoughts on the Inability of Sin- tion laid in regeneration for holy

ners.

T seems generally agreed,

affections and exercises in a train is evident from the experience of all Christians ; for

:

are the subjects in the new birthment the power of indwelling is moral and not physical; or, sin, they can still bear witness in other words, that it is predica- to the faithfulness of God in ble of the will and affections on- carrying on the work which he ly, and not of the intellect, or has begun in their hearts; and other natural faculty, as its pro- also from the scriptures which deper seat. For though it be true, clare, that the gifts and calling as it certainly is, that in the of God are without repentance. new birth the whole man is, in It is a fact that they love what an important sense, renewed, they hated before, and hate what the understanding is illuminated, they loved before and there is the conscience is purged, and a reason to be sought for, in the every faculty is sanctified; yet nature of things, why they this is supposed to be the neces- do so; and a reason sufficient sary consequence of the change for the effect. There is a perof the will and affections. But manent reason resulting from though the change, in its main the nature of creatures or of their character be moral, it will not characteristic temper; we refollow that there is no change in mark the difference, and we acthe nature of the subject as the count for the fact, by supposing ground of holy affections: and that their frame and constitution, if such change be supposed, it or their natures are different.-— must be admitted, that so far it The dog and the lamb are so is physical: for moral quality is made as to be differently affectpredicable of the will and affec-ed with the same object. The tions only, and not of that state dog will bite, and the lamb will of the soul which is the ground of lick the hand that offers violence. them. That there is a founda- Perceiving this diversity we

VOL. VI. NO. 10.

X x

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