Excerpt from The Christian Baptist, 1827-28, Vol. 5: Published Monthly
The policy, and the measures adopted both by my open, avowed, and determined opponents; and by the masked, double-minded and double-tongued, faltering and wavering adversaries, have ih spired me with more confidence in my means and resources - with more assurance of the truth and triumphing pretensions of the cause I espouse - with more disdain for error itself, and the low cunning, pusilanimous intrigues, and cowardly artifice by which it strives to creep into notice, or to hold fast its unauthorized hold upon the passions and prejudices of those who will not think, and therefore cannot act for, or from themselves.
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Alexander Campbell was born September 12, 1788, in the county of Antrim, Ireland. But though born in Ireland, his ancestors were, on one side, of Scotch origin, and on the other, descended from the Huguenots, in France. A profound reverence for the Word of God, was a marked feature of the character alike of the boy and of the man.
He was not less laborious as a speaker than as a writer. During all these years, he traveled extensively, traversing most of the states of the Union, and visiting Great Britain and Ireland; discoursing everywhere to crowded audiences, on the great themes that occupied his heart, and coming into contact with many of the best minds of the age, from whom, whatever their difference of sentiment, he constantly challenged respect and admiration.
In addition to forty volumes, Mr. Campbell published several other works.
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