Excerpt from Counsel and Encouragement: Discourses on the Conduct of Life
Editors have not felt at liberty to make the changes which he, probably, would have made in revising them for the press. This fact will account for the repetition of some words, and for some expressions, which it will be seen were used in his familiar talk with his people without any thought of their being given to the public generally. Yet, on this account, the volume may be none the less acceptable to his friends, and perhaps the discourses, just as he delivered them, will the better represent the man in his familiar and affectionate inter course with his people.
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Hosea Ballou was an American Universalist clergyman and theological writer. osea Ballou was born in Richmond, New Hampshire, to a family of Huguenot origin. The son of Maturin Ballou, a Baptist minister, he was self-educated, and devoted himself early on to the ministry. In 1789 he converted to Universalism, and in 1794 became a pastor of a congregation in Dana, Massachusetts.
He founded and edited The Universalist Magazine (1819 -- later called The Trumpet), and The Universalist Expositor (1831 -- later The Universalist Quarterly Review), and wrote about 10,000 sermons as well as many hymns, essays and polemic theological works. He is best known for Notes on the Parables (1804), A Treatise on Atonement (1805) and Examination of the Doctrine of a Future Retribution (1834). These works mark him as the principal American expositor of Universalism.
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