to have no Connection with Conscience any longer.
Mr Frazer says, Page 24, "Another Error in the Relief Church is, their allowing Me to follow the Dictates of their own Conscience, altho' in opposition to the Word of God,—which is evident above from Mr Monteith's own Case, and from what he said to the Members of this Congregation." I cannot for my Heart perceive from any Thing that is said above, that the Relief Church have any such Principles; nor does it appear that any Man's Conscience was opposing the Word of God, except the Conscience of Daniel Frazer in Dunse: And, for this Reason, he has declared he will have no more to do with it. He has now, I think, played his Conscience a Trick for its Perverseness, and got fairly even with it. I am sorry that honest Frazer ever should have been in any Church of such a bad Character, as he describes; but alas! poor Soul, he has no hopes of being any better, for he is all along supposing every Church to have no Members, but such as have ill Consciences. Had Mr Frazer proved that Mr Monteith and the Church of Relief, had done any thing contrary to the Word of God, and that they affirmed that their Consciences directed them to do so, Daniel might have had some reason to have fallen foul on their Consciences: But the Man of Dunsehas