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"Florry, my own dear Florry! hear me, for none on earth love you as I do Do you not believe the Bible--God's written word? Has he not said, 'there is one mediator between God and man--the man Christ Jesus?' Has not Christ made propitiation for our sin, and assured us there is but one hereby we may be saved, repentance for our past sins and faith in the sufficiency of his atone and death? Tell me, Florry, by what authority you invoke your saints? Surely you do so in opposition to the express declaration of the Bible already quoted--'there is one mediator between God and man'"

"The holy Fathers of our church have been in the habit of praying for the intercession of saints from the earliest periods, and none have questioned their fervent piety, or doubted the orthodoxy of their faith," replied Florence

"In the first place," said Mary, "it would be ridiculous in the extreme to advocate all the opinions and tenets advanced by those saustine doubted the existence of the antipodes; Tertullian een denied the sin of David in causing the death of Uriah, and has often been accused of favoring Arianisration of soul; while it is a well-known fact, that Jeroe of dissi, and thereby favoring deceit In the second place, are you quite sure that they were in the habit of invoking saints?"

"Certainly, Mary; for it is undeniable that St Augustine in his Meditations calls on the Blessed Virgin, and all the angels and apostles in heaven, to intercede with God in his behalf Father Mazzolin pointed out the passage no later than last week, to remove the doubts which I confess I entertained, as to whether it was proper and in accordance with the practise of the Fathers to implore such intercession"

"And does your conviction rest on so frail a basis? Hear what the Rev Dr Milner says on this subject, in the first volu it froh lish readers than any other of the works ascribed to Augustine, on account of the translation of it into our language by Stanhope, seems not to be his, both on account of its style, which is sententious, concise, abrupt, and void of any of those classical elegancies which now and then appear in our author's genuine writings; and also, on account of the prayers to deceased saints which it contains This last circumstance peculiarly ustine Frauds of this, kind were commonly practised on the works of the Fathers in the monastic times'