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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_b6476192-ac4e-5e7f-ade2-a0ec0858c167">87 In the second edition of the Anxious Bench, written in January 1844, Nevin added a chapter in which he compared the system of the catechism with the methods of the bench. The Anxious Bench received mixed reviews. The Messenger, the publication of the German Reformed Church, endorsed it. The Christian Intelligencer, of the Dutch Reformed Church, endorsed it. As did the Princeton Review. In contrast, Jacob Helfenstein of the German Reformed Church came out in support of the revival system and one member of the Reformed Synod of Ohio, with reference to The Anxious Bench, vowed that he would not “touch the wicked little thing with a ten-foot pole.”88 In addition, Lutheran Observer devoted considerable energy to criticizing both Nevin and The Anxious Bench.89

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      Preface.

      In coming before the public with a Second edition of the Anxious Bench, it seems proper to introduce it with a short preface.

      The publication, as was to be expected, has produced considerable excitement. At least half a dozen of replies to it, shorter or longer, have been announced in different quarters, proceeding from no less than five different religious denominations. Various assaults, in addition to this, have been made upon it from the pulpit; to say nothing of the innumerable reproaches it has been required to suffer in a more private way.

      All this, however, calls for no very special notice in return. I am sorry to say that of all the published replies to the tract, which have come under my observation, not one is entitled to any respect, as an honest and intelligent argument on the other side. In no case has the question at issue been fairly accepted and candidly met. I do not feel myself required at all, then, to enter into a formal vindication of the tract, as assailed in those publications. I consider it to be in itself a full and triumphant answer to all they contain against it, in the way of objection or reproach. If permitted to speak for itself, by being seriously and attentively read, it may safely be left to plead its own cause. In such circumstances it would be idle to enter into a controversial review of the manifold misrepresentations to which it has been subjected. The only proper reply to them is a republication of the tract itself.

      With the reproaches that have been showered upon me personally, in different quarters, I have not allowed myself to be much disturbed. I had looked

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