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“It must be burdensome to some, and very easy to others, I should imagine, to find their subject, as they do whose lot is cast in the Episcopal establishment, where the preacher usually refers to the gospel or the epistle, or the lesson for the day, and feels himself bound — not by any law, but by a sort of precedent — to preach from a verse in either the one or the other . . . There may be some advantages connected with this pre-arrangement, but the Episcopalian public do not appear to have been made partakers of them” (Charles Spurgeon, Lectures to My Students, pp. 83-84).

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