‘It was impossible,’ says archdeacon Strachan ‘to hear him without becoming sensible of the infinite importance of the gospel. He warned,counseled, entreated, and comforted with intense and powerful energy. His manner and voice struck you with a deep interest which pervaded his soul for their salvation, and into their heart.’
–John McVickar, The professional years of John Henry Hobart: being a sequel to his early years (New York, Protestant Episcopal Press, 1836) p.41
Q. "… do you mean that the bread and wine are changed into Christ's body and blood, as the Roman Catholics assert?"
— SouthernAnglo (@AngloSouthern) April 5, 2024
A. "Certainly not. This would contradict our senses; and the body of Christ is in heaven, not on earth."
-From Bishop Hobart's Catechism pic.twitter.com/efOKdsRgeB