Henry Augustus Boardman
American clergyman
Henry Augustus Boardman (January 9, 1808 – June 15, 1880) was an American minister and author.

Quotes
edit- This, as I understand it, is the orthodox doctrine of native depravity. They do not hold, (as some have reported,) that there is a mass of corrupt matter lodged in the heart, which sends off noxious exhalations like a dead body. But they maintain that the soul has entirely lost the image of God, in which it was originally created; that there is nothing pure or good remaining in it; that, in consequence of the withdrawment of those special, divine influences, which were given to our first parents, the proper balance of the powers is destroyed, they have lost their conformity to the law of God, and the holy dispositions, which were at first implanted in the soul, have given place to sinful dispositions, which are the source of all actual transgressions.
- A Treatise on the Scripture Doctrine of Original Sin (Presbyterian Board of Publication, 1839), p. 18
- Modified in Gilbert (1883), p. 190: "Those that hold the doctrine of native depravity do not believe ..."
- Never before was a people so advantageously situated for working out this great problem in favor of human liberty.
- Discourse in Philadelphia, PA (December 12 and 19, 1850); The American Union: A Discourse (Lippincott, Grambo & Co., 1851), p. 46
- Give the Bible the place in your families to which it is entitled, and then, through the unsearchable riches of Christ, many a household among you may hereafter realize that most blessed consummation, and appear a whole family in heaven!
- The Bible in the Family: or, Hints on Domestic Happiness (Lippincott, Grambo & Co., 1851), lecture 8, p. 243
- Modified in Gilbert (1883), p. 39: "... justly entitled, ..."
External links
edit- Josiah H. Gilbert (ed.) Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (Troy, NY: H. B. Nims & Co., 1883), pp. 39, 190
- Elbert S. Porter, in The American National Preacher, vol. 27, no. 7 (July, 1853), p. 168