Excerpt from La Liberte des Cultes
Le rapport joint a ces eloges quelques critiques de plu sieurs desquelles l'enteur a tire parti avant de livrer son ou vrage a l'impression, et de la discussion d'une question spe ciale sur laquelle le laureat etait d'un sentiment different de celui de ses juges et du rapporteur en particulier, celle de savoir si les principes du catholicisme sont favorables ou contraires a la liberte religieuse. M. Vinet a persiste a re sondre cette question negativement, meme apres les remar ques de son illustre antagoniste.
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Alexandre Vinet was born near Lausanne in Switzerland. Educated for the Protestant ministry, he was ordained in 1819, when already teacher of the French language and literature in the gymnasium at Basel; and throughout his life he was as much a critic as a theologian. His literary criticism brought him into contact with Augustin Sainte-Beuve, for whom he obtained an invitation to lecture at Lausanne, which led to his famous work on Port-Royal.
As a theologian Vinet gave a fresh impulse to Protestant theology, especially in French-speaking lands, but also in England and elsewhere. His philosophy relied strongly on conscience, defined as that by which man stands in direct personal relation with God as moral sovereign, and the seat of a moral individuality which nothing can rightly infringe.
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