enable them to be carried out. 146 In December of 1893 the Reverend A.A. Bryant Rector -in-Charge of Georgetown and Mount Stewart resigned bis appointment and the vacancy was filled by the Reverend E.T. Woollard . During the following year he was able to provide his parishes with a greater number of services than held there ever before and he found it practical to establish a Church at Souris . Matters there progressed quite well and he was happily able to report to the D.C.S . that a contract was about to be let for the erection of a church, the site having been kindly donated by the Knight Estate. James Simpson 's Published Sermons Elicit a Rebuke. Meanwhile, in Charlottetown , a mild stir had been caused by the publication in The Daily Examiner, of a series of sermons delivered by the Reverend James Simpson to the congregation of St. Peter 's Cathedral, in a February issue in 1894. The series was entitled, "Disunited Christendom, Instructions on Some of the Principal Divisions Among Those Who Profess and Call Themselves Christians." The series was primarily intended and framed in a way that the congregation of St. Peter 's Cathedral be instructed in the form of government, doctrines, ritual, etc. of several denominations about which they only had the vaguest of notions. It was only published as an afterthought by the newspaper. The series drew a sharp attack from Dr. James Morrison of Charlottetown who felt of the writer that, "he somewhat shamefully falsified the position of the Roman Catholic church in her relation to the Greek schism"147 and made "false representations of the Catholic Church"148. Father Simpson answered the criticism pointing out: the differences between the Greek Church and the Roman Catholic church, and the Anglican Church, are not to be easily settled: and although Rome has many learned divines, England and the East may boast of others equally learned: and the causes which led to the dismemberment of Christendom have been matters of dispute between these churches for centuries, and each side continues to hold its own views in the various controversies. Did it not do so, but instead, could the Anglican and the Greek Churches be convinced of the righteousness of the claims of the Roman Church, or vice versa, then there would be nothing to prevent that reunion of Christendom which we all long for. It can hardly be Diocesan Church Society Report . 1894. 147. The Daih Examiner. Letter to the Editor. February 19th, 1894. 148. -Ibid. 119