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			<description>Allestree meant <i>The Government of the Tongue</i> to serve as a partner to his treatise
			on biblical interpretation, <i>The Lively Oracles Given to Us</i>. While the latter deals
			with the proper use and application of the received Word, <i>The Government of the
			Tongue</i> deals with that of the spoken word. He draws primarily from the book of
			Proverbs and the general letter of James. First, he discusses why God gifted humankind
			with speech, then how humankind has since abused it. Serving for many years as provost
			of a boys’ boarding school, Allestree writes practically and instructively.

			<br /><br />Kathleen O’Bannon<br />CCEL Staff
			</description>
			<pubHistory />
			<comments />
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 <DC>
  <DC.Title>The Government of the Tongue</DC.Title>
  <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">Richard Allestree</DC.Creator>
  <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Allestree, Richard (1619-1681)</DC.Creator>
  <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
  <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">BJ1533.C7 </DC.Subject>
  <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Ethics</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh2">Individual ethics. Character. Virtue (Including practical and applied ethics...)</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All; Ethics; Theology </DC.Subject>
  <DC.Contributor sub="Digitizer" />
  <DC.Date sub="Created">2000-1-23</DC.Date>
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  <DC.Identifier scheme="URL">/ccel/allestree/government.html</DC.Identifier>
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  <DC.Language scheme="ISO639-3">eng</DC.Language>
  <DC.Rights>Public Domain</DC.Rights>
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    <div1 title="Title Page" progress="0.23%" id="i" prev="toc" next="ii">
<h2 id="i-p0.1">THE</h2>
<h1 id="i-p0.2">Government</h1>
<h2 id="i-p0.3">OF THE</h2>
<h1 id="i-p0.4">Tongue</h1>

<div style="margin-top:36pt; text-indent:0in; text-align:center" id="i-p0.5">
<p id="i-p1">By the Author of<br />
The Whole Duty of Man, &amp;c.</p>

<p style="margin-top:24pt;" id="i-p2">Death and Life are in the power of the Tongue. <scripRef passage="Prov. 18. 21" id="i-p2.1" parsed="|Prov|18|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.18.21">Prov. 18. 21</scripRef>.</p>

<p style="margin-top:24pt; margin-bottom:24pt" id="i-p3">The Second Impression</p>
<p id="i-p4">MDCLXXIV.</p>
</div>



</div1>

    <div1 title="Preface" progress="0.30%" id="ii" prev="i" next="iv">

<h2 id="ii-p0.1">The Preface</h2>

<p class="normal" id="ii-p1"> <span class="sc" id="ii-p1.1">The</span> Government of the Tongue has ever been justly reputed one of the most important
parts of human Regiment. The
Philosopher and the Divine equally attest this: and Solomon (who was both)
gives his suffrage also; the persuasions to, and encomiums of it, taking up a
considerable part of his book of Proverbs. I shall not therefore need to say anything, to justify my
choice of this subject, which has so much better Authorities to commend
it. I rather with that it had not
the super-addition of an accidental fitness grounded upon the universal neglect
of it, it now seeming to be an art wholly out-dated. For though some lineaments of it may be met with in books,
yet there is scarce any footsteps of it in practice, where alone it can be
significant. The attempt therefore
of reviving it I am sure is seasonable, I wish it were half as easy.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ii-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="ii-p2.1">Indeed</span> that skill was never very
easy, it requiring the greatest vigilance and caution, and therefore not to be
attained by loose trifling spirits. The Tongue is so slippery, that it easily deceives a drowsy or heedless
guard. Nature seems to have given
it some unhappy advantages towards that. Tis in its frame the most ready for motion of any member, needs not so
much as the flexure of a joint, and by access of humors acquires a glibness
too, the more to facilitate its moving. And alas, we too much find the effect of this its easy frame; it often
goes without giving us warning; and as children when they happen upon a rolling
engine, can set it in such a carrier, as wiser people cannot on a sudden stop;
so the childish parts of us, our passions, our fancies, all our mere animal
faculties, can thrust our tongues into such disorder, as our reason cannot
easily rectify. The due management
therefore of this unruly member, may be rightly be esteemed on of the greatest
mysteries of Wisdom and Virtue. This is intimated by <i>St. James, If any man offend not in word, the
same is a perfect man, and able also to bridle the whole body, </i><scripRef passage="James 3:2" id="ii-p2.2" parsed="|Jas|3|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.3.2">Jam. 3.
2</scripRef>. Tis storied of <i>Bembo, </i>a
primitive Christian, that coming to a friend to teach him a Psalm, he began to
him the thirty-ninth, <i>I said I will take heed to my ways, that I offend not
with my Tongue</i>; upon hearing of which first verse, he stopped his Tutor,
saying, “This is enough for me, if I learn it as I ought”; and being after six
months rebuked for not coming again, he replied, that he had not yet learned
his first lesson: nay, after nineteen years he professed, that in that time he
had scarce learned to fulfill that one line. I give not this instance to discourage, but rather to
quicken men to the study; for a lesson that requires so much time to learn, had
need be early begun with.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ii-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="ii-p3.1">But</span> especially in this age,
wherein the contrary liberty has got such a prepossession, that men look on it
as a part of their birth-right; nay, do not only let their tongues loose, but
studiously suggest inordinacies to them, and use the spur where they should the
bridle. By this means conversation
is so generally corrupted, that many have had cause to wish they had not been
made sociable creatures. A man
secluded from company can have but the Devil and himself to tempt him; be he that
converses, has almost as many snares as he has companions. Men barter vices, and as if each had
not enough of his own growth, transplant out of his neighbors soil, and that
which was intended to cultivate and civilize the world, has turned it into a wild
desert and wilderness.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ii-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="ii-p4.1">This</span> face of things, I confess,
looks not very promising to one who is to solicit a reformation. But whatever the hopes are, I am sure
the needs are great enough to justify the attempt; for as the disease is
Epidemic, so it is mortal also, utterly inconsistent with that pure religion,
which leads to life. We may take <i>St.
James</i>’s word for it, “<i>If any man seem to be religious, and bridleth not
his tongue, that man’s religion is in vain”, </i><scripRef passage="James 1:26" id="ii-p4.2" parsed="|Jas|1|26|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.26">Jam. 1. 26</scripRef>. God knows we have not much Religion
among us: Tis great pity we should frustrate the little we have, render that
utterly insignificant, which at the best amounts to so little. Let therefore the difficulty and
necessity of the task, prevail with us to take time before us, not to defer
this so necessary a work, till the night come; or imagine that the Tongue will
be able to expiate its whole age of guilt by a feeble <i>“Lord have mercy on
me”</i> at the last. Though indeed
if that were supposable, Twere but a broken reed to trust to, none knowing
whether he shall have time or grace for that. He may be surprised with an Oath, a Blasphemy, a Detraction
in his mouth: many have been so. Tis sure there must be a dying moment: and how can any man secure
himself, it shall not be the same with that in which he utters those, and his
expiring breath, be so employed? Sure they cannot think that those incantations (though hellish enough)
can make them scot free, render them invulnerable to death’s darts; and if they
have not that or some other as a ridiculous reserves, Tis strange what should
make them run such a mad adventure.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ii-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="ii-p5.1">But</span> I expect it should be
objected, that this little despicable Tract is not proportionable to the
encounter to which it is brought; that besides the unskillful managing of those
points it does touch, it wholly omits many proper to the subject, there being
faults of the Tongue which it passes in silence. I confess there is color enough for this objection. But I believe if it were put to votes,
more would resolve I had said too much, rather than too little. Should I have enlarged to the utmost
compass of this Theme, I should have made the volume of so affrighting a bulk,
that few would have attempted it; and by saying much I should have said nothing
at all to those who most need it. Men’s stomachs are generally so queasy in these cases, that Tis not safe
to overload them; let them try how they can digest this: if they can so as to
turn it into kindly nourishment, they will be able to supply themselves with
the remainder. For I think I may
with some confidence affirm, that he that can confine his Tongue within the
limits here prescribed, may without much difficulty refrain from its other
excursions. All I shall beg of the
Reader, is but to come with sincere intentions, and then perhaps these few <i>Stones</i>
and <i>Sling</i> used in the Name, and with invocation of the <i>Lord of Hosts</i>,
may countervail the massive armor, of the <i>uncircumcised Philistine</i>; And
may that God who loves to magnify his power in weakness, give it the like
success.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 1: Of the Use of Speech" progress="3.05%" id="iv" prev="ii" next="v">
<h2 id="iv-p0.1">Section I. <br />
Of the Use of Speech.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p1"> <span class="sc" id="iv-p1.1">Man</span> at
his first creation was substituted by God as his Viceregent, to receive the homage,
and enjoy the services of all inferior beings: nay, farther was endowed with
excellencies fit to maintain the port of so vast an Empire. Yet those very excellencies, as they
qualified him for dominion, so they unfitted him for satisfaction or acquiescence
in those his vassals: the dignity of his nature set him above the society or
converse of mere animals; so that in all the pomp of his royalty, amidst all
the throng and variety of creatures, he still remained solitary. But God who knew what an appetite of
society he had implanted in him, judged this no agreeable state for him, It is
not meet that man should be alone. <scripRef passage="Gen. 2" id="iv-p1.2" parsed="|Gen|2|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.2">Gen. 2</scripRef>. 18. And as in the universal frame of nature, he engrafted such
an abhorrence of vacuity, that all creatures do rather submit to a
preternatural motion than admit it, so, in this empty, this destitute condition
of man, he relieved him by a miraculous expedient, divided him that he might
unite him, and made one part of him an associate for the other.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="iv-p2.1">Neither</span> did God take this care to
provide him a companion, merely for the intercourses of Sense: had that been
the sole aim, there needed no new productions, there were sensitive creatures
enough: the design was to entertain his nobler principle, his reason, with a
more equal converse, assign him an intimate, whose intellect as much
corresponded with his, as did the outward form, whose heart, according to <i>Solomon’s</i>
resemblance, answered his, <i>As in water face answers face, </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 27. 19" id="iv-p2.2" parsed="|Prov|27|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.27.19">Prov. 27. 19</scripRef>. 
with whom he might communicate minds, traffic and interchange all the notions
and sentiments of a reasonable soul.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="iv-p3.1">But</span> though there were this
sympathy in their sublimer part which disposed them to a most intimate union;
yet there was a cloud of flesh in the way which intercepted their mutual view,
nay, permitted no intelligence between them, other than by the mediation of
some Organ equally commensurate to soul and body. And to this purpose the infinite wisdom of God ordained
Speech; which as it is a sound resulting from the modulation of the Air, has
most affinity to the spirit, but as it is uttered by the Tongue, has immediate
cognition with the body, and so is the fittest instrument to manage a commerce
between the rational yet invisible powers of human souls clothed in flesh.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="iv-p4.1">And</span> as we have reason to admire
the excellency of this contrivance, so have we to applaud the extensiveness of
the benefit. From this it is we
derive all the advantages of society: without this men of the nearest
neighborhood would have signified no more to each other than the <i>Antipodes</i>
now do to us. All our arts and
sciences for the accommodation of this life, had remained only a rude Chaos in
their first matter, had not speech by a mutual comparing of notions ranged them
into order. By this it is we can
give one another notice of our wants, and solicit relief; by this we
interchange advices, reproofs, consolations, all the necessary aids of human
feebleness. This is that which
possesses us of the most valuable blessing of human life, I mean Friendship,
which could no more have been contracted amongst dumb men, than it can between
pictures and statues. Nay, farther
to this we owe in a great degree the interests even of our spiritual being, all
the oral, yea, and written revelations too of God’s will: for had there been no
language there had been no writing. And though we must not pronounce how far God might have evidenced
himself to mankind by immediate inspiration of every individual, yet we may
safely rest in the Apostle’s inference in <scripRef passage="Rom. 10. 14" id="iv-p4.2" parsed="|Rom|10|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.10.14">Rom. 10. 14</scripRef>.<i> How shall they believe in Him of whom
they have not heard, and how shall they hear without a preacher?</i></p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="iv-p5.1">From</span> all these excellent uses of
it in respect to man, we may collect another in relation to God, that is in <i>praising</i>
and <i>magnifying</i> his goodness, as for all other effects of his bounty, so
particularly that he hath given us language, and all the consequent advantages
of it. This is the just inference
of the son of <i>Syrach</i> in <scripRef passage="Ecclus. 51. 22" id="iv-p5.2" parsed="|Sir|51|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Sir.51.22">Ecclus. 51. 22</scripRef>.<i> The Lord hath given me a tongue, and I will praise him
therewith. </i>This is the
sacrifice which God calls for so often by the Prophets, <i>the Calves of our
Lips, </i>which answers to all <i>the oblations out of the herd, </i>and which
the Apostle makes equivalent to those of the <i>floor</i> and <i>winepress</i>
also, <scripRef passage="Heb. 13. 15" id="iv-p5.3" parsed="|Heb|13|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.15">Heb. 13. 15</scripRef>.<i> The fruit of
our lips, giving thanks to his name. </i>To this we frequently find the Psalmist exciting both himself and
others, <i>Awake up my glory, I will give thanks unto Thee, O Lord, among the
people, and I will sing unto Thee among the nations. </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 57. 9, 10" id="iv-p5.4" parsed="|Ps|57|9|0|0;|Ps|57|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.57.9 Bible:Ps.57.10">Psa. 57. 9, 10</scripRef>. And<i> O praise the Lord with me, and
let us magnify His name together. </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 34. 3" id="iv-p5.5" parsed="|Ps|34|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.34.3">Psa. 34. 3</scripRef>. And indeed, whoever observes that excellent magazine of
Devotion, the book of Psalms, shall find that the <i>Lauds</i> make up a very
great part of it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="iv-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="iv-p6.1">By</span> what hath been said, we may
define what are the grand Uses of speech, viz. the glorifying of God, and the
benefiting of men. And this helps
us to an infallible test by which to try our words. For since everything is so far approvable as it answers the
end of its being, what part soever of our discourses agrees not with these
primitive ends of speech, will not hold weight in the balance of the
sanctuary. It will therefore
nearly concern us to enter upon this scrutiny, to bring our words to this
touchstone: for though in our depraved estimate the Eloquence of Language is
more regarded than the innocence, though we think our words vanish with the
breath that utters them, yet they become records in God’s Court, are laid up in
his Archives as witnesses either for, or against us: for he who is truth itself
hath told us, that <i>By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words
thou shalt be condemned. </i><scripRef passage="Mat. 12. 37" id="iv-p6.2" parsed="|Matt|12|37|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.37">Mat. 12. 37</scripRef>.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 2: Of the Manifold Abuse of Speech" progress="5.37%" id="v" prev="iv" next="vi">
<h2 id="v-p0.1">Section II. <br />
Of the manifold Abuse of Speech.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="v-p1"> <span class="sc" id="v-p1.1">And</span> now,
since the original designs of speaking are so noble, so advantageous, one would
be apt to conclude no rational creature would be tempted to pervert them, since
tis sure he can substitute none for them, that can equally conduce, either to
his honor, or interest.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="v-p2.1">Yet</span> experience (that great baffler of
speculation) assures us the thing is too possible, and brings in all ages
matter of fact to confute our suppositions. So liable alas, is speech to be depraved, that the Scripture
describes it as the force of all our other depravation. Original sin came first out of the
mouth by speaking, before it entered by eating. The first use we find <i>Eve</i> to have made of her
language, was to enter parley with the tempter, and from that to become a
tempter to her husband. And
immediately upon the fall, guilty <i>Adam</i> frames his tongue to a frivolous
excuse, which was much less able to cover his sin than the fig leaves his
nakedness. And as in the infancy
of the first world, the tongue had licked up the venom of the old serpent, so neither
could the Deluge wash it off in the second. No sooner was that small colony (wherewith the depopulated
earth was to be replanted) come forth of the Ark, but we meet with <i>Ham</i>,
a detractor of his own father, inviting his brethren to that execrable
spectacle of their parent’s nakedness.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="v-p3.1">Nor</span> did this only run in the
blood of that accursed Person; the holy seed was not totally free from its
infection, even the Patriarchs themselves were not exempt. <i>Abraham</i> used a repeated
collusion in the case of his wife, and exposed his own integrity to preserve
her chastity. <i>Isaac</i> the
heir of his blessing, was son of his infirmity also, and acted over the same
scene upon <i>Rebecca’s</i> account. <i>Jacob</i> obtained his father’s blessing by a flat lie. <i>Simeon</i> and <i>Levi</i> spake not
only falsely, but insidiously, nay, hypocritically, abusing at once their
proselytes, and their religion, for the effecting their cruel designs upon the <i>Shechemites. Moses, </i>though a man of
unparalleled meekness, yet <i>spake unadvisedly with his lips, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 106. 33" id="v-p3.2" parsed="|Ps|106|33|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.106.33">Psa. 106.
33</scripRef>. <i>David</i> uttered a bloody
vow against <i>Nabal, </i>spake <i>words smoother than oil </i>to<i> Uriah</i>,
when he had done him one injury, and designed him another. Twere endless to reckon up those
several instances the Old Testament gives us of these lapses of the Tongue:
neither want there divers in the New; though there is one of so much horror, as
supersedes the naming more, I mean that of <i>St. Peter</i> in his reiterated
abjuring his Lord, a crime which (abstracted from the intention) seems worse
than the one of <i>Judas</i>: that traitor owned his relation, cried <i>Master,
Master, </i>even when he betrayed him, so that had he been measured only by his
tongue, he might have passed for the better disciple.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="v-p4.1">These</span> are sad instances, not
recorded to pratonize the sin, but to excite our caution. It was a politic inference of the
elders of Israel in the case of <i>Jehu, Behold two kings stood not before him,
how then shall we stand? </i><scripRef passage="2Kings 10" id="v-p4.2" parsed="|2Kgs|10|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.10">2 King. 10</scripRef>. And we may well apply it to this: if persons of so circumspect a piety
have been thus overtaken, what security can there be for our wretched
obstinacy? If those who <i>kept </i>their
<i>mouths, as it were, with a bridle, </i><scripRef passage="Psalm 39" id="v-p4.3" parsed="|Ps|39|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.39">Psa. 39</scripRef>. could not have always
preserve their innocence, to what guilts may not our unrestrained licentious
tongues hurry us? Those which as
the Psalmist speaketh in <scripRef passage="Psa. 73. 9" id="v-p4.4" parsed="|Ps|73|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.9">Psa. 73. 9</scripRef>.<i> go through the world, </i>are in that
unbounded range very likely to meet with him who walks the same round. <scripRef passage="Job 2. 2" id="v-p4.5" parsed="|Job|2|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Job.2.2">Job 2. 2</scripRef>. and by him be tuned and
set to his key, be screwed and wrested from their proper use, and made
subservient to his vilest designs.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="v-p5.1">And</span> would God this were only a
probable supposition! But alas,
experience supplants the use of conjecture in the point: we do not only presume
it may be so, but actually find it is so; for amidst the universal depravation
of our Faculties, there is none more notorious than that of speech. Whither shall we turn us to find it in
its pristine integrity? Amidst
that infinity of words in which we exhaust our breath, how few are there which
do at all correspond with the original designation of speech, nay, which do not
flatly contradict it? To what
unholy, uncharitable purposes is that useful faculty perverted? That which was meant to serve as the
perfume of the tabernacle, to send up the incenses of praise and prayers, now
exhales in impious vapors, to eclipse, if it were possible, the Father of
light. That which should be the
store-house of relief and refreshment to our brethren, is become a magazine of
all offensive weapons against them, <i>spears and arrows and sharp swords</i>,
as the Psalmist often phrases them. We do not only fall by the slipperiness of our tongues, but we
deliberately discipline and train them to mischief. <i>We bend our tongues as our bows for lies. </i>As the Prophet speaks in <scripRef passage="Jer. 9" id="v-p5.2" parsed="|Jer|9|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9">Jer.
9</scripRef>. And in a word, what God
affirmed of the old world in relation to thoughts, is too applicable to our
words, they <i>are evil and that continually, </i><scripRef passage="Gen. 6. 5" id="v-p5.3" parsed="|Gen|6|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.6.5">Gen. 6. 5</scripRef>. and that which was
intended for the instrument, the aid of human society, is become the disturber,
the pest of it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="v-p6">6. I <span class="sc" id="v-p6.1">Shall</span> not attempt a particular
discussion of all the vices of the Tongue: it doth indeed pass all Geography to
draw an exact Map of that <i>world of iniquity, </i>as <i>St. James</i> calls
it. I shall only draw the greater
lines, and distribute it into its principal and more eminent parts, which are
distinguishable as they relate to God, our Neighbor, and our Selves: in each of
which I shall rather make an essay by way of instance, than attempt to exact
enumeration or survey.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 3: Of Atheistical Discourse" progress="7.60%" id="vi" prev="v" next="vii">
<h2 id="vi-p0.1">Section III. <br />
Of Atheistical Discourse.</h2>


<p class="normal" id="vi-p1"> I <span class="sc" id="vi-p1.1">Begin</span> with those which relate to
God, this poor despicable member the tongue being of such a gigantic insolence,
though not size, as even to make war with heaven. Tis true every disordered speech doth remotely so, as it is
a violation of God’s law; but I now speak only of those which as it were attack
his person, and immediately fly in the face of Omnipotency. In the highest rank of these we may
well place all Atheistical Discourse, which is that bold fort of rebellion,
which strikes not only at his Authority, but Himself. Other blasphemies level some at one Attribute, some another;
but this by a more compendious impiety, shoots at his very being; and as if it
scorned those piece-meal guilts, sets up a single monster big enough to devour
them all: for all inferior profaneness is an much outdated by Atheism, as is
religion itself.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="vi-p2.1">Time</span> was when the inveighing
against this, would have been thought a very impertinent subject in a Christian
nation, and men would have replied upon me as the <i>Spartan</i> Lady did, when
she was asked what was the punishment for adulteresses, <i>There are no such
things here. </i>Nay, even amongst
the most barbarous people, it could have concerned but some few single persons,
no numbers, much less societies of men, having ever excluded the belief of a
Deity. And perhaps it may at this
day concern them as little as ever; for amidst the various Deities and worships
of those remoter nations, we have yet no account of any that renounced
all. Tis only our light hath so
blinded us: so that God may upbraid us as he did Israel, <i>Hath a nation
changed their gods which yet are no gods? but my people have changed their
glory for that which doth not profit. </i><scripRef passage="Jer. 2. 11" id="vi-p2.2" parsed="|Jer|2|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jer.2.11">Jer. 2. 11</scripRef>. This madness is now the enclosure, the peculiarity of those,
who by their names and institution should be Christians: as if that natural
Aphorism, <i>That when things are at their height they must fall again, </i>had
place here also, and our being of the most excellent, most elevated religion,
were but the preparation to our being of none.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="vi-p3.1">Tis</span> indeed deplorable to see,
how the professors of no God begin to vie numbers with all the differing
persuasions in religion, so that Atheism seems to be the gulf that finally
swallows up all our Sects. It has
struck on a sudden into such a reputation, that it scorns any longer to skulk,
but owns itself more publicly than most men dare do the contrary. Tis <i>set down in the seat of the
scorner, </i>and since it cannot argue, resolves to laugh all Piety out of
countenance, and having seized the mint, nothing shall pass for wit that hath
not its stamp, and with it there is no metal of so base an alloy, but shall go
current. Even the dullest creature
that can but stoutly disclaim his Maker, has by it sufficiently secured its
title to ingenuity; and such measures being once established, no wonder at its
shoals of proselytes, when it gives at the one hand license to all sensual inordinancies, permits them to be as
much beasts as they will, or can, and yet tells them on the other, that they
are the more men for it. Sure tis
not strange that a hook thus doubly baited should catch many. Either of those allurements single, we
see has force enough. The charms
of sensuality are so fascinating, that even those who believe another world,
and the severe revenges that will there attend their luxuries, yet choose to
take them in present with all their dismal reversions. And then sure it cannot but be very
good news to such a one to be told, that that after-reckoning is but a false
alarm: and his great willingness to have it true, will easily incline him to believe
it is so. And doubtless were
Atheism traced up to its first cause, this would be found the most
operative. Tis so convenient for a
man that will have no God to control or restrain him, to have none to punish
him neither, that that utility passes into Argument, and he will rather put a
cheat upon his understanding by concluding there is no future account, than
leave such a sting in his pleasures, as the remembrance of it must needs
prove. This seems to be the
original and first rise of this impiety, it being impossible for any man that
sees the whole, nay, but the smallest part of the Universe, to doubt of a first
and supreme Being, until from the consciousness of his provocations, it become
his interest there should be none.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="vi-p4.1">This</span> is indeed, considering the
depravity of the world, a pretty fast tenure for Atheism to hold by; yet it has
of late twisted its cord, and got that other string to its bow we before
mentioned. Its bold monopolizing
of wit and reason compels, as other invited men. This we many indeed call the devil’s press, by which he hath
filled up his troops. Men are
afraid of being reproached for silly and irrational, in giving themselves up to
a blind belief of what they do not see: and this bugbear frights them from
their religion, resolving they will be <i>no fools for Christ’s sake. </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 4. 10" id="vi-p4.2" parsed="|1Cor|4|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.10">1
Cor. 4. 10</scripRef>. I dare appeal to the
breasts of many in this Age, whether this have not been one of the most
prevalent temptations with them to espouse the tenet: and though perhaps they
at first took it up, only in their own defense, for fear of being thought
fools, yet that fear soon converts into ambition of being thought wits. They do not satisfy themselves with
deserting their religion, unless they revile it also; remembering how
themselves were laughed out of it, they essay to do the like by others. Yea, so zealous propugners are they of
their negative Creed, that they are importunately diligent to instruct men in
it, and in all the little sophistries and colors for defending it: so that he
that would measure the opinions by their industry and the remissness of
believers, would certainly think that the great interests of Eternity lay
wholly on their side. Yet I take
not this for any argument of the confidence of this persuasion, but the
contrary: for we know they are not the secure, but the desperate undertakings,
wherein men are most desirous of partners, and there is somewhat of horror in
an uncouth way, which makes men unwilling to travail it alone.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="vi-p5.1">The</span> truth is, though these men
speak big, and prescribe as positively to their pupils, as if they had some
counter revelation to confute those of <i>Moses</i> and <i>Christ, </i>yet were
their secret thoughts laid open, there would scarce be found the like assurance
there. I will not say to what
reprobate sense some particular persons may have provoked God to deliver them,
but in the generality, I believe one may affirm, that there is seldom an
infidelity so sanguine as to exclude all fears. Their most bold Thesis, That <i>there is no God, </i>no
judgement, no hell, is often met with an inward tremulous Hypothesis, What if there be? I dare in this remit me to themselves,
and challenge (not their consciences, who profess to have none, but) their
natural ingenuity to say, whether they have not sometimes such damps and shivering
within them. If they shall say,
that these are but the relics of prepossession and education, which their
reason soon dissipates, Let me then ask them farther, whether they would not
really give a considerable sum to be infallibly ascertained there were no such
thing: no sensible man would give a farthing to be secured from a thing which
his reason tells him is impossible: therefore, if they would give anything (as
I dare say they cannot deny to themselves that they would) tis a tacit
demonstration that they are not so sure as they pretend to be.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p6">6. I <span class="sc" id="vi-p6.1">Might</span> here join issue upon the
whole, and press them with the unreasonableness, the disingenuousness of
embracing a profession to which their own hearts have an inward reluctance,
nay, the imprudence of governing their lives by that position, which for ought
they know may be (nay, they actually fear is) false, and if it be, must
inevitable immerse them in endless ruin. But I must remember my design limits me only to the faults of the
Tongue, and therefore I must not follow this chase beyond those bounds. I shall only extend it to my proper
subject, that of Atheistical talk, wherein they make as mad an adventure as in
any other of their enormous practices, nay, perhaps in some respects a worse.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="vi-p7.1">In</span> the first place, tis to be
considered, that if there be a God, He, as well as men, may be provoked by our
words as well as our deeds. Secondly, tis possible he may be more. Our ill deeds may be done upon a vehement impulse of
temptation; some profit or pleasures may transport and hurry us, and they may
at least have this alleviation, that we did them to please or advantage
ourselves, not to spite God: but Atheistical words cannot be so palliated: they
are arrows directly shot against heaven, and can come out of no quiver but
malice; for tis certain there never was man that said, There was no God, but he
wished it first. We know what an
enhancement our injuries to each other receive from their being malicious: and
sure they will do so much more to God, whose principal demand from us is, that
we give him our heart. But
thirdly, this implies a malice of the highest sort. Human spite is usually confined within some bounds, aims
sometimes at the goods, sometimes at the fame, at most but at the life of our
neighbor: but here is an accumulation of all those, backed with the most
prodigious insolence. Tis God only
that has power of annihilation, and we (vile worms) seek here to steal that
incommunicable right, and retort it upon himself, and by an anti-creative power
would unmake him who has made us. Nay lastly, by this we have not only the utmost guilt of single rebels,
but we become ringleaders also, draw in others to that accursed association:
for tis only this liberty of Discourse that has propagated Atheism. The Devil might perhaps by inward
suggestions have drawn here and there a single Proselyte, but he could never
have had such numbers, had he not used some as decoys to ensnare others.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="vi-p8.1">And</span> now let the alert Atheist a
little consider, what all these aggravations will amount to. ‘Twas good counsel was give to the
Athenians to be very sure <i>Philip</i> was dead, before they expressed their
joy at his death, lest they might find him alive to revenge that hasty
triumph. And the like I may give
to these men, Let them be very sure <i>there is no God, </i>before they presume
thus to defy Him, lest they find Him at last assert His being in their
destruction. Certainly nothing
less than a Demonstration can justify the reasonableness of such a daring. And when they can produce that, they
have so far outgone all the comprehensions of mankind, they may well challenge
the liberty of their Tongue, and say, <i>We are our own, who is Lord over us? </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 12. 4" id="vi-p8.2" parsed="|Ps|12|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.12.4">Psa.
12. 4</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="vi-p9.1">But</span> till this be done, twere
well they would soberly balance the hazards of this liberty with the gains of
it. The hazards are of the most
dreadful kind, the gains of the slightest: the most is but a vain applause of
wit for an impious jest, or of reason for a deep considerer: and yet even for
that they must encroach on the Devil’s right too, who is commonly the prompter,
and therefore, if there be any credit in it may justly challenge it. Indeed tis to be feared he will at last
prove the master wit, when as for those little loans he made to them, he gets
their souls in mortgage. Would God
they would consider betimes, what a woeful raillery that will be, which for
ought they know may end in <i>gnashing of teeth.</i></p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="vi-p10.1">The</span> next impiety of the Tongue
is Swearing, that foolish sin which plays the Platonic to damnation, and courts
it purely for itself, without any of the appendant allurements which other sins
have: a vice which for its guilt may justify the sharpest, and for its
customariness the frequentest invectives which can be made against it: but it
has been assaulted so often by better pens, and has showed itself so much proof
against all Homily, that it is as needless as discouraging a task for me to
attempt it. Tis indeed a thing
taken up so perfectly without all sense, that tis the less wonder to find it
maintain itself upon the same principle tis founded, and continue in the same
defiance to reason wherein it began.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p11">11. <span class="sc" id="vi-p11.1">All</span> therefore that I shall say
concerning it, is to express my wonder how it has made a shift to twist itself
with the former sin of Atheism, by which according to all rules of reasoning it
seems to be superseded: and yet we see none own God more in their oaths, than
those that disavow him in their other discourse: nay, such men swear not only to
swell their language, and make it sound more full and blustering, but even when
they most desire to be believed. What an absurdity of wickedness is this? Is there a God to swear by, and is there none to believe in,
none to pray to? We call it frenzy
to see a man fight with a shadow: but sure tis more so, to invoke it. Whey then do these men of reason make
such solemn appeals (for such every oath is) to a mere Chimera and Phantasm? It would make one think they had some
inward belief of a Deity, which they upon surprise thus blurt out: if it argue
not this, it does something worse, and becomes an evidence how much the
appearance of a sin recommends it to them, that they thus catch at it, without
examining how it will consist with another they like better. These are indeed wholesale chapmen to
Satan, that do not truck and barter one crime for another, but take the whole
herd: and though by reason of their disagreeing kinds they are apt to gore and
worry each other, yet he still keeps up his old policy, and will not let one
Devil cast out another. A league
shall be made between the most discordant sins, and there shall be a God, or
there shall be none, according as opportunity serves to provoke him: so assuming
to himself a power which even Omnipotence disclaims, the reconciling of
contradictions. And the Devil
succeeds in it as far as his concern reaches: for though he cannot solve the
repugnancies in reason, yet as long as he can unite the sins in men’s practice,
he has his design, nay, has at once the gain and the sport of fooling these
great pretenders to ratiocination.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p12">12. A <span class="sc" id="vi-p12.1">Third</span> sort of impious discourse
there is, which yet is bottomed on the most sacred, I mean those profane
paraphrases that are usually make upon the holy Text, many making it the subject
of their cavils, and others of their mirth. Some do it out of the former Atheistical principle, and I
cannot but confess they act consonantly to themselves in it: for this but a
needful artifice for men to disparage those testimonies, which they fear may be
brought against them. But there
are others who not only profess a God, but also own the sacred Scripture for
His word, and use it as coarsely as the others. And these, I confess, are riddles of profaneness that hang,
as some have pictured <i>Solomon, </i>between heaven and hell, borrow the
Christian’s faith, and the Atheist’s drollery upon it: and tis hard to say in
which they are more the earnest. It is indeed scandalous to see, to what despicable uses those holy
Oracles are put: such as should a Heathen observe, he would little suspect them
to be owned by us as the rule of our religion, and could never think they were
ever meant for anything beyond a whetstone for wit. One tries his Logic upon them, and objects to the sense;
another his Rhetoric, and quarrels at the phrase; a third his contrivance, and
thinks he could have woven the parts with a better contexture: never
considering, that unless they could confute the Divinity of their original, all
these accusations are nothing else but direct blasphemy, the making God <i>such
a one as themselves, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 50. 21" id="vi-p12.2" parsed="|Ps|50|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.50.21">Psa. 50. 21</scripRef>. and charging Him with those defects which
are indeed their own. They want
learning or industry to sound the depths of those sacred treasures, and
therefore they decry the Scripture as mean and poor; and to justify their
wisdom, dispute God’s. This is as
if the mole should complain that the sun is dark, because he dwells under
ground, and sees not its splendor. Men are indeed in all instances apt to speak ill of all things they
understand not, but in none more than this. Their ignorance of local customs, Idioms of language, and
several other circumstances, renders them incompetent judges, (as has been
excellently evinced by a late Author). Twill therefore befit them, either to qualify themselves better, or to
spare their Criticisms. But upon
the whole, I think I may challenge any ingenious man, to produce any writing of
that antiquity, whose phrase and genius is so accommodated to all successions
of ages. Styles and ways of
address we know grow obsolete, and are almost antiquated as garments: and yet
after so long a tract of time, the Scripture must (by considering men) be
confessed to speak not only properly, but often politely and elegantly to the
present age: a great argument that it is the dictate of Him that is, <i>The
same yesterday, today, and forever. </i><scripRef passage="Heb. 13. 7" id="vi-p12.3" parsed="|Heb|13|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.7">Heb. 13. 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p13">13. <span class="sc" id="vi-p13.1">But</span> besides these more solemn
traducers, there are a lighter ludicrous sort of profaners, who use the
Scripture as they do odd ends of plays, to furnish out their jests; clothe all
their little impertinent conceits in its language, and debase it by the mixture
of such miserable trifles, as themselves would be ashamed of, were they not
heightened and inspired by that profaneness. A Bible phrase serves them in discourse as the haut-goust
does in diet, to give a relish to the most insipid stuff. And were it not for this magazine, a
great many men’s raillery would want supplies: for there are divers who make a
great noise of wit, that would be very mute if this one Topic were barred
them. And indeed, it seems a tacit
confession that they have little of their own, when they are fain thus to
commit sacrilege to drive on the trade. But sure tis a pitiful pretence to ingenuity that can be thus kept up,
there being little need of any other faculty but memory to be able to cap
Texts. I am sure such repetitions
out of other books would be thought pedantic and silly. How ridiculous would a man be, that
should always enterlard his discourse with fragments of <i>Horace, </i>or <i>Virgil,
</i>or the Aphorisms of <i>Pythagoras, </i>or <i>Seneca</i>? Now tis too evident, that it is not
from any superlative esteem of sacred Writ, that it is so often quoted: and why
should it then be thought a specimen of wit to do it there, when tis folly in
other instances? The truth is, tis
so much the reserve of those who can give no better Testimony of their parts,
that me thinks upon that very score it should be given over by those that
can. And sure were it possible for
anything that is so bad to grow unfashionable, the world has had enough of this
to be cloyed with it: but how fond soever men are of this divertissement, twill
finally prove that <i>mirth Solomon</i> speaks of, which <i>ends in heaviness. </i>
<scripRef passage="Prov. 14. 13" id="vi-p13.2" parsed="|Prov|14|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.14.13">Prov. 14. 13</scripRef>. For certainly,
whether we estimate it according to human or divine measure, it must be a high
provocation of God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p14">14. <span class="sc" id="vi-p14.1">Let</span> any of us but put the case
in our persons: suppose we had written to a friend, to advertise him of things
of the greatest importance to himself, had given him ample and exact
instructions, backed them with earnest exhortations and conjurings not to
neglect his own concern, and lastly enforced all with the most moving
expressions of kindness and tenderness to him: suppose, I say, that after all
this, the next news of we should hear of that letter, were to have it put in
doggerel rime, to be made sport for the rabble, or at best have the most
eminent phrases of it picked out and made a common by-word: I would fain know
how any of us would resent such a mixture of ingratitude and contumely. I think I need make no minute
application. The whole design of
the Bible does sufficiently answer, nay, outgo the first part of the parallel,
and God knows our vile usage of it does too much (I fear too literally) adapt
the latter. And if we think the
affront too base for one of us, can we believe God will take it in good
part? That were to make Him not
only more stupid than any man, but as much so as the heathen idols, that have <i>eyes
and see not, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 115. 5" id="vi-p14.2" parsed="|Ps|115|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.115.5">Psa. 115. 5</scripRef>. And
tis sure the highest madness in the world, for any man that believes that there
is a God, to imagine he will finally sit down by such usage.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p15">15. <span class="sc" id="vi-p15.1">But</span> if we weigh it in the scale
of religion; the crime will yet appear more heinous. Mere natural Piety has taught men to receive the Responses
of their gods with all possible veneration. What applications had the Delphic Oracle from all parts, and
from all ranks of men? What
confidence had they in its prediction, and what obedience did they pay to its
advice? If we look next into the
Mosaical Oeconomy, we shall see with what dreadful Solemnities that Law was
promulgated, what an awful reverence was paid to the mount whence it issued,
how it was fenced from any rude intrusions either of men or beasts: and after
it was written on tables, all the whole equipage of the Tabernacle, was
designed only for its more decent repository, the Ark itself receiving its
value only for what it had in custody. Yea, such a hallowing influence had it, as transfused a relative sanctity
even to the meanest utensils, none of which were after to be put to common
uses: the very perfume was so peculiar and sacred, that it was a capital crime
to imitate the composition. Afterwards, when more of the divine revelations was committed to writing,
the Jews were such scrupulous reverers of it, that twas the business of the
Masorites, to number not only the sections and lines, but even the words and
letters of the Old Testament, that by that exact calculation they might the
better secure it from any surreptitious practices.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p16">16. <span class="sc" id="vi-p16.1">And</span> sure the New Testament is
not of less concern than the Old: nay, the Apostle asserts it to be of far
greater, and which we shall be more accountable for, <i>For if the word spoken
by Angels were steadfast, and every transgression and disobedience received a
just recompense, how shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation, which at
the first began to be spoken to us by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by
them that heard it? </i><scripRef passage="Heb. 2. 23" id="vi-p16.2" parsed="|Heb|2|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.23">Heb. 2. 
23</scripRef>. And it is in another place the
inference of the same Apostle, from the excellency of the Gospel above the Law,
that we should <i>serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear. </i><scripRef passage="Heb. 12. 28" id="vi-p16.3" parsed="|Heb|12|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.28">Heb.
12. 28</scripRef>. And certainly tis but an
ill essay of that reverence and godly fear, to use that very Gospel so
irreverently and ungodily as men now do. If we pass from the Apostolic to the next succeeding ages of the Church,
we find the Primitive Christians looked on their Bibles as their most important
treasure. Such was the outward
respects they paid to them, (of which the standing up at the reading of Gospel,
still in use among us, is a faint memorial) that the heathen persecutors made
it one part of their examination of the Christians brought to their tribunals, <i>What
those books were which they adored while they read them?</i> Such was their intimate esteem, that
they exposed all things else to the rapine of their enemies, so they might
secure those volumes. Nor was this
only an heroic piece of zeal in some, but indispensably required of all:
insomuch that when in the heat of persecution, they were commanded to deliver
up their Bibles to be burned, the Church gave no indulgence for that necessity
of the times, but exhorted men rather to deliver up their lives: and those
whose courage failed them in the encounter, were not only branded by the
infamous name of <i>Traitors, </i>but separated from the communion of the
faithful, and not readmitted till after many years of the severest penance.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p17">17. I <span class="sc" id="vi-p17.1">Have</span> given this brief narration,
with a desire that the reader will compare the practice of former times with
those of the present, and see what he can find either among Heathens, Jews, or
Christians, that can at all patronize our profaneness. There was no respect thought too much
for the false Oracles of a falser god: and yet we think no comtempts too great
for those of the true. The moral
law was so sacred to the Jews, that no parts of its remotest retinue, those
ceremonial attendants, were to be looked upon as common: and we who are equally
obliged by that Law, laugh at that by which we must one day be judged. The Ritual, the Preceptive, the
Prophetic, and all other parts of sacred Writ, were most sedulously, most
religiously guarded by them: and we look upon them as a winter night’s tale,
from which to fetch matter of sport and merriment. Lastly, the first Christians paid a veneration to, nay,
sacrificed their lives to rescue their Bibles from the unworthy usage of the
Heathens, and we ourselves expose them to the worse: they would but have burned
them, we scorn and vilify them, and outvy even the persecutor’s malice with our
contempt. These are miserable
Antitheses; yet this God knows is the case with too many. I wonder what new state of Felicity
hereafter these men have fancied to themselves: for sure they cannot think
these retrograde steps, can ever bring them so much as to the Heathen Elysium,
much less the Christian Heaven.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p18">18. <span class="sc" id="vi-p18.1">It</span> will therefore concern
those who do not quite renounce their claim to that Heaven, to consider
soberly, how inconsistent their practice is with those hopes. A man may have a great estate conveyed
to him; but if will madly burn, or childishly make paper kites of his Deeds, he
forfeits his title with his evidence: and those certainly that deal so with the
conveyances of their eternal inheritance, will not speed better. If they will thus dally and play with
them, God will be as little in earnest in the performance, as they are in the
reception of the promises; nay, He will take His turn of mocking too, and when
their scene of mirth is over, His will begin. <scripRef passage="Prov. 1. 24" id="vi-p18.2" parsed="|Prov|1|24|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.1.24">Prov. 1. 24</scripRef>. which deserves to be set down at large, <i>Because
I have called, and ye refused, I have stretched out may hand and no man regarded: But ye have set at
nought all my counsel, and would none of my reproof, I will also laugh at your
calamity, I will mock when your fear cometh. When your fear cometh as desolation, and your destruction
cometh as a whirlwind: when distress and anguish cometh upon you, then shall
they call upon me, but I will not answer, they shall seek me early, but they
shall not find me. </i>Would God I
could as well transcribe this Text into men’s hearts, and there would need no
more to secure the whole Canon of Scripture from their profanation. Could men but look a little before
them, and apprehend how in the days of their distress and agony, they will gasp
for those comforts which they now turn into ridicule; they would not thus madly
defeat themselves, cut off their best and only reserve, and with a pitiful
contempt cast away those Cordials, which will then be the only support of their
fainting spirits. As for those who
deride Scripture upon Atheistical grounds, all I shall say is to refer to what
I have said in the beginning of the Section; they had need be very well assured
that foundation be not sandy: for if it be, this reproaching God’s word will be
a considerable addition to the guilt of all their other hostility, and how
jolly soever they seem at present, it may be when that question they are so
willing to take for granted, is by death drawing near a decision, some of their
confidence will retire, and leave them in an amazed expectation of somewhat,
which they are sure cannot be good for them, who have so ill provided for
it. Then perhaps their merry vein
will fail them; and not their infidelity, but their despair may keep them from
invocating that Power that they have so long derided. Tis certain it has so happened with some: for as practical,
so Speculative wickedness, has usually another aspect, when it stands in the
shadow of death, than in the dazzling beams of health and vigor. It would therefore be wisdom beforehand
to draw it out of this deceitful light, and by sober, serious thoughts place it
as near as may be in those circumstances in which twill then appear: and then
sure to hearts that are not wholly petrified, twill seem safer to own a God
early and upon choice, than later upon a compulsion.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vi-p19">19. <span class="sc" id="vi-p19.1">However</span>, if they will not yield
themselves Homagers, yet the mere possibility of their being in the wrong,
should methinks, persuade them at least to be civil to adversaries. A generous man will not pursue even a
falling enemy with revilings and reproach, must less will a wise man do it to
one who is in any the least probability of revenging it: it being a received
Maxim, That there is no greater folly than for a man to let his tongue betray
him to mischief. Let it therefore,
in this case at least, stand neuter, that if by their words they be not
justified, yet by their words they may not be condemned. They can be no losers by it: for at the
utmost, tis but keeping in a little unsavory breath, which (supposing no God to
be offended with it) is yet nauseous to all those men who believe there is
one. To those indeed who have a
zeal for their faith, there can be no Discourse so intolerable, so disobliging:
it turns conversation into skirmishing, and perpetual disputes. The Egyptians were so zealous for their
brutish Deities, that <i>Moses</i> presumed the Israelites sacrificing of those
beasts they adored, must need set them in an uproar, <scripRef passage="Exod. 8. 26" id="vi-p19.2" parsed="|Exod|8|26|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Exod.8.26">Exod. 8. 26</scripRef>. And sure those who do acknowledge a
Divine power, cannot contentedly sit by to hear Him blasphemed. Tis true there are some so cool, that
they are of the same mind for God, that <i>Gideon’s</i> father was for <i>Baal</i>,
<scripRef passage="Judg. 6. 31" id="vi-p19.3" parsed="|Judg|6|31|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Judg.6.31">Judg. 6. 31</scripRef>.<i> Let him plead for
himself, </i>they will not appear in His defense: yet even these have a secret
consciousness, that they ought to do so, and therefore have some uneasiness in
being put to the Test: so that it cannot be a pleasant entertainment even for
them. And therefore those who have
no fear of God to restrain them, should methinks, unless they be perfectly of
the temper of the unjust Judge, <scripRef passage="Luke 17. 1" id="vi-p19.4" parsed="|Luke|17|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.17.1">Luke 17. 1</scripRef>. in respect to men abstain from all
sorts of impious discourse; and at least be civil, though they will not be
pious.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 4: Of Detraction" progress="19.51%" id="vii" prev="vi" next="viii">
<h2 id="vii-p0.1">Section IV <br />
Of Detraction.</h2>


<p class="normal" id="vii-p1"> <span class="sc" id="vii-p1.1">We</span> have
seen in the last Section the insolence of the Tongue towards God; and sure we
cannot expect it should pay more reverence to men. If there be those that dare <i>stretch their mouths against
heaven, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 7. 39" id="vii-p1.2" parsed="|Ps|7|39|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.7.39">Psa. 7. 39</scripRef>. we are not to wonder if there be more that will <i>shoot
their arrows, even bitter words, </i>against the best on earth, <scripRef passage="Psa. 64. 3" id="vii-p1.3" parsed="|Ps|64|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.64.3">Psa. 64. 
3</scripRef>. I shall not attempt to ransack
the whole quiver, by showing every particular sort of verbal injuries which
relate to our Neighbors, but rather choose out some few, which either for the
extraordinariness of their guilt, or the frequency of their practice, are the
most eminent. I begin with <i>Detraction</i>,
in which both those qualities concur: for as in some instances tis one of the
highest sins, so in the general tis certainly one of the most common, and by
being so becomes insensible. This
vice (above all others) seems to have maintained not only its Empire, but its
reputation, too. Men are not yet
convinced heartily that it is a sin: or if any, not of so deep a die, or so
wide an extent as indeed it is. They have, if not false, yet imperfect notions of it, and by not knowing
how far its Circle reaches, do often like young Conjurers step beyond the
limits of their safety.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p2"> <span class="sc" id="vii-p2.1">This</span> I am the apter to believe, because I see some degree of this fault
cleave to those, who have eminently corrected all other exorbitancies of the
Tongue. Many who would startle at
an Oath, whose stomachs as well as consciences, recoil at an obscenity, do yet
slide glibly into a Detraction: which yet, methinks, persons otherwise of
strict conversations should not do frequently and habitually, had not their
easy thoughts of the guilt smoothed the way to it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p3"> <span class="sc" id="vii-p3.1">It</span> may therefore be no unkind attempt, to try to disentangle from this
snare by displaying it; showing the whole contexture of the sin, how tis woven
with threads of different sizes, yet the least of them strong enough to noose
and entrap us. And alas, if Satan
fetter us, tis indifferent to him whether it be by a cable or a hair. Nay, perhaps the smallest sins are his
greatest stratagems. The finer his
line is spun, the less shadow it casts, and is less apt to fright us from the
hook: and though there be much odds between a talent of lead and a grain of
sand, yet those grains may be accumulated till they out-weigh the talent. It was a good replay of <i>Plato’s</i>,
to one who murmured at his reproving him for a small mater, <i>Custom,</i> says
he, <i>is no small matter. </i>And
indeed, supposing any sin were so small as we are willing to fancy most, yet an
indulgent habit even of that would be certainly ruinous: that indulgence being
perfectly opposite to the Love of God, which better can consist with the
indeliberate commissions of may sins, than with an allowed persistence in any
one.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p4"> <span class="sc" id="vii-p4.1">But</span> in this matter of Detraction I cannot yield that any is small, save
only comparatively with some other of the same kind which is greater: for
absolutely considered, there is even in the very lowest degrees of it, a flat
contradiction to the grand rule of Charity, the loving our neighbor as
ourselves. And surely that which
at once violates the sum of the whole second Table of the Law, for so our
Savior renders it, <scripRef passage="Luke 10. 7" id="vii-p4.2" parsed="|Luke|10|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.7">Luke 10. 7</scripRef>. must be looked on as no trifling inconsiderable
guilt. To evidence this I shall in
the Anatomizing this sin apply this Rule to every part of it: first consider it
in Gross, in its entire body, and after descend to its several limbs.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p5">1. <span class="sc" id="vii-p5.1">Detraction</span>, in the native importance
of the word, signifies the withdrawing or taking off from a thing; and as it is
applied to the reputation, it denotes the impairing or lessening a man in point
of fame, rendering him less valued and esteemed by others, which is the final
aim of Detraction, though pursued by various means.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p6">2. <span class="sc" id="vii-p6.1">This</span> is justly looked on as one
of the most unkind designs one man can have upon another, there being implanted
in every man’s nature a great tenderness of Reputation: and to be careless of
it, is looked on as a mark of a Degenerous mind. On which account <i>Solon</i> in his Law presumes, that he
that will sell his own fame, will also sell the public interest. Tis true, many have improved this too
far, blown up this native spark into such flames of Ambition, as has set the
world in a combustion; Such as <i>Alexander, Caesar, </i>and others, who
sacrificed Hecatombs to their Fame, fed it up to a prodigy upon a Cannibal
diet, the flesh of Men: yet even these excesses serve to evince the universal
consent of mankind, that Reputation is a valuable and desirable thing.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p7">3. <span class="sc" id="vii-p7.1">Nor</span> have we only the suffrage
of man, but the attestation of God Himself, who frequently in Scripture gives
testimony to it: <i>A good name is better than great riches, </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 22. 1" id="vii-p7.2" parsed="|Prov|22|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.22.1">Prov. 22. 
1</scripRef>. And again, <i>A good name is
better than precious ointment. </i><scripRef passage="Eccles. 7. 1" id="vii-p7.3" parsed="|Eccl|7|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.7.1">Eccles. 7. 1</scripRef>. And the more to recommend it, he proposes it as a reward of
piety and virtue, as he menaces the contrary to wickedness. <i>The memory of the just shall be
blessed, but the name of the wicked shall rot. </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 10. 7" id="vii-p7.4" parsed="|Prov|10|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.10.7">Prov. 10. 7</scripRef>. And that we may not think this an
invitation fitted only to the Jewish Oeconomy, the Apostle goes farther, and
proposes the endeavor after it as a duty, <i>Whatsoever things are of good
report, if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these
things. </i><scripRef passage="Phil. 4. 8" id="vii-p7.5" parsed="|Phil|4|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.8">Phil. 4. 8</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p8">4. <span class="sc" id="vii-p8.1">And</span> accordingly, good men have
in their estimate ranked their names the next degree to their Souls, preferred
them before goods or life. Indeed,
tis that which gives us an inferior sort of Immortality, and makes us even in
this world survive ourselves. This
part of us alone continues verdant in the grave, and yields a perfume, when we
are stench and rottenness: the consideration whereof has so prevailed with the
more generous Heathens, that they have cheerfully quitted life in contemplation
of it. Thus <i>Epaminondas</i>
alacriously expired, in a confidence that he left behind him a perpetual memory
of the victories he had achieved for his Country. <i>Brutus</i> so courted the fame of a Patriot, that he
broke through all the obstacles of gratitude and humanity to attain it: he
cheerfully bore the defeat of his attempt, in contemplation of the glory
it. Twere endless to recount the
stories of the <i>Codri, Decii, </i>and<i> Curtii, </i>with the train of those
noble Heroes, who in behalf of their Countries devoted themselves to certain
death.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p9">5. <span class="sc" id="vii-p9.1">But</span> we need no foreign Mediums
to discover the value of a good name: let every man weigh it but in his own
scales, retire to his breast, and there reflect on that impatience he has when
his own repute is invaded. To what
dangers, to what guilts does sometimes the mere fancy of a reproach hurry
men? It makes them really forfeit
that virtue from when all true reputation springs, and like <i>Aesop’s </i>dog,
lose the substance by too greedy catching at the shadow; an irrefragable proof
how great a price they set on their fame.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p10">6. <span class="sc" id="vii-p10.1">And</span> then, since reason sets it
as so high a rate, and passion at a higher, we may conclude the violation this
interest, one of the greatest injuries in the human commerce; such as is
resented not only by the rash, but the sober: so that we must pick out only
blocks and stones, the stupid and insensible part of mankind, if we think we
can inflict this would without an afflictive smart. And though the power of Christianity does in some so
moderate this resentment, that none of those blows shall recoil, no degree of
revenge be attempted; yet that does not at all justify or excuse the
inflicter. It may indeed be a
useful trial of the patience, and meekness of the defamed, yet the defamer has
not the less either of crime or danger: not of crime, for that is rather
enhanced than abated by the goodness of the person injured; nor of danger,
since God is the more immediate avenger of those who attempt not to be their
own. But if the injury meet not
with this meekness (as in this vindictive age tis manifold odds it will not) it
then acquires another accumulative guilt, stands answerable not only for its
own positive ill, but for all the accidental which it causes in the sufferer,
who by this means is robbed not only of his repute, but his innocence also,
provoked to those unchristian returns, which draw God also into the enmity, and
set him at war with heaven and earth. And though as to his immediate judgement, he must bear his iniquity,
answer for his impatience: yet as in all Civil insurrections the ring-leader is
looked on with a particular severity, so doubtless in this case, the first
provoker has by his seniority and primogeniture a double portion of the guilt,
and may consequently expect of the Punishment, according to the Doom of our
Savior, <i>Woe to that man by whom the offence cometh. </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 18. 7" id="vii-p10.2" parsed="|Matt|18|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.18.7">Matt. 18. 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p11">7. <span class="sc" id="vii-p11.1">Indeed</span>, there is such a train of
mischiefs usually following this sin, that tis scare possible to make a full
estimate of its malignity. Tis one
of the grand incendiaries which disturbs the peace of the world, and has a
great share in the most of its quarrels. For could we examine all the feuds which harass Persons, Families, nay,
sometimes Nations, too, we should find the greater part take their rise from
injurious, reproachful words, and that for one which is commenced upon the
intuition of any real considerable interest, there are many which owe their
being to this licentiousness of the Tongue.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p12">8. <span class="sc" id="vii-p12.1">In</span> regard therefore, of its
proper guilt, and all those remoter sins and miseries which ensue it, tis every
man’s great concern to watch over himself. Neither is it less in respect both of that universal aptness
we have to this sin, and its being so perpetually at hand, that for others we
must attend occasions and convenient season, but the opportunities of this are
always ready: I can do my neighbor this injury, when I can do him no
other. Besides the multitude of
objects do proportionally multiply both the possibilities and incitations; and
the objects here are as numerous, as there are Persons in the world, I either
know, or have heard of. For though
some sorts of Detractions seem confined to those to whom we bear particular
malice, yet there are other kinds of it more ranging, which fly indifferently
at all. Lastly, this sin has the
aid almost of universal example, which is an advantage beyond all other, there
being scarce any so irresistible insinuation as the practice of those with whom
we converse, and no subject of converse so common as the defaming our
neighbors.</p>

<p class="normal" id="vii-p13">9. <span class="sc" id="vii-p13.1">Since</span> then the path is so
slippery, it had not need to be dark, too. Let us then take in the best light we can, and attentively
view this sin in its several branches, that by a distinct discovery of the
divers acts and degrees of it, we may the better be armed against them all.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 5: Of Lying Defamation" progress="23.75%" id="viii" prev="vii" next="ix">
<h2 id="viii-p0.1">SECTION V. <br />
Of Lying Defamation.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p1"> <span class="sc" id="viii-p1.1">Detraction</span> being (as we have already said) the lessening and impairing a man in his
repute, we may resolve, that whatever conduces to that end, is properly a
Detraction. I shall begin with
that which is most eminent, the spreading of Defamatory reports. These may be of two kinds, either
false, or true: which though they seem to be of very different complexions, yet
may spring from the same stock, and drive at the same design. Let us first consider of the false.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="viii-p2.1">And</span> this admits of various
circumstances. Sometimes a man
invents a perfect falsity of another; sometimes he that does not invent, yet
reports it, though he know it to be false; and a third sort there are, who having
not certain knowledge whether it be false or no, do yet divulge it as an
absolute certainty, or at least with such artificial insinuations, as may bias
the hearer on that hand. The
former of these crimes is so high, so disingenuous a nature, that though many
are vile enough to commit it, none are so impudent as to avow it. Even in this age of insulting vice,
when almost all other wickedness appears barefaced, this is feign to keep on
the vizard. No man will own
himself a false accuser: for if modesty do not restrain him, yet his very
malice will; since to confess would be to defeat his design. Indeed, it is of all other sins the
most Diabolical, it being a conjunction of two of Satan’s most essential
properties, Malice and Lying. We
know tis his peculiar title to be <i>the Accuser of the brethren</i>: and when
we transcribe his copy, we also assume his nature, entitle ourselves to a
descent from him, <i>Ye are of your Father the Devil. </i><scripRef passage="John. 8. 44" id="viii-p2.2" parsed="|John|8|44|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.8.44">John. 8. 44</scripRef>. We are by it rendered a sort of <i>Incubus</i>
brats, the infamous progenies of the Lying spirit. It is indeed a sin of so gross, so formidable a bulk, that
there needs no help of Optics to render it discernable, and therefore, I need
not further expatiate on it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="viii-p3.1">The</span> next degree is not much
short of it; what it wants is rather of invention than malice: for he that will
so adopt another’s lie, shows he would willingly have been its proper
Father. It does indeed differ no
more than the maker of adulterate wares, does from the vendor of them: and
certainly there cannot be a more ignominious trade, than the being Hucksters to
such vile Merchandize. Neither is
the sin less that the baseness: we find the <i>Lover</i> of a lie ranked in an
equal form of guilt with the <i>Maker, </i><scripRef passage="Rev. 21" id="viii-p3.2" parsed="|Rev|21|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.21">Rev. 21</scripRef>. And surely he must be presumed to love it, that can descend
to be the broker to it, help it to pass current in the world.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="viii-p4.1">The</span> third sort of Detractors
look a little more demurely, and with the woman in <scripRef passage="Proverbs 30" id="viii-p4.2" parsed="|Prov|30|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30">Proverbs, Chap. 30</scripRef>. <i>Wipe
their mouths, and say they have done no wickedness. </i>The do not certainly know the falsity
of what they report, and their ignorance must serve them as an Amulet against
the guilt both of deceit and malice: but I fear it will do neither. For first, perhaps, they are affectedly
ignorant: they are so willing it should be true, that they have not attempted
to examine it. But Secondly, it
does not suffice that I do not know the falsity; for to make me a true speaker,
tis necessary I know the truth of what I affirm. Nay, if the thing were never so true, yet if I knew it not
to be so, its truth will not secure me from being a liar: and therefore,
whoever endeavors to have that received for a certainty, which himself knows
not to be so, offends against truth. The utmost that can consist with sincerity, is to represent it to others
as doubtful as it appears to him: yet even that how consonant soever to truth,
is not to Charity. Even doubtful
accusations leave a stain behind them, and often prove indelible injuries to
the party accused: how much more than do the more positive and confident
aspersions we have hitherto spoken of? Let me add only this concerning this later sort, that they
are greater advancers of Defamatory designs, than the very first
contrivers. For those, upon a
consciousness of their falseness, are obliged to proceed cautiously, to pick
out the credulous and least discerning persons, on whom to impose their
fictions, and dare not produce them in all companies for fear of detection: but
these in confidence that the untruth (if it be one) lies not at their door,
speak it without any restraint in all places, at all times, and what the others
are fain to whisper, they proclaim, like our new Engine, which pretends to
convey a whisper many miles off. So that as in the case of Stealing, tis proverbially said, that if there
were no receivers there would be no thieves; so in this Slander, if there were
fewer spreaders, there would be fewer forgers of Libels: the manufacture would
be discouraged, if it had not these retailers to put off the wares.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="viii-p5.1">Now</span> to apply these practices to
our rule of duty, there will need no very close inspection to discern the
obliquity. The most superficial
glance will evidence these several degrees of Slanderers to do what they would
not be willing to suffer. Who
among them can be content to be falsely aspersed? Nay, so far are they from that, that let but the shadow of
their own calumny reflect on themselves, let any but truly tell them that they
have falsely accused others, they grow raving and impatient, like a dog at a
looking glass fiercely combating that image which himself creates: and how
smoothly soever the original lie slides from them, the Echo of it grates their
ears. And indeed tis observable,
that those who make the greatest havoc of other men’s reputation, are the most
nicely tender of their own; which sets this sin of calumny in a most
Diametrical opposition to the Evangelical precept of <i>Loving our neighbors as
ourselves.</i></p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="viii-p6.1">Thus</span>, much is discernable even
in the surface of the crime: but if we look deeper and examine the motives, we
shall find the foundation well agrees to the superstructure, they being usually
one of these two, <i>Malice</i> or <i>Interest. </i>And indeed, the thing is so disingenuous, so contrary to the
dictates of Humanity as well as Divinity, that I must in reverence to our
common nature, presume it must be some very forcible impellent, that can drive
a man so far from himself. The
Devil here plays the Artist: and as the fatalest poisons to man are (they say)
drawn from human bodies, so here he extracts the venom of our Irascible and
Concupiscible part, and in it dips those arrows, which we thus shoot to one
another.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="viii-p7.1">Tis</span> needles to harangue
severally upon each. The world too
experimentally knows the force of both. <i>Malice</i> is that whirlwind, which has shook States and Families, no
less than private Persons; a passion so impetuous and precipitate, that it
often equally involves the Agent and the Patient: a malicious man being of like
violence with those who flung in the three Children, <scripRef passage="Daniel 3" id="viii-p7.2" parsed="|Dan|3|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Dan.3">Dan. 3</scripRef>. consumed by those
flames into which he cast others. As for <i>Interest, </i>tis that universal Monarch to which all other
Empires are Tributaries, to which men sacrifice not only their Consciences and
Innocence, but (what is usually much dearer) their Sensualities and Vices. Those whom all the Divine (either)
threats or promises, cannot persuade to mortify, and but restrain one Lust, at <i>Mammon’s</i>
beck will disclaim many, and force their inclinations to comply with their
interest.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="viii-p8.1">And</span> whilst this sin of Calumny
has two such potent Abettors, we are not to wonder at its growth: as long as
men are malicious and designing, they will be traducing; those Cyclopses will
be perpetually forging Thunderbolts, against which no innocence or virtue can
be proof. And alas, we daily find
too great effect of their industry. But though these are the forgers of the more solemn deliberate
calumnies, yet this sportive age hath produced another sort, there being men
that defame others by way of divertissement, invent little stories that they
may find themselves exercise, and the Town talk. This, if it must pass for sport, is such as <i>Solomon</i>
describes, <scripRef passage="Proverbs 26:18,19" id="viii-p8.2" parsed="|Prov|26|18|26|19" osisRef="Bible:Prov.26.18-Prov.26.19">Prov. 26. 18, 19</scripRef>.<i> As
a mad man that casteth firebrands, arrows and death, so is he that deceiveth
his neighbor, and saith, am I not in sport?</i> He that shoots an arrow in jest, may kill a man in earnest;
and he that gives himself liberty to play with his neighbor’s fame, may soon
play it away. Most men have such
an aptness to entertain sinister opinions of others, that they greedily draw in
any suggestion of that kind; and one may as easily persuade the thirsty earth
to refund the water she has sucked into her veins, as them to deposit a
prejudice they have once taken up. Therefore, such experiments upon fame, are as dangerous as that which <i>Alexander</i>
is said to have made of the force of Naptha upon his Page, from which he scarce
escaped with life. These jocular
slanders are often as mischievous as those of deeper design, and have from the
slightness of the temptation an enhancement of guilt. For sure, he that can put such an interest of his neighbor’s
in balance with a little fit of laughter, sets it at a lower price than he that
hopes to enrich or advance himself by it: and thought it pass among some for a
specimen of Wit, yet it really lifts them among <i>Solomon’s</i> fools who <i>make
a mock at sin, </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 14. 9" id="viii-p8.3" parsed="|Prov|14|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.14.9">Prov. 14. 9</scripRef>. In
the meantime, since slander is a plant that can grow in all soils, since the
frolic humor, as well as the morose, betrays to the guilt, who can hope to
escape this <i>Scourge of the Tongue, </i>as the Wise man calls it, <i>which
communicates with all, </i><scripRef passage="Ecclus. 26. 6" id="viii-p8.4" parsed="|Sir|26|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Sir.26.6">Ecclus. 26. 6</scripRef>. Persons of all ranks do mutually asperse, and are aspersed: so that he
who would not have his credulity abused, has scarce a securer way, than (like
the Astrologer, who made his Almanac give a tolerable account of the weather by
a direct inversion of the common prognosticators,) to let his belief run quite
counter to reports. Yea, so
Epidemic is this disease grown, that even religion (at least those parties and
factions which assume that name) has got a taint of it; each sect or opinion
seeking to represent its Antagonist as odious as it can. And whilst they contend for speculative
truth, they by mutual calumnies forfeit the practice: a thing that justly
excites the grief of good men, to see that those who all pretend to the same
Christianity, should only be unanimous in the violating that Truth and Charity
it prescribes.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="viii-p9.1">And</span> if these be the weapons of
our spiritual warfare, what may we think of the carnal? How are our secular animosities
pursued, when our Speculations are thus managed? How easily do we run down the reputation of any who stand in
the way, either of our spleen or avarice? When <i>Joseph’s</i> resolute purity had changed the scene of his
Mistress’s passion, she does as readily shift that of guilt too, and fixes her
crime upon him, <scripRef passage="Gen. 39. 14" id="viii-p9.2" parsed="|Gen|39|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.39.14">Gen. 39. 14</scripRef>. So 
when <i>Zeba</i> had a mind to undermine <i>Mephibosheth</i> in his estate, he
first practices upon his fame in a false accusation, <scripRef passage="2 Sam. 16. 3" id="viii-p9.3" parsed="|2Sam|16|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.16.3">2 Sam. 16. 3</scripRef>. And alas, how familiarly do we now see
both these scenes reacted? Those
who will not take vice into their bosoms, shall yet have it bespatter their
faces: they who will not run <i>to the same excess of riot, </i>must expect to
be evil spoken of, <scripRef passage="1 Pet. 4. 4" id="viii-p9.4" parsed="|1Pet|4|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.4.4">1 Pet. 4. 4</scripRef>. Nay, not only pious men, but piety itself partakes of the same fate,
falls under the two edged slander both of deceit and folly. And if men cannot be permitted quietly
to enjoy their piety, much less will they those things whereof the world hath
more gust, I mean secular advantages. There are still crimes to be discovered in the possessors of honors or
Estates, and they wonderfully excite the zeal of those who would supplant
them. What artifices are there to
make them appear unworthy of what they have, that others more unworthy may
succeed them? Nor are these storms
only in the upper regions, in the higher ranks of men; but if we pass through
all degrees, we shall find the difference is rather in the value of the things,
than in the means of pursuing them. He that pretends to the meanest office, does as studiously disparage his
competitor, as he that is rivaled for a kingdom. Nay, even he that has but a merry humor to gratify, makes no
scruple to do it with the loss of another man’s reputation.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="viii-p10.1">Thus</span> we do accommodate every petty temporal interest at the cost of our
eternal: and as an unskillful Fencer, whilst he is pursuing his thrust, exposes
his body; so whilst we thus actuate our own malice, we abandon ourselves to
Satan’s, receive mortal wounds from him, only that we may give a few light
scratches to one another. For, as
I have before said, there is nothing does more secure his title to us, than
this vice of Calumny, it bearing his proper impress and figure. And we may fear <i>Christ</i> will one
day make the same Judgment of Persons as he did of coin, and award them to him
whose <i>Image and Superscription they bear. </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 22. 20" id="viii-p10.2" parsed="|Matt|22|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.22.20">Matt. 22. 20</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p11">11. <span class="sc" id="viii-p11.1">And</span> now, how great a madness is it to make such costly oblations to so
vile an Idol? This is indeed the
worshipping our own Imaginations, preferring a malicious fiction before a real
felicity: and is but faintly resembled by him, who is said to have chosen to
part with his Bishopric, rather than burn his Romance. Alas, are there not gross corporal sins
enough to ruin us, but must we have aereal ones too, damn ourselves with
Chimeras, and by these forgeries of our brains, dream ourselves to destruction?</p>

<p class="normal" id="viii-p12">12. <span class="sc" id="viii-p12.1">Let</span> all those who thus
unhappily employ their inventive faculty, timely consider, how unthriving a
trade tis finally like to prove, that all their false accusations of others
will rebound in true ones upon themselves. It does often so in this world, where many times the most
clandestine contrivances of this kind meet with detection: or if they should
happen to keep on the disguise here, yet twill infallibly be torn off at the
great day of manifestation, when before God, Angels, and Men, they will be
rendered infinitely more vile, than twas possible for them here to make others.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 6: Of Uncharitable Truth" progress="29.25%" id="ix" prev="viii" next="x">
<h2 id="ix-p0.1">SECTION VI. <br />
Of Uncharitable Truth.</h2>


<p class="normal" id="ix-p1"> <span class="sc" id="ix-p1.1">In</span> the
next place we are to consider of the other branch of Defamatory reports, viz.
such as are true: which though they must be confessed to be of a lower form of
guilt than the former, yet as to the kind, they equally agree in the definition
of Detraction, since tis possible to impair a man’s credit by true reports as
well as by false.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="ix-p2.1">To</span> clear this I shall first
observe, that although every fault hath some penal effect which are coetaneous
to the act, yet this of Infamy is not so: this is a more remote consequent;
that which it immediately depends upon, is the publishing. A man may do things which to God and
his own conscience render him abominable, and yet keep his reputation with men:
but when this stifled crime breaks out, when his secret guilts are detected,
then, and not till then, he becomes infamous: so that although his sin be the
Material, yet it is the discovery that is the Formal cause of his infamy.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="ix-p3.1">This</span> being granted, it follows
that he that divulges an unknown, concealed fault, stands accountable for all
the consequences that flow from that divulging; but whether accountable as for
guilt, must be determined by the particular circumstances of the cause. So that here we must admit of an
exception: for though every discovery of another’s fault be in the strict
natural sense of the word a Detraction, yet it will not always be the sin of
Detraction, because in some instances there may be some higher obligation
intervene, and supersede that we own to the fame of our neighbor; and in those
cases it may not only be lawful, but necessary to expose him.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="ix-p4.1">Now</span> all such cases I conceive
may summarily be reduced to two heads, Justice and Charity. First as to Justice: that we know is a
fundamental virtue, and he that shall violate that, to abound in another, is as
absurd, as he that undermines the foundation to raise the walls. We are not to steal to give alms, and
God himself has declared that he hates robbery for a burnt offering: so that no
pretence either of Charity or Piety can absolve us from the duty we owe to
Justice. Now it may often fall
out, that by concealing one man’s fault, I may be injurious to another, nay, to
a whole community: and then I assume the guilt I conceal, and by the Laws both
of God and Man am judged an accessory.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="ix-p5.1">And</span> as Justice to others
enforces, so sometimes Justice to a man’s self allows the publishing of a
fault, when a considerable interest either of fame or fortune cannot otherwise
be rescued. But to make loud
outcries of injury, when they tend nothing to the redress of it, is a liberty
rather assumed by rage and impatience, than authorized by Justice. Nay, often in that case the complainer
is the most injurious Person; for he inflicts more than he suffers, and in lieu
of some trivial right of his which is invaded, he assaults the other in a
nearer interest, by wounding him in his good name: but if the cause be
considerable and the manner regular, there lies no sure obligation upon any man
to wrong himself, to indulge to another.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="ix-p6.1">Neither</span> does Charity retrench this
liberty; for though it be an act of Charity to conceal another man’s faults, yet
sometimes it may be inconsistent with some more important Charity, which I owe
to a third Person, or perhaps to a Multitude; as in those cases wherein public
benefit is concerned. If this were
not allowable, no History could lawfully be written, since if true, it cannot
but recount the faults of many: no evidence could be brought in against a
Malefactor: and indeed all discipline would be subverted, which would be so
great a mischief, that Charity obliges to prevent it, what Defamation soever
fall upon the guilty by it. For in
such instances tis a true rule, that mercy to the evil proves cruelty to the
innocent. And as in a competition
of mischiefs, we are to choose the least, so of two goods the greatest, and the
most extensive, is the most eligible.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="ix-p7.1">Nay</span>, even that Charity which
reflects upon myself, may also sometimes supersede that to my neighbor, the
rule obliging me to love him as, not better than, myself. I need not sure silently assent to my
own unjust Defamation, for fear of proving another a false accuser; nor suffer
myself to be made a beggar, to conceal another man’s being a thief. Tis true, in a great inequality of
interest, Charity (whose Character it is, <i>Not to seek her own, </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 13. 5" id="ix-p7.2" parsed="|1Cor|13|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.13.5">1 Cor.
13. 5</scripRef>.) will prompt me to prefer a greater concern of my neighbors, before a
slight one of my own: but in equal circumstances I am sure at liberty to be
kind first to myself. If I will
recede even from that, I may; but that is then to be accounted among the Heroic
flights of Charity, not her binding and indispensable Laws.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="ix-p8.1">Having</span> now set the boundaries to
the excepted cases; as all instances within them will be legitimated, so all
without them will be (by the known rule of exceptions) be precluded, and fall
under that general duty we owe to our neighbor, of tendering his credit: an
obligation so Universally infringed, that tis not imaginable the breach should
always happen within the excepted cases. When tis remembered how unactive the principles of Justice and Charity
are grown in the world, we must certainly impute such incessant effects, to
some more vigorous causes: of which it may not be amiss to point out some of
the most obvious, and leave every man to examine which of them he finds most
operative in himself.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="ix-p9.1">In</span> the first place, I may
reckon <i>Pride, </i>a humor which as it is always mounting, so it will make
use of any footstool towards its rise. A man who affects an extraordinary splendor of reputation, is glad to
find any foils to see him off; and therefore will let no fault nor folly of
another’s enjoy the shade, but brings it into the open light, that by that
comparison, his own excellencies may appear the brighter. I dare appeal to the breast of any
proud man, whether he do not upon such occasions, make some Pharisaical
reflections on himself, whether he be not apt to say, <i>I am not like other
men, or as this Publican, </i><scripRef passage="Luke 18" id="ix-p9.2" parsed="|Luke|18|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18">Luke 18</scripRef>. though probably he leave out the <i>God,
I thank Thee. </i>Now he that
cherishes such resentments as these in himself, will doubtless be willing to
propagate them to other men, and to that end render the blemishes of others as
visible as he can. But this
betrays a degenerous spirit, which from a consciousness that he wants solid
worth, on which to bottom a reputation, is fain to found it on the ruins of
other men’s. The true Diamond
sparkles even in the sunshine: tis but a glow-worm virtue that owes its luster
to the darkness about it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="ix-p10.1">Another</span> prompter to Detraction is <i>Envy</i>,
which sometimes is particular, sometimes general. He that has a pique to another, would have him as hateful to
all mankind as he is to him; and therefore, as he grieves and repines at
anything that may advance his estimation, so he exults and triumphs when
anything occurs which may depress it, and is usually very industrious to
improve the opportunity, nay, has a strange sagacity in hunting it out. No vulture does more quickly scent a
carcass, than an envious Person does, those <i>dead flies</i> which corrupt his
neighbor’s ointment, <scripRef passage="Eccles. 10. 1" id="ix-p10.2" parsed="|Eccl|10|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.10.1">Eccles. 10. 1</scripRef>. the vapor whereof his hate, like a strong
wind, scatters and disperses far and near. Nor needs he any great crime to practice on: every little
infirmity or passion, looked on through his Optics, appears a mountainous
guilt. He can improve the least
speck or freckle to leprosy, which shall overspread the whole man: and a cloud
no <i>bigger than a man’s hand, </i>like that of <i>Elisha, </i><scripRef passage="1 King. 18. 44" id="ix-p10.3" parsed="|1Kgs|18|44|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.18.44">1 King. 18. 44</scripRef>.
may in an instant, with the help of prejudice, grow to the utter darkening of
the brightest reputation, and fill the whole horizon with tempest and
horror. Sometimes this Envy is
general, not confined to any man’s person, but diffused to the whole
nature. Some tempers there are so
malign, that they wish ill to all, and believe ill of all; like <i>Timon</i>
the Athenian, who professed himself a universal man-hater. He whose guilty conscience reflects
dismal images of himself, is willing to put the same ugly shape upon the whole
nature, and to conclude that all men are the same, were they but closely
inspected. And therefore, when he
can see but the least glimmering of a fault in any, he takes it as a proof of
his Hypothesis, and with an envious joy calls in as many spectators as he
can. Tis certain there are some in
whose ears nothing sounds so harsh as the commendation of another, as on the
contrary nothing is so melodious as a Defamation. <i>Plutarch</i> gives an apt instance of this upon <i>Aristides’s</i>
banishment, whom when a mean Person had proposed to Ostracism, being asked what
displeasure <i>Aristides</i> had done him, he replied, <i>None, neither do I
know him, but it grieves me to hear everybody call him a just man. </i>I fear some of our keenest accusers
nowadays may give the same answer. No man that is eminent for Piety (or indeed but moral virtue) but he
shall have many insidious eyes upon him <i>watching for his halting</i>: and if
any the least obliquity can be espied, he is used worse than the vilest
malefactor: for such are tried but at one bar, and know the utmost of their
doom, but these are arraigned at every Table, in every Tavern. And at such variety of Judicatures,
there will be as great variety of sentences; only they commonly concur in this
one, that he is an Hypocrite, and then what complacency, what triumph have they
in such a discovery? There is not
half so much Epicurism in any of their most studied luxuries, no spectacle
affords them so much pleasure, as a bleeding fame thus lying at their mercy.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p11">11. <span class="sc" id="ix-p11.1">Another</span> sort of Detractors there
are, whose designs are not so black, but are equally mean and sordid, much too
light to be put in balance with a neighbor’s Credit. Of those some will pick up all the little stories they can
get; to humor a Patron: an artifice well known by those trencher guests, who,
like Rats, still haunt the best Provisions. These men do almost come up to a literal sense of what the <i>Psalmist</i>
spoke in a figurative, <scripRef passage="Psa. 14" id="ix-p11.2" parsed="|Ps|14|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.14">Psa. 14</scripRef>.<i> and eat up people for bread, </i>tear and
worry men in their good names, that themselves may eat. It was a Curse denounced against <i>Eli’s</i>
offspring, <i>that they should come and crouch for a morsel of bread. </i><scripRef passage="1 Sam. 2. 39" id="ix-p11.3" parsed="|1Sam|2|39|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.2.39">1
Sam. 2. 39</scripRef>. But such men court
this as a preferment, and to bring themselves within reach of it, stick not to
assume that vilest office of common Delators. There are others who when they have got the knowledge of
another man’s fault, think it an endearing thing to whisper it in the ear of
some friend or confidant. But sure
if they must needs sacrifice some secret to their friendship, they should take <i>David’s</i>
rule, and <i>not offer that which cost them nothing. </i>If they will express their confidence,
let them acquaint them with their own private crimes. That indeed would show something of trust: but those
experiments upon another man’s cost, will hardly convince any considering
person of their kindness.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p12">12. <span class="sc" id="ix-p12.1">There</span> still remains a yet more
trifling sort of Defamers, who have no deliberate design which they pursue in
it, yet are as assiduous at the Trade as the deeper contrivers. Such are those who publish their
neighbors’ failings as they read Gazettes, only that they may be telling News:
and Itch wherewith some people’s tongues are strangely over-run, who can as
well hold a glowing Coal in their mouths, as keep anything they think New; nay,
will sometimes run themselves out of breath, for fear least anyone should serve
them as <i>Ahimaaz </i>did the <i>Cushite</i> <scripRef passage="2Samuel 18:23" id="ix-p12.2" parsed="|2Sam|18|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.18.23">2. Sam. 18. 23</scripRef>. and tell the tale
before them. This is one of the
most Childish vanities imaginable: and sure men must have Souls of a very low
level that can think it a commensurate entertainment. Others there are who use Defamatory discourse, neither for
the love of News, nor Defamation, but purely for the love of talk: whose speech
like a flowing current bears away indiscriminately whatever lies in its
way. And indeed, such incessant
talkers are usually people not of depth enough to supply themselves out of their
own store, and therefore can let no foreign accession pass by them, no more
than a Mill which is always going, can afford any waters to run wait. I know we used to call this
Talkativeness a Feminine vice; but to speak impartially, I think, though we have
given them the enclosure of the Scandal, they have not of the fault, and he
that shall appropriate Loquacity to Women, may perhaps sometimes need to light <i>Diogenes’s</i>
Candle to seek a man: for tis possible to go into Masculine company, where
twill be as hard to edge in a word, as at a Female Gossiping. However, as to this particular of
Defaming, both the Sexes seem to be at a vie: and I think he were a very
Critical Judge, that could determine between them.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p13">13. <span class="sc" id="ix-p13.1">Now</span> lest this later sort of
Defamers should be apt to absolve themselves, as men of harmless intentions, I
shall desire them to consider, that they are only more impertinent, not less
injurious. For though it be
granted, that the proud and envious are to make a distinct account for their
Pride and envy; yet as far as related to the neighbor, they are equally
mischievous. <i>Anacreon</i> that
was choked with a grape-stone, died as surely as <i>Julius Caesar</i> with his
three and twenty wounds; and a man’s reputation may be as well fooled and
prattled away, as maliciously betrayed. Nay, perhaps more easily; for where the speaker can least be suspected
of design, the hearer is apter to give him Credit: this way of insinuating by
familiar discourse, being like those poisons that are taken in at the pores,
which are the most insensibly sucked in, and the most impossible to expel.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p14">14. <span class="sc" id="ix-p14.1">But</span> we need not <i>dispute</i>
which is worst, since tis certain all are bad, none of them (or any that hold
proportion with them) being at all able to pretend their warrant either from
Justice or Charity. And then what
our Savior says in another case, will be applicable to this, <i>He that is not
for us is against us. </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 12. 30" id="ix-p14.2" parsed="|Matt|12|30|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.30">Matt. 12. 30</scripRef>. He that in publishing his neighbor’s faults, acts not upon the dictates
of Justice or Charity, acts directly in contradiction to them: for where they
do not upon some particular respects command, they do implicitly and generally
forbid all such discoveries.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p15">15. <span class="sc" id="ix-p15.1">For</span> first, if a fault divulged
be of a light nature, the offender cannot thereby merit so much, as to be made
a public discourse. Fame is a
tender thing, and seldom is tossed and bandied without receiving some bruise,
if not a crack: for reports we know, like snow balls, gather still the farther
they roll, and when I have once handed it to another, how know I how he may
improve it, and if he deliver it so advanced to a third, he may give his
contribution also to it, and so in a successive transmitting, it may grow to
such a monstrous bulk, as bears no proportion to its Original. He must be a great stranger to the
world, that has not experimentally found the truth of this. How many persons have lain under great
and heavy scandals, which have taken their first rise only from some
inadvertence, or indiscretion? Of
so quick a growth is Slander, that the least grain, like that of mustard seed,
mentioned <scripRef passage="Mat. 13. 32" id="ix-p15.2" parsed="|Matt|13|32|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.13.32">Mat. 13. 32</scripRef>. immediately shoots up into a tree. And when it is so, it can no more be
reduced back into its first cause, than a tree can shrink into that little seed
from whence it first sprang. No
ruins are so irreparable as those of reputation: and therefore he that pulls
out but one stone towards the breach, may do a greater mischief than perhaps he
intends: and a greater injustice too; for by how much the more strictly Justice
obliges to reparation in case of injuries done, so much the more severely does
it prohibit the doing those injuries which are uncapable of being
repaired. In the Levitical Law, he
that knew his ox was apt to gore, and yet kept him not up, stood responsible
for any mischief he happened to do, <scripRef passage="Exod. 21. 29" id="ix-p15.3" parsed="|Exod|21|29|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Exod.21.29">Exod. 21. 29</scripRef>. I think there is no considering man can be ignorant how apt
even little trivial accusations are to tear and mangle one’s fame: and yet if
the lavish talker restrain them not, he certainly stands accountable to God,
his Neighbor, and his own Conscience, for all the danger they procure.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p16">16. <span class="sc" id="ix-p16.1">But</span> if the report concern some
higher and enormous crime, tis true the delinquent may deserve the less pity,
yet perhaps the reporter may not deserve the less blame: for often such a
discovery serves but to enrage, not reclaim the offender, and precipitate him
into farther degrees of ill. Modesty and fear of shame, is one of those natural restraints, which the
wisdom of God has put upon mankind, and he that once stumbles, may yet by a
check of that bridle recover again: but when by a public detection he is fallen
under that infamy he feared, he will then be apt to discard all caution, and to
think he owes himself the utmost pleasures of his vice, as the price of his
reputation. Nay, perhaps he
advances farther, and sets up for a reversed sort of Fame, by being eminently
wicked: and he who before was but a Clandestine disciple, becomes a Doctor of
impiety. And sure it were better
to let a concealed crime remain in its wished obscurity, than by thus rousing
it from its covert, bring it to stand at bay, and set itself in this open
defiance; especially in this degenerous age, when vice has so many well
willers, that, like a hoping party, eagerly run into any that will head them.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p17">17. <span class="sc" id="ix-p17.1">And</span> this brings in a third
consideration relating to the public, to which the divulging of private
(especially if they be novel, unusual) crimes, does but an ill piece of
service. Vice is contagious, and
casts pestilential vapors: and as he that should bring out a plague-sick
Person, to inform the world of his disease, would be thought not to have much
befriended his neighborhood, so he that displays these vicious Ulcers, whilst
he seeks to defame one, may perhaps infect many. We too experimentally find the force of ill examples. Men often take up sins, to which they
have no natural propension, merely by way of conformity and imitation. But if the instance happen in a crime,
which more suits the practice of the hearers, thought it cannot be said to
seduce, yet it may encourage and confirm them; embolden them not only the more
frequently to act, but even to avow those sins, wherein they find they stand
not single, and by discovering a new accessory to their Party, invite them the
more heartily and openly to espouse it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p18">18. <span class="sc" id="ix-p18.1">These</span> are such effects as surely do very ill correspond with that Justice
and Charity we owe either to particular Persons, or to mankind in General. And indeed, no better can be expected,
from a practice which so perfectly contradicts the grand rule both of Justice
and Charity, The doing as we would be done to. That this does so, every man has a ready conviction within
him, if he please but to consult his own heart. Alas, with what solicitude do we seek to hide our own
guilts, what false dresses, what varnishes have we for them? There are not more arts of disguising
our Corporal blemishes, than our Moral: and yet whilst we thus paint and parget
our deformities, we cannot allow any the least imperfection of another’s to
remain undetected, but tear off the veil from their blushing frailties, and not
only expose them, but proclaim them. And can there be a grosser, a more detestable partiality than this? God may sure in this instance (as in many
others) expostulate with us as he did with Israel, <scripRef passage="Ezek. 33" id="ix-p18.2" parsed="|Ezek|33|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.33">Ezek. 33</scripRef>.<i> Are not your ways unequal?</i> What Barbarism, what inhumanity is it,
thus to treat those of the same common nature with ourselves, whom we cannot
but know have the same concern to preserve a Reputation, and the same regret to
lose it, which we have? And what
shame it is, that that Evangelical precept, of doing as we would be done to,
which met with so much reverence even from the Heathens, that <i>Severus</i>
the Emperor preferred it to all the Maxims of Philosophers, should be thus
condemned and violated by Christians, and that too upon such slight
inconsiderable motives as usually prevail in this case of Defamation?</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p19">19. <span class="sc" id="ix-p19.1">But</span> we are not to consider this
fault only in its root, as it is a defect of Justice and Charity, but in its
product too, as it is a Seminary of more Injustice and Uncharitableness. Those disadvantageous reports we make
of our neighbors, are almost seen to come round: for let no man persuade
himself, that the hearers will keep his counsel any better than he does that of
the defamed Person. The softest
whisper of this kind, will find others to Echo it, till it reach the ears of
the concerned Party, and perhaps with some enhancing circumstances, too. And when tis considered how unwilling
men are to hear of their faults, though even in the mildest and most charitable
way of admonition, tis not to be doubted a public Defamation will seem
disobliging enough to provoke a return, which again begets a rejoinder, and so
the quarrel is carried on with mutual recriminations, all malicious inquiries
are made into each others manners, and those things which perhaps they did in
closets, come to be proclaimed upon the house top: so the wild-fire runs round,
till sometimes nothing but blood will quench it; or if it arrive not to that,
yet it usually fixes in an irreconcilable feud. To this is often owing those distances we see among friends
and relations; this breeds such strangeness, such animosities amongst
neighbors, that you cannot go to one, but you shall be entertained with
invectives against the other; nay, perhaps you shall lose both because you are
willing to side with neither.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p20">20. <span class="sc" id="ix-p20.1">These</span> are the usual consequences
of the liberty of the Tongue; and what account can any man give to himself, either
in Christianity or prudence, that has let in such a train of mischiefs, merely
to gratify an impotent childish humor of telling a tale? Peace was the great Legacy Christ left
to his followers, and ought to be guarded, though we expose for it our greatest
temporal concerns, but cannot without despite to Him, as well as our brethren,
be thus prostituted.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p21">21. <span class="sc" id="ix-p21.1">Yet</span> if we consider it
abstractedly, from these more solemn mischiefs which attend it, the mere levity
and unworthiness of it sets it below an ingenuous Person. We generally think a tattler and
busybody a title of no small reproach: yet truly I know not to whom it more
justly belongs, than to those, who busy themselves first in learning, and then
in publishing the faults of others: an employment which the Apostle thought a
blot, even upon the weaker sex, and thinks the prevention of such importance,
that he prescribes them to change their whole condition of life; to convert
widow-hood (though a state which in other respects he much prefers, <scripRef passage="1 Cor. 7. 8" id="ix-p21.2" parsed="|1Cor|7|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.7.8">1 Cor. 7. 
8</scripRef>) into marriage, rather than expose themselves to the temptation, <scripRef passage="1Timothy 5:13,14" id="ix-p21.3" parsed="|1Tim|5|13|5|14" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.5.13-1Tim.5.14">1 Tim. 5. 
13, 14</scripRef>. And if their impotence
cannot afford excuse for it, what a debasement is it of men’s nobler faculties
to be thus entertained? The
Historian gives it as an ill indication of <i>Domitian’s</i> temper, that he
employed himself in catching and tormenting Flies: and sure they fall not under
a much better character, either for wisdom, or good nature, who thus snatch up
all the little fluttering reports they can meet with, to the prejudice of their
neighbors.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p22">22. <span class="sc" id="ix-p22.1">But</span> besides this divulging the
faults of others, there is another branch of Detraction naturally springing
from this root, and this is the censuring and severe judging of them. We think not we have well played the
Historians, when we have told the thing, unless we add also our remarks, and
animadversions of it. And although
tis, God knows, bad enough to make a naked relation, and trust it to the
severity of the hearers; yet few can content themselves with that, but must
give them a sample of rigor, and by the bitterness of their own censure, invite
them to pass the like: a process contrary to all rules of Law or equity, for
the plaintiff to assume the part of a Judge. And we may easily divine the fate of that man’s fame that is
so unduly tried.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p23">23. <span class="sc" id="ix-p23.1">Tis</span> indeed sad to see how many
private tribunals are everywhere set up, where we scan and judge our neighbor’s
actions, but scarce ever acquit any. We take up with the most incompetent witnesses, nay, often suborn our
own surmises and jealousies, that we may be sure to cast the unhappy
Criminal. How nicely and
scrupulously do we examine every circumstance, (Would God we were but half as
exact in our own penitential inquisitions) and torture it to make it confess
something which appears not in the more general view of the fact, and which
perhaps never was in the actor’s intentions? In a word, we do like witches with their Magical Chemistry,
extract all the venom, and take none of the allay. By this means we confound the degrees of sins, and sentence
deliberate and indeliberate, a habit or an act all at one rate, that is
commonly, at the utmost it can amount to, even it its worse exception: and sure
this were a most culpable corruption in judgment, could we show our commission
to judge our brethren.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p24">24. <span class="sc" id="ix-p24.1">But</span> here we may every one of us
interrogate ourselves in our Savior’s words, <i>Who made me a Judge? </i><scripRef passage="Luke 12:14" id="ix-p24.2" parsed="|Luke|12|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.12.14">Luke. 
12. 14</scripRef>. And if he disclaimed it,
(who in respect of his Divinity had the Supreme right) and that too in a case
wherein one (at least) of the Litigants had desired his interposition, what a
boldness is it in us to assume it, where no such appeal is made to us, but on
the contrary the Party disowns our Authority? Nay, (which is infinitely more) tis superseded by our great
Law-giver, in that express prohibition, <scripRef passage="Matt. 7. 1" id="ix-p24.3" parsed="|Matt|7|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7.1">Matt. 7. 1</scripRef>.<i> Judge not, </i>and that
backed with a severe penalty, <i>that ye be not judged</i>? As God hath appropriated vengeance to
himself, so has He Judicature also; and tis an invasion of His peculiar, for
any (but His Delegates the lawful Magistrates) to pretend to either. And indeed, in all private Judgments so
much depends upon the intention of the Offender, that unless we could possess
ourselves of God’s Omniscience, twill be as irrational as impious to assume His
Authority. Until we know men’s
hearts, we are at the best but imperfect Judges of their actions. At our rate of judging, St. Paul surely
passed for a most malicious Persecutor, whereas God saw he <i>did ignorantly in
unbelief, </i>and upon that intuition <i>had mercy on him, </i><scripRef passage="1 Tim. 1. 13" id="ix-p24.4" parsed="|1Tim|1|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.1.13">1 Tim. 1. 13</scripRef>. Tis therefore good counsel
which the Apostle gives, <scripRef passage="1 Cor. 4. 5" id="ix-p24.5" parsed="|1Cor|4|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.5">1 Cor. 4. 5</scripRef>. <i>Judge nothing before the time until the Lord come. </i>For though tis said <i>the Saints shall
judge the world, </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 6. 3" id="ix-p24.6" parsed="|1Cor|6|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.6.3">1 Cor. 6. 3</scripRef>. yet it must be at the great Assize, and he
that will needs intrude himself into the office before the time, will be in
danger to be rather Passive than Active in the Judicatory. I do not here advise to such a stupid
charity as shall make no distinction of Actions. I know there is a woe pronounced as well to those who <i>call
evil good, as good evil. </i>Surely when we see an open notorious sin committed, we may express a
detestation of the Crime, though not of the Actor; nay, it may sometimes be a
necessary Charity, both to the Offender, and to the innocent Spectators, as an
Amulet to keep them from the Contagion of the Example. But still, even in these cases, our
Sentence must not exceed the evidence, we must judge only according to the
visible undoubted circumstances, and not aggravate the crime upon the presumptions
and conjectures; if we do, how right soever our guesses may be, our judgment is
not, but we are as St. James speaks, <i>Judges of evil thoughts. </i><scripRef passage="James 2:4" id="ix-p24.7" parsed="|Jas|2|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.2.4">Chap. 2. 4</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p25">25. <span class="sc" id="ix-p25.1">Indeed</span>, this rash judging is not
only very unjust both to God and man, but it is an act of the greatest
pride. When we set our selves in
the Tribunal, we always look down with contempt on those at the bar. And certainly there is nothing does so
gratify, so regale a haughty humor, as this piece of usurped Sovereignty over
our brethren: but the more it does so, the greater necessity there is to
abstain from it. Pride is a hardy
kind of vice, that will live upon the barest pasture: you cannot starve it with
the most industrious mortifications: how little need is there then of pampering
and heightening it, which we cannot more effectually do, than by this
censorious humor? for by that we are so perpetually employed abroad, that we
have no leisure to look homeward, and see our own defects. We are like the inhabitants of <i>Ai, </i>
<scripRef passage="Josh. 8" id="ix-p25.2" parsed="|Josh|8|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Josh.8">Josh. 8</scripRef>. so eager upon the pursuit of others, that we leave ourselves exposed
to the ambushes of Satan, who will be sure still to encourage us in our chase,
draw us still farther and farther from ourselves, and cares not how zealous we
are in fighting against the crimes of others, so he can but keep that zeal from
recoiling upon our own.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p26">26. <span class="sc" id="ix-p26.1">Lastly</span>, this judging others is one
of the highest violations of Charity. The Apostle gives it as one of the properties of that grace, that <i>it
thinks no evil</i> (<i>i.e.</i>) is not apt to make severe constructions, but
sets everything in the fairest light, puts the most candid interpretations that
the matter will bear. And truly
this is of great importance to the reputation of our neighbors. The world we know is in many instances
extremely governed by opinion, but in this tis all in all; it has not only an
influence upon it, but is that very thing: reputation being nothing but a fair
opinion and estimation among others. Now this opinion is not always swayed by due motives: sometimes little
accidents, and often fancy, and most often prepossession governs in it. So that many times he that puts the
first ill Character, fixes the stamp which afterwards goes current in the
world. The generality of people
take up prejudices (as they do religions) upon trust, and of those that are
more curious in inquiring into the grounds, there are not many who vary on the
more charitable hand, or bring the common sentence to review, with intent to
moderate but enhance it. Men are
apt to think it some disparagement to their acuteness and invention, if they
cannot say something as sharp upon the subject as hath been said before; and so
tis the business of many to lay on more load, but of few to take off: and
therefore he that passes the first condemnatory sentence, is like the
incendiary in a popular tumult, who is chargeable with all those disorders to
which he gave the first rise, though that free not his Abettors from their
share of the guilt.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p27">27. <span class="sc" id="ix-p27.1">And</span> as this is very
uncharitable in respect of the injury offered, so also it is in reflection on
the grand rule of Charity. Can we
pretend to love our neighbors as ourselves, and yet shall our love to him have
the quite contrary effects to that we bear ourselves? Can self-love lessen our beam into a mote, and yet can our
love to him magnify his mote into a beam? No, certainly true Charity is more sincere, does not turn to us the
reverse end of the perspective, to represent our own faults at a distance, and
in the most diminutive size, and yet shuffle the other to us when we are view
his. No, these are Tricks of
Legerdemain we learn in another School, even in whose style is <i>the accuser
of the brethren. </i>We know how
frequently God protests against false weights and false measures. And sure tis not only in the shop or
market that he abhors them, they are no less abominable in conversation than in
traffic. To buy by one measure and
sell by another, is not more unequal, than it is to have these differing
standards for our own and our neighbor’s faults, that our own shall weigh, in
the Prophet Jeremiah’s Phrase, <i>lighter than vanity, yea nothing, </i>and yet
his (though really the lighter) shall prove Zechariah’s talent of lead. This is such a partiality, as consists
not with common honesty, and can therefore never be reconciled with Christian
Charity: and how demurely soever such men may pretend to sanctity, that
interrogation of God’s presses hard upon them, <i>Shall I count them pure with
the wicked balances, and with the bag of deceitful weights? </i><scripRef passage="Micah 6:11" id="ix-p27.2" parsed="|Mic|6|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Mic.6.11">Mich. 6.
11</scripRef>. Such bitter invectives against
other men’s faults, and indulgence or palliation of their own, shows their zeal
lies in their spleen, and that they consider no so much what is done, as who
does it: and to such the sentence of the Apostle is very applicable, <scripRef passage="Rom. 2. 1" id="ix-p27.3" parsed="|Rom|2|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.1">Rom. 2. 1</scripRef>.<i> Therefore thou art inexcusable, O
man, whosoever thou art that judgest, for wherein thou judgest another thou
condemnest thyself, for thou that judgest dost the same thing. </i>But admit a man have not the very same
guilts he censures in another, yet tis sure every man has some, and of what
sort soever they be, he desires not they should be rigorously scanned, and
therefore by the rule of Charity, yea, and justice too, ought no to do that
which he would not suffer. If he
can find extenuations for his own crimes, he is in all reason to presume others
may have so for theirs: the common frailty of our nature, as it is apt alike to
betray us to faults, so it gives as equal share in the excuse; and therefore,
what I would have pass for the effect of impotency or inadvertence in myself, I
can with no tolerable ingenuity give a worse name to in him.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p28">28. <span class="sc" id="ix-p28.1">We</span> have now viewed both these
branches of Detraction, seen both the sin and mischiefs of them, we may now
join them together in a concluding observation, which is that they are as
imprudent as they are unchristian. It has been received among the maxims of civil life, not unnecessarily
to exasperate anybody; to which agrees the advice of an ancient Philosopher,
Speak not evil of they neighbor, if thou dost thou shalt hear that which will
not fail to trouble thee. There is
no Person so inconsiderable, but may at some time or other do a displeasure:
but in this of Defaming men need no harnessing, no preparation, every man has
his weapons ready for a return: so that none can shoot these arrows, but they
must expect they will revert with a rebounded force: not only to the violation
of Christian Unity (as I have before observed) but to the Aggressors great
secular detriment, both in fame, and oftentimes interest also. Revenge is sharp-sighted, and overlooks
no opportunity of a retaliation, and that commonly not bounded as the Levitical
ones were, <i>An eye for any eye, a tooth for a tooth, </i><scripRef passage="Exod. 21. 24" id="ix-p28.2" parsed="|Exod|21|24|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Exod.21.24">Exod. 21. 24</scripRef>. no,
nor by the larger proportions of their restitutions <i>fourfold, </i><scripRef passage="Exod. 22. 1" id="ix-p28.3" parsed="|Exod|22|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Exod.22.1">Exod. 22. 
1</scripRef>. but extended to the utmost power of the inflicter. The examples are innumerable of men who have thus laid
themselves open in their greatest concerns, and have let loose the hands as
well as Tongues of others against them, merely because they would put no
restraint upon their own, which is so great an indiscretion, that to them we
may well apply that of Solomon, <i>A fool’s mouth is his destruction, and his
lips are the snare of his soul. </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 18. 7" id="ix-p28.4" parsed="|Prov|18|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.18.7">Prov. 18. 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p29">29. <span class="sc" id="ix-p29.1">And</span> now, who can sufficiently
wonder that a practice that so thwarts our interest of both worlds, should come
universally to prevail among us? Yet that it does so, I may appeal to the consciences of most, and to the
observation of all. What so common
Topic of discourse is there, as this of backbiting our neighbors? Come into company of all Ages, all
Ranks, all Professions, this is the constant entertainment. And I doubt he that at night shall duly
recollect the occurrences of the day, shall very rarely be able to say he has
spent it without hearing or
speaking (perhaps both) somewhat of this kind. Nay, even those who restrain themselves other liberties are
often apt to indulge to this: many who are so just to their neighbor’s
property, that as Abraham once said, <scripRef passage="Gen. 14. 23" id="ix-p29.2" parsed="|Gen|14|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.14.23">Gen. 14. 23</scripRef>.<i> they would not take from
him, even from a thread to a shoe latchet, </i>are yet so inconsiderate of his
Fame, as to find themselves discourse at the expense of that, though infinitely
a greater injury than the robbing of his Coffer: which shews what false
measures we are apt to take of things, and evinces that many of those, who have
not only in a general abjured the world in their baptism, but do in many
instances seem to themselves (as well as others) to have gained a Superiority
over it, do yet in this undiscernibly yield it the greatest ensign of
Sovereignty, by permitting it to set the Standards and estimate of things, and
taking its customary Prescriptions for Laws. For what besides this unhappy servility to custom, can
possibly reconcile men that own Christianity, to a practice so widely distant
from it? Tis true those that
profess themselves men of this world, who design only their portion in this
life, may take it up as sometimes conducing (at least seemingly) to their end:
but for those who propose higher hopes to themselves, and know that Charity is
one of the main props to those hopes, how foolishly do they undermine
themselves, when they thus act against their principles, and that upon no other
Authority, but that of popular usage? I know men are apt to excuse themselves upon their indignation against
vice, and think that their zeal must as well acquit them for this violation of
the Second Table, as it once did Moses for the breaking both, <scripRef passage="Ex. 32. 19" id="ix-p29.3" parsed="|Exod|32|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Exod.32.19">Ex. 32. 19</scripRef>. But to such I may answer in Christ’s words,
<scripRef passage="Luke 9. 55" id="ix-p29.4" parsed="|Luke|9|55|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.55">Luke 9. 55</scripRef>.<i> Ye know not what
manner of spirit you are of. </i>Meekness and Charity are the Evangelical graces, which will most
recommend and assimilate us to Him, who was meek and lowly in heart. But after all this pretext of Zeal, I
fear it is but a cheat we put on ourselves, the Elder brother’s raiment only to
disguise the Supplanter. <scripRef passage="Gen. 27" id="ix-p29.5" parsed="|Gen|27|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.27">Gen. 27</scripRef>. Let men truly ransack their own breasts, and I doubt the best will find
there is something of vanity which lies at the bottom, if it be not the
positive sort mentioned before, of designing to illustrate myself by others’
blemishes, yet at least the negative, that I am unwilling to incur the contempt
incident to those who scruple at small sins. Besides, I observe perhaps, that tis the common
entertainment of the world to Defame their neighbors, and if I strike not in
upon the Theme, I shall have nothing to render me acceptable company; perhaps I
shall be reproached as morose or dull, and my silence shall be construed to
proceed not from the abundance of my Charity, but the defect of my Wit.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p30">30. <span class="sc" id="ix-p30.1">But</span> sure they that can thus
argue, do hereby give a more demonstrative proof of that defect. He whose wit is so precarious that it
must depend only upon the folly or vice of another, had best give over all
pretence to it. He that has
nothing of his own growth to set before his guests, had better make no
invitations, than break down his neighbor’s enclosure, and feast them upon his
plunder. Besides, how pitiful an
attestation of wit is it, to be able to make a disgraceful relation of
another? No scolding women but may
set up such Trophies: and they that can value a man upon such an account, may
prefer the Scarabes, who feed upon dung, and are remarked by no other property,
before the Bee that sucks the flowers and returns honey.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p31">31. <span class="sc" id="ix-p31.1">But</span> in the next place, admit
this restraint should certainly expose one to that reproach; methinks this
should be no news to those who know the condition of Christianity is to take up
the Cross: and sure it cannot weigh lighter than in this instance. What am I the worse if a vain Talkative
Person think me too reserved? Of
if he whose frolic levity is his disease, call me dull because I vapor not out
all my spirits into froth? <i>Socrates</i>,
when informed of some derogatory Speeches one had used of him behind his back,
made only this facetious reply, <i>Let him beat me too when I am absent. </i>And he that gets not such an
indifference to all the idle censures of men, will be disturbed in all his
civil transactions, as well as his Christian; it being scarce possible to do
any thing, but there will be descants made on it. And if a man will regard those winds, he must, as <i>Solomon</i>
says, <i>never sow, </i><scripRef passage="Eccles. 11. 4" id="ix-p31.2" parsed="|Eccl|11|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.11.4">Eccles. 11. 4</scripRef>. He must suspend even the necessary actions of common life, if he will
not venture them to the being misjudged by others.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p32">32. <span class="sc" id="ix-p32.1">But</span> there is a yet farther
consideration in this matter: for he that upon such a despicable motive will
violate his duty in one particular, lets Satan get a main point of him, and can
with no good Logic deny to do it in others. Detraction is not the only sin in fashion: Profaneness, and
Obscenity, and all sorts of Luxury are so too, and threaten no less reproach to
those who scruple at them. Upon
the same grounds, therefore, that he discards his Charity to his neighbor, he may
also his Piety, his Modesty, his Temperance, and almost all other virtues. And to speak the truth, there is not a
more fertile womb of sin, than this dread of ill men’s reproach. Other corruptions must be gratified
with cost and industry, but in this the Devil hath no farther trouble than to
laugh men out of their souls. So
prolific a vice therefore had need be weeded out of men’s hearts: for if it be
allowed the least corner, if it be indulged to in this one instance, twill
quickly spread itself farther.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p33">33. <span class="sc" id="ix-p33.1">Yet</span> after all, this fear of
reproach is a mere fallacy, started to disguise a more real cause of fear: for
the greater danger of reproach does indeed lie on that other side. Common estimation puts an ill Character
upon pragmatic, meddling people. For though the inquisitiveness and curiosity of the hearer may sometimes
render such discourses grateful enough to him, yet it leaves in him no good
impressions of the speaker. This
is well observed by the son of Sirach, <scripRef passage="Ecclus. 19:8,9" id="ix-p33.2" parsed="|Sir|19|8|19|9" osisRef="Bible:Sir.19.8-Sir.19.9">Ecclus. 19. 8, 9</scripRef>. <i>Whether it be to friend or foe, talk
not of other men’s lives; and if thou canst without offense, reveal them not,
for he heard and observed thee, and when time cometh he will hate thee. </i>In a word, all considering Persons will
be on their guard in such company, as foreseeing that they will talk no less
freely of them, than they do of others before them. Nor can the commonness of the guilt obviate the censure,
there being nothing more frequent than for men to accuse their own faults in
other Persons. Vice is like a dark
Lantern, which turns its bright side only to him that bears it, but looks black
and dismal in another’s hand: and in this particular none has so much reason to
fear a Defamer, as those who are themselves such: for (besides the common
prudential motive) their own consciousness gives them an inward alarm, and
makes them look for a retribution in the same kind. Thus, upon the whole matter we see, there is no real
temptation, even to our vanity, to comply with this uncharitable custom, we
being sure to lose more repute by it than we can propose to ourselves to
gain. The being esteemed an ill
man will not be balanced by being thought pleasant, ingenuous company, were one
sure to be so. But tis odds that
will not be acquired by it neither, for the most assiduous tale-bearers and
bitterest revilers are often half-witted people: there being nothing more
frequently observable, than such men’s aptness to speak evil of things they understand
not, <scripRef passage="Jude. 1. 2" id="ix-p33.3" parsed="|Jude|1|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jude.1.2">Jude. 1. 2</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p34">34. O <span class="sc" id="ix-p34.1">Let</span> not then those that have
repudiated the more inviting sins, shew themselves pilfered and bewitched by
this, but instead of submitting to the ill example of others, set a good one to
them, &amp; endeavor to bring this unchristian custom out of fashion. I am sure if they do not, they will be
more deeply chargeable than others: for the more command they have over their
other corruptions, the more do they witness against themselves. Their remissness and willing subjection
to this, besides their example when ill, is more ensnaring than other men’s,
and is apt to insinuate easy thought of the sin. Men are apt to think themselves safe while they follow one
of noted piety, and the authority of his Person often leads them blindfold into
his failings. Thus when <i>Peter</i>
dissembled, <i>St. Paul</i> tells us that the other <i>Jews, and even Barnabas
also was carried away with his dissimulation. </i><scripRef passage="Gal. 2. 13" id="ix-p34.2" parsed="|Gal|2|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.2.13">Gal. 2. 13</scripRef>. And I doubt not in this particular many
are encouraged by the liberty they see even good men take. So that such have a more accumulative
guilt, for they do not only commit, but patronize the fault: the consideration
whereof has kept me, I confess, longer upon this head than is proportionable to
the brevity of the rest; but I think no longer than agrees to the importance of
the subject.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p35">35. <span class="sc" id="ix-p35.1">And</span> now, since we have
considered the malignity of this sin of Detraction, and yet withal find that
tis a sin, which, as the Apostle speaks, <i>doth easily beset us, </i>tis but a
natural Corollary that we enforce our vigilance against it. And where the importance and difficulty
are both so great, twill be a little necessary to consider what are the
likeliest means, the most appropriate Antidote against this so dangerous, and
yet so Epidemic a disease.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p36">36. <span class="sc" id="ix-p36.1">And</span> here the common rule of
Physic is to be adverted too, <i>viz. </i>to examine the causes, that the
remedies may be adapted to them. I
shall therefore in the first place desire every man seriously to study his own
constitution of mind, and observe what are his particular temptations to this
sin of Detraction, whether any of those I have before mentioned, as Pride,
Envy, Levity, &amp;c. or any other which lies deeper, and is only discernible
to his own inspection. Let him, I
say, make the scrutiny, and then accordingly apply himself to correct the sin
in its first principle. For as
when there is an eruption of Humor in any part, tis not cured merely by outward
application, but by such alterative Medicines as purify the blood; so this
Leprosy of the Tongue will still spread farther, if it be not checked in its
Spring and source, by the mortifying of those corrupt inclinations, which feed
and heighten it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p37">37. <span class="sc" id="ix-p37.1">This</span> is an inquisition I must
leave to every man’s own Conscience, which alone can testify by what impulses
he acts. Yet as the Rabbis were
wont to say, that in every Signal Judgment which befell the Jews, there was
some grain of the golden-calf; so I think I may venture to say, that in all
Detraction, there is some mixture of Pride: and therefore I suppose, a Caution
against that, will be so generally seasonable, that it may well lead the Van of
all other advices in this matter. And here tis very observable, that God who has <i>made of one blood all
Nations of the earth. </i><scripRef passage="Acts 17" id="ix-p37.2" parsed="|Acts|17|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.17">Acts 17</scripRef>. has so equally distributed all the most valuable
privileges of Human nature, as if He designed to preclude all insulting of one
man over another. Neither has He
only thus insinuated it by his Providence, but has enforced it by his commands. In the Levitical Law we find what a
particular care He takes to moderate the rigor of Judicial correction, upon
this very account, lest <i>thy Brother be despised in thine eyes. </i><scripRef passage="Deut. 25. 3" id="ix-p37.3" parsed="|Deut|25|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Deut.25.3">Deut. 25. 
3</scripRef>. So unreasonable did He think
it, that the crime or misery of one, should be the exultation of another. And <i>St. Paul</i> brands it as a
great guilt of the <i>Corinthians</i> that they upon the occasion of the
incestuous Person <i>were puffed up, when they should have mourned. </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 5. 2" id="ix-p37.4" parsed="|1Cor|5|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.5.2">1 Cor. 
5. 2</scripRef>. When we see a dead Corpse,
we are not apt to insult over it, or brag of our own health and vigor; but it
rather damps us, and makes us reflect, that it may (we know not how soon) be
our own condition. And certainly
the spectacles of Spiritual mortality should have the same operation. We have the same principles of
Corruption with our lapsed Brethren, and have nothing but God’s grace, to
secure us from the same effects, and by these insulting reflections forfeit
that too; for <i>He gives grace only to the humble. </i><scripRef passage="James 4:6" id="ix-p37.5" parsed="|Jas|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.4.6">Jam. 4. 6</scripRef>. St. Paul’s advice, therefore, is very
apposite to this case, <scripRef passage="Gal. 6. 1" id="ix-p37.6" parsed="|Gal|6|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.6.1">Gal. 6. 1</scripRef>.<i> Brethren,
if a man be overtaken in a fault, restore such a one in the spirit of Meekness,
considering thyself, least thou also be tempted. </i>In a word, the falls of others ought to excite our pity
towards them, our caution as to ourselves and our thankfulness to God, if he
hath hitherto preserved us from the like, <i>For who made thee to differ from
another? </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 4. 7" id="ix-p37.7" parsed="|1Cor|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.7">1 Cor. 4. 7</scripRef>. But if
we spread our Sails, and triumph over these wrecks, we expose ourselves to
worse. Other sins like Rocks may
split us, yet the lading may be preserved; but Pride like a Gulf swallows us
up; our very virtues when so leavened, becoming weights and plummets to sink us
to our deepest ruin. The counsel,
therefore, of the Apostle is very pertinent to this matter. <scripRef passage="Rom. 11. 20" id="ix-p37.8" parsed="|Rom|11|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.20">Rom. 11. 20</scripRef>.<i> Be not high minded, but
fear</i>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p38">38. <span class="sc" id="ix-p38.1">But</span> God knows we can insult
over others when we are not only under a possibility, but are actually involved
in the same guilt; and then what are all our accusations and bitter censures of
others, but indictments and condemnatory sentences against ourselves? And we may justly expect God should
take us at our word, and reply upon us as the Prophet did upon <i>David, Thou
art the man. </i><scripRef passage="2 Sam. 12. 7" id="ix-p38.2" parsed="|2Sam|12|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.12.7">2 Sam. 12. 7</scripRef>. For
though our officious vehemence against another’s crime, may blind the eyes of
men, yet God is not so mocked: as therefore when a thief or murderer is
detected, it gives an alarm to the whole confederacy; so when we find our own
guilts pursued in other men’s Persons, tis not a time for us to join in the
prosecution, but rather by humble and penitent reflections on ourselves to
provide for our own safety. When
therefore, we find ourselves (upon any misdemeanor of our brother) ready to
mount the tribunal, and pronounce our sentence, let us first consider how competent
we are for the office, calling to mind the decision Christ once made in the
like case, <i>He that is without sin let him first cast a stone, </i><scripRef passage="John 8. 7" id="ix-p38.3" parsed="|John|8|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.8.7">John 8. 
7</scripRef>. And if we did this, many
perhaps of our fiercest impeachers, would think fit to retire and leave the
delinquent (as they themselves finally desire to be) to the merciful indulgence
of a Savior. In short, would we
but look into our own hearts, we should find so much work for our inquisitions
and censure, that we should not be at leisure to ramble abroad for it. And therefore, as <i>Lycurgus</i> once
said to one, who importuned him to establish a popular parity in the state, <i>Do
thou, </i>says he, <i>begin it first in thine own family</i>; so I shall advise
those that will be judging, to practice first at home. And if they will confine themselves to
that, till there be nothing left to correct, I doubt not their neighbor will be
well enough secured against their Detractions.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p39">39. <span class="sc" id="ix-p39.1">Another</span> preservation against that
sin is the frequent contemplation of the last and great judgment. This is indeed a Catholicon against all:
but we find it particularly applied by <i>St. Paul</i> to this of judging and
despising our Brethren. <i>Why
dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? We shall all stand before the Judgement
Seat of Christ. </i><scripRef passage="Rom. 14. 10" id="ix-p39.2" parsed="|Rom|14|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.14.10">Rom. 14. 10</scripRef>. That is the great day of Revelation and retribution, and we are not to
anticipate it by our private inquests or sentences: we have business enough to
provide our own accounts against that day. And as it were a spiteful folly for the Malefactors that
were going together to the bar, to spend their time in exaggerating each
other’s crimes: so surely it is for us, who are all going toward the dreadful
tribunal, to be drawing up Charges against one another. And who knows but we may then meet with
the fate of <i>Daniel’s</i> accusers, see him we censured acquit, and ourselves
doomed. The penitence of the
criminal may have numbered him among the Saints, when our unretracted
uncharitableness may send us to unquenchable Flames. I conclude this consideration with the words of <i>St. James,
There is one Lawgiver who is able to save and to destroy, who are thou that
judgest another?</i> <scripRef passage="James 4:12" id="ix-p39.3" parsed="|Jas|4|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.4.12">Jam. 4. 12</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p40">40. A <span class="sc" id="ix-p40.1">Third</span> expedient may be, to try to
make a revulsion of the humor, to draw it into another channel. If we must needs be talking of other people’s
faults, let it not be to Defame, but to amend them, by converting our
Detraction and backbiting into Admonition and fraternal correction. This is a way to extract medicine out
of the viper, to consecrate even this so unhallowed a part of our temper, and
to turn the ungrateful meddling of a busybody, into the most obliging office of
a friend. And indeed, had we the
zeal for virtue, which we pretend when we inveigh against vice, we should
surely lay it out this way, for this only gives a possibility of reforming the
offender. But alas, we order the
matter so, as if we feared to lose the occasion of Clamor, and will tell all
the world but him that it most concerns. Indeed, tis a deplorable thing to see how universally this necessary
Christian duty is neglected; and to that neglect we may in a great degree
impute that strange overflowing of Detraction among us. We know the receiving anything into our
Charge, insensibly begets a love and tenderness to it (a nurse upon this
account comes often to vie kindness with the mother:) and would we but take one
another thus into our care, and by friendly vigilance thus watch over each
other’s souls, tis scarce imaginable what an endearment it would create: such
certainly as would infallibly supplant all our unkind reportings, and severe
descants upon our brethren; since those can never take place, but when there is
at least an indifference, if not an enmity.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p41">41. <span class="sc" id="ix-p41.1">The</span> next cure I shall propose
for Detraction, is to subtract its nourishment, by suppressing all Curiosity
and inquisitiveness concerning others. Were all Supplies thus cut off, it would at last be subdued. The King of Ethiopia in a vie of Wit
with the King of Egypt, proposed it as a Problem to him, to drink up the Sea,
to which he replied by requiring him first to stop the access of Rivers to it:
and he that would drain this other Ocean, must take the same course, dam up the
avenues of those Springs which feed it. He that is always upon the scent, hunting out some discovery of others,
will be very apt to invite his neighbors to the quarry; and therefore twill be
necessary for him, to restrain himself from that range: not like jealous
States, to keep Spies and pensioners abroad to bring him intelligence, but
rather discourage all such officious pick-thanks: for the fuller he is of such
informations, the more is his pain if he keep them in, and his guilt if he
publish them. Could men be
persuaded to affect a wholesome ignorance in these matters, it would conduce
both to their ease and innocence: for tis this Itch of the ear which breaks out
at the Tongue: and were not Curiosity the Purveyor, Detraction would soon be
starved into a tameness.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p42">42. <span class="sc" id="ix-p42.1">But</span> the most infallible recipe
of all, is the frequent recollecting, and serious applying of the grand rule,
of doing as we would be done to; for as Detraction is the violation of that, so
the observation of that must certainly supplant Detraction. Let us therefore, when we find the
humor fermenting within us, and ready to break out in Declamations against our
brethren, Let us, I say, check it with this short question, <i>Would I myself
be thus used?</i> This voice from
within, will be like that from heaven to St. Paul, which stopped him in the
height of his carrier, <scripRef passage="Acts 9. 4" id="ix-p42.2" parsed="|Acts|9|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.4">Acts 9. 4</scripRef>. And this voice, every man may hear, that will not stop his ears, nor gag
his conscience, it being but the Echo of that native Justice and equity which
is planted in our hearts: and when we have our remedy so near us, and will not
use it, God may well expostulate with us, as he did with the Jews, <i>Why will
ye die, O house of Israel</i>? <scripRef passage="Ezek. 33. 11" id="ix-p42.3" parsed="|Ezek|33|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.33.11">Ezek. 33. 11</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="ix-p43"> <span class="sc" id="ix-p43.1">These</span> are some of those many recipes which may be prescribed against this
spreading disease. But indeed,
there is not so much need to multiply remedies, as to persuade men to apply
them. We are in love with our
Malady, and as loath to be cured of the Luxury of the Tongue, as <i>St. Augustine</i>
was of his other Sensuality, against which he prayed with a Caveat, that he
might not be too soon heard. But
tis ill dallying, where our Souls are concerned: for alas, tis they that are
wounded by those darts, which we throw at others. We take our aim, perhaps at our Neighbors, but indeed hit
ourselves: herein verifying in the highest Sense that Axiom of the Wise-man, <i>He
that diggeth a pit, shall fall into it, and he that rolleth a stone, it shall
return upon him. </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 26. 27" id="ix-p43.2" parsed="|Prov|26|27|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.26.27">Prov. 26. 27</scripRef>. If therefore, we have no tenderness, no relentings, to our Brethren, yet
let us have some to ourselves, so much compassion, nay, so much respect to our
precious immortal Souls, as not to set them at so despicable a price, to put
them in balance with the satisfying of a petulant, peevish vanity. Surely the shewing ourselves ill
natured (which is all the gain Detraction amounts to) is not so enamouring a design,
that we should sacrifice to it our highest interest. Tis too much to spend our breath in such a pursuit, O let
not our souls also exhale in the vapor; but let us rather pour them out in
prayers for our brethren, than in accusations of them: for though both the one
and the other will return into our own bosoms, yet God knows to far differing
purposes, even, as differing as those wherein we utter them. The Charity of the one, like kindly
exhalations will descend in showers of blessings, but the rigor and asperity of
the other, in a severe doom upon ourselves: for the Apostle will tell us, <i>He
shall have Judgement without mercy, that shewed no mercy, </i><scripRef passage="James 2. 13" id="ix-p43.3" parsed="|Jas|2|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.2.13">James 2. 13</scripRef>.</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 7: Of Scoffing and Derision" progress="51.82%" id="x" prev="ix" next="xi">
<h2 id="x-p0.1">Section VII. <br />
Of Scoffing and Derision.</h2>


<p class="normal" id="x-p1"> <span class="sc" id="x-p1.1">There</span> is
also another fault of the Tongue injurious to our neighbor, and that is
Derision and Mockery; the striving to render others as ridiculous and
contemptible as we can. This in
respect of the subject matter differs from the other of Detraction, as much as
folly or deformity does from vice: yet since injuries as well as benefits are
to measured by common estimation, this may come in balance with the other. There is such a general aversation in
the human nature to contempt, that there is scarce anything more
exasperating. I will not deny but
the excess of that aversation may be leveled against Pride, yet sure scorn and
disdain never sprung from humility, and therefore, are very incompetent
Correctors of the other; so that it may be said of that, as once it was of <i>Diogenes</i>,
that he trampled on <i>Plato’s</i> Pride with greater of his own.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="x-p2.1">Nor</span> is this injury enhanced
only by the refinement of the sufferer, but also by the way of inflicting
it. We generally think those are
the severest marks of infamy, which are the most indelible. To be burnt in the hand or pilloried,
is a more lasting reproach than to be scourged or confined; and it is the same
in this case, for here commonly Wit is the Lictor, which is armed with an edged
tool, and leaves scars behind it. The reproach of rage and fury seem to be writ in Chalk or Lead, which a
dispassionate hearer easily wipes out, but those of Wit are like the engraver’s
burn upon copper, or the corrodings of Aquafortis, engrave and indent the
Characters that they can never be defaced. The truth of this daily experience attests. A dull contumely quickly vanishes,
nobody thinking it worth remembering; but when tis steeled with Wit, it pierces
deep, leaves such impressions in the fancy of the hearers, that thereby it
gets rooting in the memory, and will scarce be eradicated: nay, sometimes it
happens to survive both speaker and hearer, and conveys itself to posterity; it
being not unusual for the sarcasms of Wit to be transmitted in story. And as it thus gives an edge, so also
does it add wings to a reproach, makes it fly abroad in an instant. Many a poor man’s infirmities had been
confined to the notice of a few relations or neighbors, had not some remarkable
strain of drollery scattered and dispersed them. The jest recommends the Defamation, and is commonly so
incorporate with it, that they cannot be related apart. And even those who like it not in one
respect, yet are many time so transported with it in the other, that they choose
rather to propagate the contumely, than stifle the conceit. Indeed, Wit is so much the <i>Diana</i>
of this age, that he who goes about to set any bounds to it must expect an <i>uproar, </i>
<scripRef passage="Acts 19. 28" id="x-p2.2" parsed="|Acts|19|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.19.28">Acts 19. 28</scripRef>. or at least to be judged to have imposed an envious inhibition on
it, because himself has not stock enough to maintain the trade. But however sharp or unexpected the
censure may be, yet tis necessary that plain, downright truth should sometimes
be spoken, and I think that will bear me out, if I say, tis possible men may be
as oppressive by their parts, as their power; and that God did no more design
the meaner intellectuals of some for triumphs to the Pride and vanity of the
more acute, than he did the possessions of the less powerful, as a prey to the
rapine and avarice of the mighty.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="x-p3.1">And</span> this suggests a yet farther
aggravation of this sin, as it is a perverting of God’s design, and abuse of
the talent he has committed to men in trust. Ingenuity and quickness of parts, is sure to be reckoned in
the highest ranks of Blessings, an instrument proper for the most excellent
purposes: and therefore we cannot suppose the Divine wisdom, so much short of
Human, as not in His intention to assign it to uses worthy of it. Those must relate either to God,
ourselves, or our neighbors. In
respect of God, it renders us more capable of contemplating His Perfections,
discerning the Equity and excellence of his Laws, and our obligations to
obedience. In regard of ourselves,
it makes us apprehend our own interest in that obedience; makes us tractable
and persuadable, contrary to that Brutish stubbornness of the Horse and Mule,
which the Psalmist reproaches, <scripRef passage="Psa. 32. 9" id="x-p3.2" parsed="|Ps|32|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.32.9">Psa. 32. 9</scripRef>. Besides it accommodates us in all the concerns of Human
life, forms itself into all those useful contrivances, which may make our being
here more comfortable: especially it renders a man company to himself, and in
the greatest dearth of Society, entertains him with his own thoughts. Lastly, as to our neighbors, it renders
us useful and assistant. All those
discoveries and experiments, those Arts and Science, which are now the common
treasure of the world, took their first rise from the ingenuity of particular
Persons: and in all Personal exigencies wherein any of us are at any time
involved, we need not be told the usefulness of a wise adviser. Now all these are employments
commensurable to the faculty from whence they flow, and that answer its
excellence and value; and he that so bestows his talent, gives a good account
of this trust. But I would fain
know under which of these Heads Derision of our Neighbors comes in: certainly
not under that of being assistant to him. It would be a sorry relief to a poor indigent wretch, to lavish out wit
upon him, in upbraiding of his misery. And is not this a parallel case? Is it not the same Barbarism, to mock and reproach a man that wants the
gifts of Nature, as him that wants those of Fortune? Nay, perhaps it may be more, for a Beggar may have
impoverished himself by his own fault, but in Natural defects there is nothing
to be charged, unless we will fly higher, and arraign, that Providence that
hath so dispensed. In a word, as
the Superfluities of the Rich are by God assigned as the store-house of the
poor, so the Abilities of the Wise are of the ignorant: for tis a great
mistake, to think ourselves Stewards in some of God’s gifts, and proprietors in
others. They are all equally to be
employed, according to the designation of the Donor, and there is nothing more
universally designed by him, than that mankind should be equally helpful to one
another. Those therefore, whom God
hath blessed with higher degrees of sagacity and quickness, ought not to look
down on others as the objects of their contempt or scorn, but rather of their
care and pity, endeavoring to rescue them from those mischiefs, to which their
weakness may expose them, remembering still, that God might have changed the
Scene, and made themselves what they see others. It is part of <i>Job’s</i> justification of his integrity,
that <i>he was eyes to the Blind, and feet to the Lame, </i><scripRef passage="Job 29. 25" id="x-p3.3" parsed="|Job|29|25|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Job.29.25">Job 29. 25</scripRef>. (<i>i.e.</i>)
he accommodated his assistances to all the wants and exigencies of others: and
sure tis no less the part of a good man to do it in the Mental than in the
Corporal defects.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="x-p4.1">But</span> alas, many of us would
rather put a stumbling block in the way of the Blind, pull away the Crutch from
the Lame, that we may sport ourselves to see them tumble: such a sensuality we
have in observing and improving the imperfections of others, that it is become
the grand excellence of the Age to be Dexterous at it, and Wit serves some men
for little else. We are got indeed
into a merry world, Laughing is our main business; as if because it has been
made part of the Definition of man, that he is Risible, his man-hood consisted
in nothing else. But alas, if that
be all the use men have of their understandings, they were given them to little
purpose, since mere Idiots can laugh with as much pleasure and more innocence
than they; and it is a great instance how extremes may be brought to meet, that
the excess of Wit in the one, and of Folly in the other, serve but to produce
the same effect.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="x-p5.1">Yet</span> so voracious is this humor
now grown, that it draws in everything to feed it. There is not game enough from the real folly of the world,
and therefore, that which is the most distant from it must be stamped with its
mark. Tis a known story of the
Friar who on a fasting day bid his Capon be Carp, and then very canonically ate
it; and by such a transubstantiating power our Wits bid all seriousness and
consideration be formality and foppery, and then under that name endeavor to
hunt it out of the world. I fear
moral honesty fares not better with some of them than moral prudence. The old Philosophical virtues of
Justice, Temperance, and Chastity are now hissed off the stage, as fit only for
that Antiquated set of Actors; and he that appears in that equipage, is by many
thought more ridiculous than he that walks the street in his Ancestor’s trunk
hose. Nay indeed, vice itself is
scarce secure if it have not the grand accomplishment of impudence: a puny
blushing sinner is to be laughed out of his Modesty, though not out of his sin;
and to be proof against their scorns, he must first be so against all the
regrets of his own mind.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="x-p6.1">And</span> if mere Ethic virtue, or
shame-faced vice have this treatment, Christian piety must expect worse: and so
indeed, it finds its professors being, beyond all others, exposed to their
scorn and contempt. Nor is it
strange it should be so, such men being <i>made, </i>as it is <scripRef passage="Wisd. 2. 14" id="x-p6.2" parsed="|Wis|2|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Wis.2.14">Wisd. 2. 14</scripRef>.<i> to
reprove their ways, </i>they think in their own defense they are to deride
theirs. This is it indeed, which
gives a secret sting and venom to their reproaches: other men they abuse as an
exercise of their Wit but these in defense of the party. So <i>Julian</i> after his Apostasy,
thought it a more effectual way to persecute the Christians by taunts and
ironies than by racks and tortures, as thinking it more possible to shame than
fright them out of their religion. And the stratagem seems to have been reassumed by many in this age, and
I fear with too great success: for I doubt not there are divers who have herded
themselves amongst these profane Scoffers, not that they are convinced by their
reasons, but terrified by their contumelies; and as some Indians are said to
worship the Devil, that he may not hurt them; so these choose to be active,
that they may not be passive in the contempts flung upon religion: such men
forget the dreadful denunciation of Christ against those that shall <i>be
ashamed of Him and His words. </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 8. 38" id="x-p6.3" parsed="|Matt|8|38|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.8.38">Matt. 8. 38</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="x-p7.1">As</span> for those who, upon a
juster estimate, find the advantages of piety worthy to be chosen, and take it
with all its accessory ignominies, they have the encouragement of very good
company in their sufferings. The
Psalmist long ago had his share, when not only <i>Those that sat in the gate
spake against him, but the drunkards made songs upon him, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 69. 12" id="x-p7.2" parsed="|Ps|69|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.69.12">Psa. 69. 12</scripRef>. Twas also the Prophet <i>Jeremiah’s</i>
complaint, <i>I am in Derision daily, everyone mocketh at me, </i><scripRef passage="Jer. 20. 7" id="x-p7.3" parsed="|Jer|20|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jer.20.7">Jer. 20. 
7</scripRef>. Nay, our blessed Lord himself
was derided in his life by the Pharisees, <scripRef passage="Luke 16. 14" id="x-p7.4" parsed="|Luke|16|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.16.14">Luke 16. 14</scripRef>. mocked and reviled at
His death by the Priests, the Elders, the Soldiers, nay, by casual passengers, 
<scripRef passage="Matt. 27. 39" id="x-p7.5" parsed="|Matt|27|39|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.39">Matt. 27. 39</scripRef>. And shall the <i>servant
think himself</i> <i>greater than his Lord</i>? Shall a Christian expect an immunity from what his Savior
has borne before him? (He that
does so, is too delicate a member for a crucified head.) No, sure let us rather animate
ourselves, as the Apostle exhorts, by <i>considering Him who</i> as well <i>despised
the shame, </i>as<i> endured the cross for us, </i><scripRef passage="Heb. 12. 3" id="x-p7.6" parsed="|Heb|12|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.3">Heb. 12. 3</scripRef>. and who has not
only given an example, but proposed a reward, a Beatitude to those who are <i>reviled
for righteousness sake, </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 5. 11" id="x-p7.7" parsed="|Matt|5|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.11">Matt. 5. 11</scripRef>. And when this is soberly pondered, twill sure make it easy for us to
resolve with holy <i>David</i> in a like case, <i>I will yet be more vile, </i><scripRef passage="2 Sam. 6. 22" id="x-p7.8" parsed="|2Sam|6|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.6.22">2 Sam. 6. 22</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="x-p8.1">But</span> to return from this
digression to those who thus unhappily employ their parts, let me propose to
them, that they would borrow every day some few minutes from their mirth, and
seriously consider whether this be (I need not say a Christian, but) a manly
exercise of their faculties. Alas,
when they have rallied out the day from one company to another, they may sum up
their account at night in the wise man’s simile, their <i>Laughter has been but
like the crackling of Thorns under a pot, </i><scripRef passage="Ecclus. 6. 7" id="x-p8.2" parsed="|Sir|6|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Sir.6.7">Ecclus. 6. 7</scripRef>. made a little brisk
noise for the present, and with the sparkles perhaps annoyed their Neighbors,
but what real good has it brought to themselves? All that they can fancy is but the repute of Wit: but sure
that might be attainable some other way. We find the world affected to new things, and this of Derision and abuse
to others is so beaten a road, that perhaps the very variety of a new way would
render it acceptable. They are the
lighter substances that still swim away with the stream, the greater and more
Solid bodies do sometimes stop the current: and sure twere a noble essay of a
man’s parts to stem this tide, and by a more useful application of their own
faculties, convince others that their might be better employed. Tis said of <i>Anacharsis, </i>that at
a feast he could not be got to smile at the affected railleries of common
Jesters, but when an ape was brought in he freely laughed, saying <i>an ape was
ridiculous by nature, but men by art and study. </i>And truly, tis a great contempt of human nature to think
their intellects were given them for no better end, than to raise that laughter
which a brute can do as well or better.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p9">9. I <span class="sc" id="x-p9.1">Would</span> not be thought to recommend
such a Stoical sourness, as shall admit of nothing of the cheerful, pleasant
part of Conversation. God has not
sure been more rigid to our Minds than to our Bodies: and as He has not so
devoted the one to toil, but that He allows us some time to exercise them in
recreation as well as labors, so doubtless He indulges the same relaxation to
our Minds: which are not always to be screwed up to the height, but allowed to
descend to those easinesses of Converse, which entertain the lower Faculties of
the Soul. Nor do I think those are
all employed in those little skirmishes of Wit, which pass familiarly between
intimates and acquaintances, which besides the present divertissement, serve to
whet and quicken the Fancy. Yet I
conceive this liberty is to be bounded with some Cautions: as first in these
encounters, the Charge should be Powder not Bullets; there should nothing be
said, that should leave any ungrateful impressions, or give any umbrage of a
spiteful intent. The world wants
not experiments of the mischiefs have happened by too severe Railleries: in
such Fencings jest has proven earnest, and Florets have often turned to Swords,
and not only the Friendship, but the Men have fallen a Sacrifice to a Jest.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="x-p10.1">Secondly</span>, this is to have the same
restriction with all other recreations, that it be made a divertissement, not a
trade. Tis an insinuating thing,
and is apt to encroach too much upon our time, and God knows we have a great
deal of business for this world, and much more for the next, which will not be
done with laughing: and therefore, tis not for us to play away too much of that
time, which is exacted by more serious concerns. Tis sure we shall die in Earnest, and it will not become us,
to live altogether in Jest. But
besides this stealth of our time, tis apt to steal away men’s hearts too, make
them dote so upon this kind of entertainment, that it averts them from anything
more serious. I believe I may
appeal to some who have made this their business, whether it go not against the
hair with them to set to anything else, and having espoused this as their one
excellence, they are willing to decry all others, that they may the more value
themselves upon this. By this
means it is, that the gift of Raillery has in this Age, like the lean Kine,
devoured all the more solid worthy qualifications, and is counted the most
reputable accomplishment. A
strange, inverted estimate, thus to prefer the little ebullitions of Wit before
solid reason and judgment. If they
would accommodate either Diet at the same rate, they should eat the Husk,
rather than the Kernel, and drink nothing but froth and bubbles. But after all, Wisdom is commonly at
long running justified even of her Despisers; these great Idolaters of Wit
often dashing themselves upon such Rocks, as make them too late wish their Sails
had been less, and their Ballast more. For the preventing, therefore, of more such wrecks, I wish the present
caution may be more adverted to, not to bestow an unproportionable part of our
time or value on this slight exercise of man’s slightest Faculty.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p11">11. A <span class="sc" id="x-p11.1">Third</span> Caution
in this matter, is to confine ourselves to present Company, not to make absent
Persons the Subject of our mirth. Those freedoms we use to a man’s face, as they are commonly more
moderate, so they are more equitable, because we expose ourselves to the like
from him; but the back blows are disingenuous, and give suspicion we intend not
a fair trial of Wit, but a cowardly murder of a man’s fame. Twas the precept of the Philosopher, <i>Deride
not the absent, </i>and I think it may well be so of the Politician: there
being nothing more imprudent as to our civil concerns than the contrary
liberty. For those things never
die in the company they are first vented in (nay, perhaps the hearer is not
willing his wit should so soon expire;) and when they once take air, they
quickly come to the notice of the derided Person, and then nothing in the world
is more disobliging. Twas a sober
precept given one, not so much as to laugh in compliance with him that derides
another, for you will be hated by him he derides. And if an accessory be hated, sure much more the principal:
and I think I may say, there are many can sooner forgive a solemn deep
contrivance against them, than one of their jocular reproaches: for he that
designs seems to acknowledge them considerable, but he that mocks them, seems
to think them too low for anything but contempt: and we learn from Aristotle,
that the measure of anger is entirely taken thence, men being so far provoked,
as they imagine they were slighted or affronted. In mere secular wisdom it will therefore become men to
consider, whether this trade be like to turn to account; or whether it be worth
the while, at once to make a jest and an enemy.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p12">12. <span class="sc" id="x-p12.1">And</span> if it be imprudent to make
man our enemy, tis much more to make God so, by leveling our blows at anything
sacred: but of that I have already had occasion to speak, and shall not repeat;
only give me leave to say, that besides the profaner sorts of jests, which more
immediately reflect on Him, He is concerned in all the unjust reproaches of our
brethren, our love to them being confirmed by the same divine Sanction with our
reverence to Him: and sure nothing is more inconsistent with that love, than
the exposing them to that contempt we are ourselves impatient of. In a word, what repute soever this
practice now has of Wit, it is very far from wisdom to provoke God that we may
also disoblige man: and if we will take the Scripture estimate, we shall find a
Scorner is no such honorable Epithet as we seem to account it. <i>Solomon</i> does almost constantly
set it in opposition to a Wise man: thus it is, <scripRef passage="Prov. 9. 8" id="x-p12.2" parsed="|Prov|9|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.9.8">Prov. 9. 8</scripRef>. and again <scripRef passage="Proverbs 13:1" id="x-p12.3" parsed="|Prov|13|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.13.1">Chap. 13. 
1</scripRef>. and many other places; and on the other side, closely links it with the
Fool: and that not only in title, but in punishment too, <i>Judgments are
prepared for scorners, and stripes for the backs of fools, </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 19. 29" id="x-p12.4" parsed="|Prov|19|29|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.19.29">Prov. 19. 
29</scripRef>. So that if our Wits think not <i>Solomon</i>
too dull for their Cabal, we see what a turn he will give to their present
verdict.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p13">13. <span class="sc" id="x-p13.1">And</span> if these reproaches which
aim also at ostentation of Wit, be so unjustifiable, what shall we say to those
that are drawn with blacker lines, that are founded in Malice and Envy, or some
undermining design? Every man that
is to be supplanted cannot always be attacked with a downright battery: perhaps
his integrity may be such, that, as twas said of <i>Daniel, </i><scripRef passage="Daniel 6:4" id="x-p13.2" parsed="|Dan|6|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Dan.6.4">Chap. 6. 4</scripRef>.<i> they
can find no occasion against him</i>: and when they cannot shake the main Fort,
they must try if they can possess themselves of the out-works, raise some
prejudice against his discretion, his humor, his carriage, and his most
extrinsic adherents, and if by representing him ridiculous in any of these they
can but abate men’s reverence to him, their confidence of him will not long
hold out; bare honesty without some other adornment, being looked on as a
leafless tree, nobody will trust himself to its shelter. Thus the enemies of <i>Socrates</i>,
when they could no otherways suppress his reputation, hired <i>Aristophanes</i>,
a Comic Poet, to personate him on the stage, and by the insinuations of those
interludes, insensibly conveyed first a contempt, then a hatred of him into the
hearts of the people. But I need
not bring instances of former times in this matter, these being sufficiently
versed in that mystery.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p14">14. <span class="sc" id="x-p14.1">It</span> is not strange that men of
such designs, should summon all their Wit to the service, make their Railleries
as picquant as they can, that they may wound the deeper: but methinks tis but a
mean office they assign their Wit, to be (I will not say the Pander, that being
in this age scarce a title of Reproach but) the executioner or hangman to their
malice. Christ bids us <i>be wise
as Serpents, </i>yet adds withal <i>harmless as Doves, </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 10. 18" id="x-p14.2" parsed="|Matt|10|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.10.18">Matt. 10. 18</scripRef>. But
here the Serpent has quite eat up the Dove, and puts a Vulture in the place, a
creature of such sagacity and diligence in pursuit of the prey, that tis hard
for any art or innocence to escape its talons.</p>

<p class="normal" id="x-p15">15. <span class="sc" id="x-p15.1">There</span> is yet another sort of
Contumelious Persons, who indeed are not chargeable with that circumstance, of
ill employing their Wit, for they use none in it. These are people whose sole talent is Pride and Scorn; who
perhaps have attained the Sciences of dressing themselves finely, and eating
well, and upon the strength of those excellencies, look fastidiously, and
disdainfully on any who want them, concluding if a man fall short of their
Garniture at the Knees and Elbows, he is much inferior to them in the furniture
of the Head. Such people think
crying, <i>O Ridiculous</i>! is an ample Confutation of anything can be said,
and so they can but despise enough, are contented not to be able to say why
they do so. These are I confess,
the most innocent kind of Deriders in respect of others, what they say having
not edge enough to cause any smart. The greatest hurt they do is to themselves, who though they much need,
yet are generally little capable of a rescue, and therefore I shall not clog
the present discourse with any advice to them: I shall choose rather to
conclude with enforcing my Suit to the former, that they would soberly and
sadly weigh the account they must one Day give of the Employment of their
Parts, and the more they have hitherto to embezzled them, the more to endeavor
to expiate that Unthriftiness, by a more careful Managery for the future; that
so instead of that vain, empty, vanishing Mirth they have courted here, they
may find a real, full, and eternal Satisfaction in the Joy of their Lord.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 8: Of Flattery" progress="60.85%" id="xi" prev="x" next="xii">
<h2 id="xi-p0.1">Section VIII. <br />
Of Flattery.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p1"> <span class="sc" id="xi-p1.1">The</span> last
of Verbal injuries to our Neighbor which I shall mention, is Flattery. This is indeed the fatalest wound of
the Tongue, carries least Smart, but infinitely more of Danger, and is as much
superior to the former, as a Gangrene is to a Gall or Scratch; this may be sore
and vexing, but that stupifying and deadly. Flattery is such a Mystery, such a Riddle of iniquity, that
its very softnesses are its cruelest rigor, its Balm corrodes, and (to comprise
all in the Psalmist’s excellent Description) <i>its words are smoother than
oil, and yet be they very swords. </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 56. 21" id="xi-p1.2" parsed="|Ps|56|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.56.21">Psa. 56. 21</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="xi-p2.1">But</span> besides the mischiefs of it to the
Patient, tis the most dishonoring, the most vilifying thing to the Agent. I shall not need to empanel a Jury
either of Moralists or Divines, every man’s own breast sufficiently instructing
him in the unworthiness of it. Tis
indeed a Collective, accumulative Baseness, its being in its Elements a
compound and a complex of the most sordid, hateful qualities incident to
Mankind. I shall instance in three
<i>viz. </i>Lying, Servility, and Treachery, which being detestably deformed
single must in conjunction make up a loathsome Monstrous guilt. Now, though Flattery has two Branches,
yet these lie so at the Root as equally to influence both: for whether you take
it as it is the giving of praise where it is not due, or the professing of
kindness which is not real, these Properties are still is Constitutive parts.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="xi-p3.1">And</span> first we may take Lying to
be the very corner Stone of the Fabric; for take it away, and the Whole falls
to the ground. A Parasite would
make but a lean trade of it, that should confine himself to truth. For though tis possible so to order the
manner and circumstances, as to flatter even in the representing a man’s real
virtues to him, yet commonly if they do not falsify as to the kind, they are
forced to do it as to the degree. Besides, as there are but few such subjects of Flattery, so neither are
men of that Worth so receptive of it. Such sort of addresses are less dangerous to those who have the
perspicuity to see through them: so that these Merchants are under a necessity
of dealing with the more ignorant Chapmen, and with them their counterfeit wares
will go off best. It is indeed
strange to consider, with what gross impudent falsehoods men of this trade will
court their Patrons. How many in
former ages have not only amassed together all sublunary excellencies, but have
even ransacked heaven to supply their Flattery, Deified their Princes, and
persuaded them they were gods, who at last found <i>they were to die like men</i>? And though this strain be not
out-dated, yet perhaps tis not that the vice is grown more modest, but that
Atheism has robbed it of that Topic. Those that believe no God, would rather seem to annihilate than magnify
the person to whom they should apply the title. But I do not find that the practice has any other
bounds. A great man’s vices shall
still be called virtues, his deformities beauties, and his most absurd follies
the height of ingenuity. Such a
subtle Alchemist is this Parasite, that he turns all he touches into gold,
imaginary indeed as to the deluded Person, but oft-times real to himself. Nor is Lying less natural to the other
part of Flattery, the Profession of service and kindness. This needs no evidencing, and to
attempt it would be a self-Confutation: for if those Professions be true, they
are not Flattery, therefore, if they be Flattery, they must needs be Lies. It will be almost as needless to
expatiate on the Baseness and meanness of that sin; for though there is no
Subject that affords more matter for Declamation, yet Lying is a thing that is
ashamed of itself, and therefore may well be remitted to its own convictions. Tis <i>Aristotle’s</i> observation,
that all Elements but the Earth, had some Philosopher or other, that gave it
his vote to be the first productive Principle of all things: and I think we may
now say, that all Crimes have had their Abettors and fautors, somebody that
would stand up in their defense; only Lying is so much the dregs and refuse of
wickedness, that none had yet had Chemistry enough to sublimate it, to bring it
into such a reputation, that any man will think fit to own it: the greater wonder
that what is under so universal a reproach, should be so commonly admitted in
practice. But by this we may make
an estimate, what the whole body of Flattery is, when in one limb of it we find
so much corruption.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p4">4. A <span class="sc" id="xi-p4.1">Second</span> is Servility and Abjectness
of humor: and of this there needs no other proof than has been already given;
this charge being implicitly involved in the former of Lying, the condescending
to that, being a mark of a disingenuous spirit. And accordingly, the nobler Heathens looked on it as the
vice of Slaves and vassals, below the liberty of a free man, as well as an
honest. But though I need no other
evidence to make good the accusation, yet every Sycophant furnishes me with
many supernumerary proofs. Look
upon such a one, and you shall see his eyes immovably fixed on his Patron’s
face, watching each look, each glance, and in every change of his countenance
(like a Star-gazer) reading his own destiny, his Ears chained (like
galley-slaves at the oar) to his dictate, sucking in the most insipid
discourses with as much greediness as if they were the Apothegms of the seven
Sages, his Tongue turned only to Panegyrics and acclamations, his feet in
winged motion upon every nod or other signification of his pleasure: in a word,
his whole body (as if it had not other animal spirits than what it derived from
him) varies its postures, its exercises, as he finds agreeable to the humor he
is to serve. And can humanity
contrive to debase itself more? Yes it can, and does too often, by enslaving its Diviner part too,
taking up not only opinions, but even crimes also in compliance, playing the
incarnate Devil, and helping to act those villainies which Satan can only
suggest: and if this be not a state of abject slavery, sure there is none in
the world. <i>Plutarch</i> tells
us, that <i>Philoxenus</i> for despising some dully Poetry of <i>Dionysius</i>,
was by him condemned to dig in the quarries: from whence being by the mediation
of friends remanded, at his return <i>Dionysius</i> produced some other of his
verses, which as soon as <i>Philoxenus</i> had read, he made no reply, but
calling to the waiters, said, <i>Let them carry me again to the quarries. </i>And if a heathen Poet could prefer a
corporeal slavery before a mental, what name of reproach is low enough for
them, who can submit to both, in pursuit of those poor sordid advantages they
project by their Flatteries. Nor
is this baseness more observable in these mean fawnings and observances, than
it is in the protestations of kindness and Friendship. Love is the greatest gift any man has
to bestow, and Friendship the sacredest of all moral bonds: and to prostitute
these to little pitiful designs, is sure one of the basest cheats we can put
upon our common nature, in thus debasing her purest and most current coin,
which by these frequent adulterations is become so Suspected, that scarce any
man knows what he receives. But
Christian Charity is yet worse used in this case: for that obliging to all
sincerity, is hereby induced to give gold for dross, exhibit that <i>Love
indeed and in truth, </i>which is returned only <i>in word and in Tongue, </i><scripRef passage="1 John 3. 18" id="xi-p4.2" parsed="|1John|3|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1John.3.18">1 
John 3. 18</scripRef>. And so it does in
those who observe its rules: but in those who own, yet observe them not, tis
yet a greater sufferer, by laboring under the scandal of all their
dissimulations. It was one the Character
give Christians, even by their Enemies, <i>Behold, how they love one another</i>:
but God knows we may now be pointed out by a very differing mark, <i>Behold,
how they deceive and delude one another. </i>And sure this violation we herein offer to our religion, does
not allay but aggravate the baseness of this practice: for if in the other we
fell ourselves, in this we fell our God too, sacrifice our interest in Him to
get a surreptitious title to the favor of a man. And this, I conceive, does in the second place not much
commend the Art of Flattery, which is built up of so vile materials.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="xi-p5.1">And</span> to complete this infamous
composition, in the third place Treachery comes in; a crime of so odious a
kind, that to name it is to implead it: yet how intrinsic a part this is of
Flattery, will need no great skill to evidence, daily experience sufficiently
doing it. Tis a common observation
of Flatterers, that they are like the Heliotrope, open only towards the sun,
but shut and contract themselves at night, and in cloudy weather. Let the object of their adoration be
but eclipsed, they can see none of those excellencies which before dazzled
their eyes: and how ever inconstant they may seem to others, they are indeed
very constant to themselves, true to their fixed principle, of courting the
greatness not the man; in pursuit whereof their old Idol is often made a
sacrifice to their new: all malicious discovery is made of their falling
friend, to buy an interest in the rising one. Of this there are such crowds of examples in Story, that it
would be impertinent to single out any, especially in an age that is fitter to
furnish presidents for the future, than to borrow of the past times. But supposing the Parasite not actually
guilty of this base revolt, (which yet he seldom fails to be upon occasion) yet
is he no less Treacherous even in the height of his Blandishments; and while he
most courts a man, he does the most ruinously undermine him. For first he abuses him in his understanding,
precludes him form that which wise men have judged the most essential part of
Learning, the knowledge of himself, from which tis the main business of the
Flatterer to divert him. And to
this abuse there is another inevitably consequent: for this ignorance of his
faults or follies, necessarily condemns him to the continuing in them, it being
impossible for him to think of correcting either the one or the other, who is
made believe he has neither. This
is like the treachery of a bribed officer in a Garrison, who will not let the
weak parts be fortified, and lays the man as open to assaults, as that doth the
Town. Yet this is not all, he does
not only provide for the continuance, but the improving of his crimes and
errors, which alas, are too prolific of themselves, but being cultivated and
manured with perpetual soothings and encouragements, grow immeasurably
luxuriant. And accordingly, we see
that men used only to applauses are so fooled with them that their insolences
are intolerable. And this they are
sometimes taught to their cost, when they happen among free men, who will not
submit to all they say, nor commend all they do. And finding these uneasy contradictions when they come
abroad, they are willing to return to their most complaisant company: and so
this Sycophant Devil having once got them within his circle, may enchant them
as he pleases, lead them from one wickedness to another. And as <i>Caligula</i> and other
voluptnous Emperors, by being adored as gods, sunk in their sensuality below
the Nature of man, so these celebrated Persons are by that false veneration
animated to all those reproachful practices, which may expose them to a real
contempt: their follies, as well as their vices still get had, till they answer
the description the Wise man give of the old Giants, <i>Who fell away in the strength
of their foolishness. </i><scripRef passage="Ecclus. 16. 7" id="xi-p5.2" parsed="|Sir|16|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Sir.16.7">Ecclus. 16. 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="xi-p6.1">And</span> sure he that betrays a man
to all these mischiefs, may well be thought perfidious. But that which infinitely amplifies and
enhances the Treachery is, that all this is acted under the notion and disguise
of a friend; a relation so venerable, that methinks tis the nearest secular
transcript of the treason, which is storied of those who have administered
Poison in the Eucharist. The Name
of a friend is such an endearment, as nothing human can equal. All other natural or civil ties take
their greatest force from this. What signifies an unfriendly Parent, or Brother, or Wife? Tis friendship only that is the cement
which really and effectively combines mankind: and therefore we may observe,
that God reckoning up other relations, illustrates them by several notes of
endearment, but when he come to that of friendship, tis <i>the friend who is as
thine own soul, </i><scripRef passage="Deut. 13. 6" id="xi-p6.2" parsed="|Deut|13|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Deut.13.6">Deut. 13. 6</scripRef>. nothing below the highest instance was thought
expressive enough of that union. What a Legion of Fiends then possesseth man that can break these chains, 
<scripRef passage="Matt. 5. 4" id="xi-p6.3" parsed="|Matt|5|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.4">Matt. 5. 4</scripRef>. nay, that can hammer and forge those very chains into Daggers and
Stilettos, and make their friendship an engine of ruin? This is certainly the blackest color
wherein we can view a Parasite, his false light makes the shadow the more
dismal: as the Ape has a peculiar deformity above other brutes by that awkward
and ungraceful resemblance he has to a man, so sure a Flatterer is infinitely
the more hateful for being the ugly counterfeit of a Friend. And as this Treachery lies at the
bottom of the Panegyrics, so also does it of all the caresses and exuberant
kindness of a Flatterer, which if they aimed not at any particular end of
circumvention must yet in the general be Treacherous by being false. A man looks on the love of his friend
as one of the riches possessions (upon which account the Philosopher thought
friends were to be inventoried as well as goods.) What a defeat and discomfiture is it to a man, when he comes
to use this wealth, to find it all false metal, such as will not answer any of
those purposes of which he depended on it. There cannot sure be a greater Treachery, than first to
raise a confidence and then deceive it. But besides this fundamental falseness, there are also many incidental
Treacheries, which fall in upon occasion of particular designs. A pretence of kindness is the universal
stale to all base projects: by this men are robbed of their fortunes, and women
of their honor: in a word all the wolfish designs walk under this sheep’s
clothing, and as the world goes, men have more need to beware of those who call
themselves friends, than those who own themselves enemies.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="xi-p7.1">These</span> are those lineaments of
this vice of Flattery, which sure do together make up a face of most extreme
deformity. I might upon a true
account add another, and charge it with Folly too. I am sure according to the Divine estimate it is always so:
and truly it does not seldom prove so in the secular also. Men of this art do sometimes drop their
vizard before they have got the prize, and then there is nothing in the world
that appears so contemptible, so silly; a barefaced Flatterer being everybody’s
scorn. The short is, wherever this
game is played there is always a fool in the case: if the Parasite be detected,
it falls to his share: if he be not, to his whom he deludes. But at the best tis but subtlety and
cunning he can boast of; and if he can in his own fancy raise that to the
opinion of true wisdom, tis a sign he is come round to practice his deceits
upon himself, and is as much his own Flatterer as he has been others.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="xi-p8.1">And</span> now I know not whether it
be more shame or wonder, to see that men can so put off ingenuity, and the
native greatness of their kind, as to descend to so base, so ignoble a vice:
yet alas, we daily see it done, and not only by the scum and refuse of the
people, such as <i>Job</i> speaks of, who are viler than the earth. Chap. 30.
8. but by Persons of all conditions. Flattery, like a spring forced upward ascends, as cares are by the wise
man said to descend, <scripRef passage="Ecclus. 40. 4" id="xi-p8.2" parsed="|Sir|40|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Sir.40.4">Ecclus. 40. 4</scripRef>.<i> from him that weareth a linen frock to
him that weareth a crown</i>: all intermedial degrees are but like pipes, which
as they suck from below, so transmit it still upwards. There are few so low but find somebody
to cajole and Flatter them. Some
interest or other may sometimes be to be served even upon the meanest, and those
that fine themselves thus solicited for benefits, are easily taught by it how
to address to their immediate superiors, from whom they expect greater: and as
tis thus handed from one rank to another, the art still is more subtilized and
refined. (God help poor Princes
the while, who commonly meet with the Elixir, and quintessence of this
venom.) And thus it passes through
all states and conditions: as they are passive on the one side, and are
Flattered by some, so they are active on the other, and Flatter others.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p9">9. I <span class="sc" id="xi-p9.1">Say</span> all conditions, I do not
say all Persons in those conditions, for no truly generous soul can stoop so
low: but tis too evident to what a low ebb Generosity as well as Christianity
is grown, by the numbers of those who thus degrade themselves, every little
petty interest being thought worth these base submissions. And truly, it is hard to find by what
Topic of persuasion to assault such men. The meanness, or the sin will scarce be dissuasives to those who have
reconciled themselves to both: if anything can be pertinently said to them, it
must be upon the score of Interest, for that being their grand principle, they
can with no pretence disclaim the inferences drawn thence.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="xi-p10.1">Let</span> them therefore, duly
balance the advantages they project from this practice with the mischiefs and
dangers of it. What they expect is
commonly either Honor or wealth, these they hope may be acquired by their
prostrations to those who can dispense or procure them. Tis true, as Honor signifies Greatness
and power, it is sometimes attained by it, but then as it signifies Reputation
and esteem, tis as sure to be lost. He that thus ascends, may be looked on with fear, but never with
reverence. Now I think tis no good
bargain to exchange this second notion of Honor for the first, for besides the
difference in the intrinsic value, tis to be considered how tottering a
Pinnacle unmerited Greatness is. He that raised him to satisfy his humor at one time, can (with more ease
and equal justice) throw him down at another: and when such a man does fall, he
falls without pity, so without remedy, has no foundation on which to rebuild
his fortune. His Sycophanting arts
being detected, that Game is not to be played the second time: whereas a man of
a clear reputation, though his barque be split, yet he saves his Cargo, has
something left towards setting up again, and so is in capacity of receiving
benefit not only from his own industry, but the friendship of others. A sound piece of Timber, if it be not
thought fit for one use, yet will be laid by for another: and an honest man
will probably at one time or other be thought good for something.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p11">11. <span class="sc" id="xi-p11.1">As</span> for the other aim, that of
Wealth, tis very possible that may sometimes be compassed; and well it may, the
Flatterer having several Springs to feed it by. For he that has a great Patron, has the advantage of his
countenance and Authority, he has that of his bounty and liberality, and he has
another (sometimes greater than both) that of his negligence and
deceivablenesss. But yet all these
acquisition are may times like Fairy money, what is brought one night, is taken
away the next. Men of this mold
seldom know how to bear prosperity temperately, and it is no new thing to see a
Privado carry it so high, as to awaken the jealousy of his promoter, which
being assisted by the busy industry of those who envy his fortune, twill be
easy enough to find some flaw in his Gettings, by which to unravel the whole
Web: an event that has been oft experimented not only in the private managery of
Families, but in the most public administrations. And these are such hazards, that laid altogether would much
recommend to any the Moral of <i>Horaces’s</i> Fable, and make one choose the
country Mouse’s plain fare and safety, rather tan the delicacies of the City
with so much danger. This then is
the state of the prosperous Parasite: but alas, how many are there who never
arrive to this but are kicked down ere they have climbed the two or three first
rounds of the Ladder, whose designs be so humble, as not to aspire above a
Major-Domo or some such domestic preferment, for in this trade there are
adventurers of all sizes? But upon
all these considerations, methinks it appears no very inviting one to any. At the long run an honest freedom of
speech will more recommend a man, than all these sneaking flatteries: we have a
very wise man’s word for it, <i>he that rebuketh a man afterwards shall find
more favor, than he that flattereth with his lips. </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 28. 23" id="xi-p11.2" parsed="|Prov|28|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.28.23">Prov. 28. 23</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p12">12. <span class="sc" id="xi-p12.1">But</span> after all that hath or can
be said, the suppression of Flattery will most depend upon those Persons to
whom it is addressed: if it be not repulsed there, nothing else will discourage
it, and if it be, tis crushed in the egg, and can produce no viper. These Vultures prey only on carcasses,
on such stupid minds, as have not life and vigor enough to fray them away. Let but Persons of quality entertain
such customers with a severe brow, with some smart expression of dislike, those
Leeches will immediately fall off. In <i>Sparta</i> when all laws against theft proved ineffectual, at last
they fixed the penalty on them that were robbed, and by that did the business:
and in the present case, if twere made as infamous to be flattered as tis to
flatter, I believe it might have the like effect. Indeed, there is pretence enough to make it so: for first,
as to Wit, the advantage is clear on the Flatterer’s side: he must be allowed
to have more of that (which in this age is more than a counterpoise to
honesty;) and as for virtue, the balance (as to the principle motive;) seems to
hang pretty even, tis the vice of Avarice that tempts the one to Flatter, and
the vice of Pride that makes it acceptable to the other. The truth is, there is the bottom of
the matter: tis that secret confederate within that exposes men to those
assaults from without. We have
generally such an appetite to praise, that we greedily such it in without
staying to examine whether it belong to us or no, or whether it be designed as
a kindness or an abuse. Other
injuries rush upon us with violence, and give us notice of their approach: they
may be said to come <i>like water into our bowels; but this like oil into our
bones, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 109. 18" id="xi-p12.2" parsed="|Ps|109|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.109.18">Psa. 109. 18</scripRef>. penetrates easily, undiscernibly, by help of that
native propension we have to receive it. Tis therefore, the near concern of all, especially of those whose
quality most exposes them, to keep a guard upon that treacherous inmate, not to
let that step into the scale to make a base Sycophant out-weigh a true friend,
and whenever they are attacked with extravagant Encomiums, let them fortify
themselves with the Dilemma, Either they have those excellencies they are
praised for, or they have not: if they have not, tis an apparent cheat and
gull, and he is of a pitiful, forlorn understanding that delights to be fooled:
but if they have, they are too good to be exposes to such worms who will
instantly wither the fairest gourd, <scripRef passage="Jonah 4. 7" id="xi-p12.3" parsed="|Jonah|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jonah.4.7">Jonah 4. 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xi-p13"> <span class="sc" id="xi-p13.1">For</span> as it is said of the <i>Grand Signior, </i>that no grass grows where
his horse once treads: so we may say of the Flatterer, no virtue ever prospers
where he is admitted: if he finds any he hugs it till he stifles it, if he find
none, he so indisposes the soil that no future seeds can ever take root. In fine, he is a mischief beyond the
description of any Character. O
let not men then act this part to themselves by being their own Parasites! and
then twill be an easy thing to escape all others.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 9: Of Boasting" progress="70.12%" id="xii" prev="xi" next="xiii">
<h2 id="xii-p0.1">Section IX. <br />
Of Boasting.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p1"> <span class="sc" id="xii-p1.1">We</span> have
now seen some effects of an ungoverned Tongue, as they relate to God and our
Neighbor. There is yet a third
sort which reflect upon a man’s self. So unboundedly mischievous is that petulant member, that heaven and
earth are not wide enough for its range, but it will find work at home too: and
like the viper, that after it had devoured its companions, preyed upon itself,
so it corrodes inward, and becomes often as fatal to its owner, as to all the
world besides.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="xii-p2.1">Of</span> this there are as many
instances, as there are imprudent things said, for all such have the worst
reflection upon the speaker: and therefore, all that have given rules for civil
life, have in order to it, put very severe restraints upon the Tongue, that it
run not before the judgment. Twas
the advice of <i>Zeno</i> to <i>dip the tongue in the mind</i> before one
should permit it to speak. <i>Theophrastus</i>
used to say, <i>It was safer trusting to an unbridled horse, than to
intemperate speech. </i>And daily
experience confirms the Aphorism, for those that set no guard upon their
tongues are hurried by them into a thousand indecencies, and very often into
real considerable mischiefs. By
this means men have proved their own delators, discovered their own most
important secrets: and, whereas their heart should have kept a lock upon their
Tongue, they have given their Tongue the key of their heart, and the event has
been oft as unhappy as the proceeding was preposterous. There are indeed so many ways for men
to lose themselves in their talk, that I should do the like if I should pretend
to trace them. Besides, my subject
leads me not to discourse Ethically but Christianly of the faults of the
Tongue, and therefore I have all along considered the one no farther than it
happens to be twisted with the other.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="xii-p3.1">In</span> the present case I shall
insist only upon one fault of the tongue, which partakes of both kinds, and it
is at once a vice and a folly, I mean that of Boasting and vaunting a man’s
self: a strain to which some men’s tongues have a wonderful glibness. No discourse can be administered, but
they will try to turn the Tide, and draw it all into their own Channel, by
entertaining you with long stories of themselves: or if there be no room for
that, they will at least screw in here and there some intimations of what they
did or said. Yea, so stupid a
vanity is this, that it works alike upon all materials: not only their greater
and more illustrious acts or sentences, but even their most slight and trivial
occurrences, by being theirs, they think acquire a considerableness, and are
forcibly imposed upon the company; the very dreams of such people strait
commence prophesy, and are as seriously related, as if they were undoubted
revelations. And sure if we
reflect upon our Savior’s rule, that <i>Out of the abundance of the heart the
mouth speaketh, </i>we cannot but think these men are very full of themselves,
and to be so, is but another phrase of being very Proud. So, tis Pride in the heart, which is
the spring that feeds this perpetual current at the mouth, and under that
notion we are to consider it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="xii-p4.1">And</span> truly there is nothing can
render it more infamous, Pride being a vice that of all others is the most
branded in Scripture as most detestable to God, and is signalized by the
punishment to be so. This turned <i>Lucifer</i>
out of Heaven, <i>Nebuchadnezzar</i> out of his Throne, nay, out of Human
society. And indeed, it seems
still to have something of the same effect, nothing rendering a man so
inconsiderable; for it sets him above the meaner sort of company, and makes him
intolerable to the better, and to compete the parallel, he seldom comes to know
himself till he be turned a-grazing, be reduced to some extremities.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="xii-p5.1">But</span> this Boasting, arrogant
humor, though always bad, yet is more or less so according to the Subject on
which it works. If it be only on
Natural excellencies, as Beauty, Wit, or accidental acquisitions, as Honor,
Wealth, or the like, yet even here tis not only a Theft, but a Sacrilege; the
glory of those being due only to the Donor, not to the receiver, there being
not so much as any predisposition in the subject to determine God’s
bounty. He could have made the
most deformed Beggar as handsome and as rich as those who most pride themselves
in their wealth and beauty. No man
fancies himself to be his own Creator, and though some have assumed to be the
Architects of their own fortunes, yet the frequent defeats of men’s industry and
contrivance, do sufficiently confute that bold pretense, and evince that there
is something above them, which can either blast or prosper their attempts. What an invasion then is it of God’s
right, to engross the honor of those being done, which were not at all in their
power to do? And sure the folly is
as great in respect of men, as the sin is towards God. This boasting, like a heavy Nurse,
overlays the Child, the vanity of that quite drowns the notice of the things in
which tis founded; and men are not so apt to say such a man is Handsome, Wise,
or Great, as that he is proud upon the fancy of being so. In a word, he that celebrates his own
excellencies, must be content with his own applauses, for he will get none of
others, unless it be from those fawning Sycophants, whose praises are worse
than the bitterest Detractions.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="xii-p6.1">And</span> yet so sottish
a vice is Pride, that it can make even those insidious Flatteries matter of
boast, which is a much more irrational object of it than the former. How eagerly do some men propagate every
little Encomium their Parasites make of them? With what gust and sensuality will they tell how such a Jest
of theirs took, or such a Magnificence was admired? Tis pleasant to see what little Arts and dexterities they
have to wind in such things into discourse: when alas, it amounts to no more
than this, that some have thought them fools enough to be flattered, and tis
odds but the hearers will think them enough so to be laughed at.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="xii-p7.1">But</span> there is yet another
Subject of Boasting more foolish, and more criminal too, than either of the
former, and that is when men vaunt of their Piety; which if it were true, were
yet less owing to themselves than any natural endowment. For though we do not at all assist
towards them, yet do we neither obstruct, but in the operations of Grace tis
otherwise: we have there a principle of opposition, and God never makes us his
own till He subdues that: and though He do it not by irresistible force, but by
such sweet and gentle insinuations, that we are sometimes captivated ere we are
aware: yet that does not impeach His right of conquest, but only shews Him the
more gracious conqueror. Tis true
in respect of the event we have great cause of exultance and joy, God’s service
being the most perfect freedom: yet in regard of the efficiency, we have as
little matter of Boast, as the surprised City has in the triumphs of its
victor.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="xii-p8.1">But</span> secondly, either this
vaunted Piety is not real, and then tis good for nothing; or else by being
vaunted becomes so. If it be not
real, tis then the superadding Hypocrisy to the former sacrilege, an attempt at
once to rob God and cheat men, and in the event usually renders them hateful to
both: to God (who cannot be mocked) it does so at the instant, and seldom
misses to do so at last to men. An
Hypocrite has a long part to act, and if his memory fail him but in any one
scene, his play is spoiled: so that his hazards are so great, that tis as
little prudent as tis honest to set up the trade, especially in an age when Piety
itself is at so low a price, that its counterfeit cannot pass much. But if the Piety be indeed true, the
Boasting it blasts it, makes it utterly insignificant. This we are told by <i>Christ</i>
Himself, who assure us, that even the most Christian actions of prayer, alms,
and fasting, must expect no other reward (when boasted) that the sought-for
applause of men. <scripRef passage="Matthew 6" id="xii-p8.2" parsed="|Matt|6|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.6">Matt. 6</scripRef>. When a
man shall make his own tongue the trumpet of his Alms, or the echo of his
prayers, he carves, or rather snatches his own reward, and must not look God
should heap more upon him: the recompense of his pride he may indeed look for
from Him, but that of his virtue he has forestalled. In short, piety is like those Lamps of old, which maintained
their light some Ages under ground, but as soon as they took air expired. And surely there cannot be a more
deplorable folly, than thus to lose a rich Jewel, only for the pitiful pleasure
of shewing it: it’s the humor of Children and Idiots, who must be handling their
birds till they fly away, and it ranks us with them in point of discretion,
though not of innocence.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="xii-p9.1">From</span> the view of these
particulars we may in the gross conclude, that this ostentation is a most
foolish sin, such as never brought in advantage to any man. There is no vice so undermines itself
as this does: tis glory it seeks, and instead of gaining that, it loses common,
ordinary estimation. Everybody
that sees a bladder puffed up, knows tis but wind that so swells it: and there
is no surer argument of a light, frothy brain than this bubbling at the
mouth. Indeed, there is nothing
renders any man so contemptible, so utterly useless to the world; it excludes
him almost from all commerce, makes him uncapable of receiving or doing a
benefit. No man will do him a good
turn, because he foresees he will arrogate it to himself, as the effect of his
merit: and none (that are not in some great exigence) will receive one from
him, as knowing it shall be not only proclaimed, but magnified much above the true
worth. There seems to be but one
purpose for which he serves, and that is to be sport for his company: and that
he seldom fails to be, for in these gamesome days men will not lose such an
opportunity of divertissement, and therefore, will purposely give him hints,
which may put him upon his Rodomontades. I do not speak this by way of encouragement to them, but only to shew
these vaporers, to what scorn they expose themselves, and what advantage they
give to any that have a mind to abuse them: for they need not be at any pains
for it, they do but swim with their stream; an approving nod or smile, serves
to drive on the design, and make them display themselves more
disadvantageously, more ridiculously, than the most Satirical Character could
possibly do.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="xii-p10.1">But</span> besides these sportive
projects, such a man lays himself open to more dangerous circumventions. He that shews himself so enamoured of
praise, that (<i>Narcissus</i> like) dotes on his own reflections, is a fit
prey for Flatterers, and such a Carcass will never want those Eagles: when his
weak part is one discerned (as it must soon be when himself publishes it) he
shall quickly be surrounded with assailants. The last Section has shewed the misery of a man so besieged,
therefore, I shall not enlarge on it here, this mention being only intended to
evince how apt this vainglorious humor is to betray men to it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p11">11. <span class="sc" id="xii-p11.1">These</span> are competent Specimens of the folly of this vice: but it has yet a
farther aggravation, that it precludes all means of growing wiser: tis <i>Solomon’s</i>
assertion, <i>Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a
Fool than of him. </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 26. 12" id="xii-p11.2" parsed="|Prov|26|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.26.12">Prov. 26. 12</scripRef>. And the reason is evident, for he discards the two grant instruments of
instruction, Admonition and Observation. The former he thinks superseded by his own Perfections, and therefore,
when any such friendly office is attempted towards him, he imputes it either to
Envy, and a desire to eclipse his luster by finding some spot, or else to
Ignorance and incapacity of estimating his worth: the one he entertains with
Indignation, the other with disdainful Pity. As for Observation, he so circumscribes it within himself,
that it can never fetch in anything from without. Reading of men has been by some thought the most facile and
expedite Method of acquiring Knowledge; and sure for some kinds of Knowledge it
is: but then a man must not only read one Author, much less the one worst he
can pick out for himself. Tis an
old and true saying, <i>He that is his own Pupil shall have a fool for his
Tutor</i>: and truly he that studies only himself, will be like to make but a
sorry Progress. Yet this is the
case of arrogant men, they lose all the benefit of Conversation, and when they
should be enriching their Minds with foreign treasure, they are only counting over
their own store. Instead of
adverting to those sober discourses which they hear from others, they are
perhaps watching to interrupt them by some pompous Story of themselves, or at
least in the abundance of their self-sufficiency, think they can say much
better things, Magisterially obtrude their own notions, and fall a-teaching
when tis fitter they should learn: and sure to be thus forward to lay out, and
take no care to bring in, must needs end in a Bankrupt state. Tis true, I confess, the study of a
man’s self is (rightly taken) the most useful part of Learning, but then it
much be such a Study as brings him to know himself, which none do so little as
these men, who in this are like those silly women the Apostle describes, <scripRef passage="2 Tim. 3. 7" id="xii-p11.3" parsed="|2Tim|3|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.3.7">2 Tim. 
3. 7</scripRef>.<i> Who are ever learning yet never attain. </i>And tis no wonder, for they begin at the wrong end, make no
inquiry into their faults or defects, but fix their Contemplation only on their
more splendid qualities, with which they are so dazzled, that when you bring
them to the darker parts of themselves, it fares with them as with those that
come newly from gazing on the Sun, they can see nothing.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p12">12. <span class="sc" id="xii-p12.1">And</span> now having dissected this
swelling vice, and seen what it is that feeds the tumor, the cure suggests
itself. If the disease be founded
in Pride, the abating that is the most natural and proper remedy: and truly,
one would think that mere weighing of the foregoing considerations might prove
sufficient allays to it. Yet
because where humors are turgent, tis necessary not only to purge them, but
also to strengthen the infested part, I shall adventure to give some few
advices by way of fortification and Antidote.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p13">13. <span class="sc" id="xii-p13.1">In</span> the first place, that of
the Apostle offers itself to my hand, <i>Look not every man on his own things,
but every man also on the things of others. </i><scripRef passage="Phil. 2. 4" id="xii-p13.2" parsed="|Phil|2|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.2.4">Phil. 2. 4</scripRef>. A counsel which in a distorted sense
seems to be too much practiced. We
are apt to apply it to worldly advantages, and in that notion not to look on our
own things with thankfulness, but on other men’s with envy. We apply it also to errors and sins,
and look not on our own to correct and reform, but on others to despise and
censure. Let us at last take it in
the genuine sense, and not look on our own excellencies, but those of
others. We see in all things how
desuetude does contract and narrow our faculties, so that we may apprehend only
those things wherein we are conversant. The droiling Peasant scarce thinks there is any world beyond his own
Village, or the neighboring Markets, nor any gayety beyond that of a Wake or
Morris, and men who are accustomed only to the admiration of themselves, think
there is nothing beside them worthy of regard. These unbred minds must be a little sent abroad, made
acquainted with those excellencies which God has bestowed on other men, and
then they will not think themselves like <i>Gideon’s</i> fleece to have sucked
up all the dew of heaven: nay, perhaps they many find they rather answer the
other part of the miracle, and are drier than their neighbors. Let them therefore put themselves in
this course, observe diligently all the good that is visible in other men, and
when they find themselves mounting into their altitudes, let them clog their
wings with the remembrance of those who have out-soared them, not in vain
opinion, but in true worth. Tis
nothing but the fancy of singularity that puff us up. To breath, to walk, to hear, to see, are excellent powers,
yet nobody is proud of them, because they are common to the whole kind: and
therefore, if we would observe the great number of those that equal or exceed
us, even in the more appropriate endowments, we should not put so excessive a
price upon ourselves.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p14">14. <span class="sc" id="xii-p14.1">Secondly</span>, if we will needs be
reflecting upon ourselves, let us do it more ingeniously, more equally, let us
take a true survey, and observe as well the barren as the fertile part of the
soil: and if this were done, may men’s value would be much short of what they
are willing to suppose it. Did we
but compare our crop of Weeds and Nettles, with that of our Corn, we must either
think our ground is poor, or ourselves very ill husbands. When therefore, the recollection of
either real or fancied worth begins to make us airy, let us condense again by
the remembrance of our sins and folly: tis the only possible service they can
do us, and considering how dear they are to cost us, we had not need lose this
one accidental advantage. In this
sense <i>Satan may cast out Satan, </i>our vilest guilts help to eject our
pride, and did we will manage this one stratagem against him, twould give us more
cause of triumph, than most of those things for which we so spread our plumes:
I do not say we should contract new guilts to make us humble, God knows we need
not, we have all of us enough of the old stock if we would but thus employ
them.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p15">15. <span class="sc" id="xii-p15.1">In</span> the last place I should
advise those who are apt to talk big things of themselves, to turn into some
other road of discourse: for if they are their own theme, their tongues will as
naturally turn into Eulogies, as a horse does into that Inn to which he is customed. All habits do require some little
excess of the contrary to their cure: for we have not so just a scantling of
ourselves, as to know to a grain what will level the scales, and place in the
right Mediocrity. Let men
therefore that have this infirmity, shun (as far as prudence and interest
permits) all discourse of themselves, till they can sever it from that unhappy
appendage. They will not be at all
the less acceptable company, it being generally thought none of the best parts
of breeding, to talk much of one’s self: for though it be done so an not to
argue pride, yet is does ignorance of more worthy subjects.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p16">16. I <span class="sc" id="xii-p16.1">Should</span> here conclude this Section,
but that there is another sort of vaunting Talk, which was not well reducible
to any of the former Heads, the subject matter being vastly distant: for in
those the Boasting was founded in some either real or supposed worth, but in
this is all Baseness and villainy. There are a Generation of men, who have removed all the Land-marks which
their Fathers (nay, even the Father of Spirits) have set, reversed the common
notions of Humanity, and <i>call evil good, and good evil, </i>and those things
which a moderate impudence would blush to be surprised in, they not only
proclaim but boast of, blow the Trumpet as much before their crimes, as others
before their good deeds. Nay, so
much to they affect this inverted sort of Hypocrisy, that they own more
wickedness than they act, assume to have made practical the highest Speculations
of villainy, and like the Devil’s Knights errant, pretend to those Romantic
achievements, which the veriest Fiend incarnate could never compass. These are such Prodigies, such Monsters
of villainy, that though they are objects of Grief and Wonder, they are not of
Counsel. Men who thus rave, we
many conclude their brains are turned, and one may as well read Lectures at
Bedlam as treat with such. Yet we
know that there sharp corrections recover crazed men to Sobriety; and then
their Cure lies only in the hand of Civil Justice: if that would take them at
their words, receive their brags as Confessions, and punish them accordingly,
it may be a little real smart would correct this mad Itch, and teach them not <i>to
glory in their shame. </i><scripRef passage="Phil. 3. 19" id="xii-p16.2" parsed="|Phil|3|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.19">Phil. 3. 19</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xii-p17"> <span class="sc" id="xii-p17.1">In</span> the mean time, let others who are not yet arrived to this height
consider betimes, that all indulgent practice of sin is the direct Road to it,
and according to the degrees of that indulgence, they make more less haste. He that constantly and habitually indulges,
rides upon the Spur, and will quickly overtake his Leaders. Nay, if it be but this one vice of
vanity, it may finally bring him to their state. He that loves to brag, will scarce find exercise enough for
that faculty in his virtues, and therefore, may at last be tempted to take in
his vices also. But that which is
more seriously considerable is, that Pride is so provoking to Almighty God,
that it often causes him to withdraw His <i>Grace, </i>which is a Donative He
has promised only <i>to the humble. </i><scripRef passage="James 4:6" id="xii-p17.2" parsed="|Jas|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.4.6">Jam. 4. 6</scripRef>. And indeed, when we turn that Grace into wantonness, as the
proud man does who is pampered by it into high conceits of himself, tis not
probable God will any longer prostitute his favors to such abuse. The Apostle observes it of the
Gentiles, who had in contradiction of their natural light abandoned themselves
to vile Idolatries, that God <i>after gave them up to a reprobate mind and vile
affections. </i><scripRef passage="Romans 1:25,26" id="xii-p17.3" parsed="|Rom|1|25|1|26" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.25-Rom.1.26">Rom. 1. 25, 26</scripRef>. But the proud now stifle a much clearer light, and give up themselves to
as base an Idolatry, the adoration of themselves. And therefore, tis but equal to expect God should desert
them, and (as some Nations have Deified their diseases) permit them to
celebrate even their foulest enormities. The application of all I shall sum up in the words of the Apostle. <scripRef passage="Rom. 11. 21" id="xii-p17.4" parsed="|Rom|11|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.21">Rom. 
11. 21</scripRef>.<i> Take heed also that he spare not thee.</i></p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 10: Of Querulousness" progress="78.58%" id="xiii" prev="xii" next="xiv">
<h2 id="xiii-p0.1">Section X. <br />
Of Querulousness.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p1"> <span class="sc" id="xiii-p1.1">To</span> this
of Boasting may not unfitly be subjoined another inordinancy of the Tongue, <i>viz</i>.
murmuring and complaining. For
though these faults seem to differ as much in their complexions, as Sanguine
does from Melancholy, yet there is nothing more frequent than to see them
united in the same person. Nor is
this a conjunction of a later date, but is as old as <i>St. Jude’s</i> days,
who observes that <i>murmurers</i> and <i>complainers</i> are the very same
with those who speak <i>great swelling words, </i><scripRef passage="Jude 1:16" id="xiii-p1.2" parsed="|Jude|1|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jude.1.16">Jude 16</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p2.1">Nor</span> are we to wonder to find
them thus conjoined, if we consider what an original cognation and kindred they
have, they being (however they seem divided) streams issuing from the same
fountain. For the very same Pride
which prompts a man to vaunt and overvalue what he is, does so forcibly incline
him to contemn and disvalue what he has; whilst measuring his enjoyments by
that vast Idea he has formed of himself, tis impossible but he must think them
below him.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p3.1">This</span> indeed is the true original
of those perpetual complainings we hear from all sorts and conditions of
men. For let us pass through all
Degrees, all Ages, we shall rarely find a single person, much less any number
of men, exempt from this Querulous, this sullen humor: as if that breath of
life wherewith God originally inspired us, had been given us not to magnify his
Bounty, but to accuse his illiberality, and like the more dismal sorts of
instruments, could be tuned to no other Strains but those of Mourning and
Lamentation. Every man contributes
his note to this doleful Harmony, and after all that God has done to oblige and
delight mankind, scare any man is satisfied enough, I will not say to be
thankful, but to be patient. For
alas, what tragical complaints do men make of their infelicity, when perhaps
their prosperity is as much the envious outcry of others? Every little defeat of a design, of an
appetite, every little disregard from those above them, or less solemn
observance from those below them, make their <i>Heart hot within them, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 39. 3" id="xiii-p3.2" parsed="|Ps|39|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.39.3">Psa. 
39. 3</scripRef>. and the tongue (that combustible part) quickly takes fire and <i>breaks
out</i> into extravagant exclamations. It is indeed strange to see how weighty every the trivialest thing is
when a passion is cast into the scale with it, how every the slightest
inconvenience or petty want preponderates hundreds of great substantial
blessings; when indeed, were it in an instance never so considerable, it could
be no just Counterpoise. Yet so
closely is this corruption interwoven with our constitution that it has
sometimes prevailed even upon good men. <i>Jacob</i> though he had twelve sons, yet upon the supposed death of
one despised the comforts of all the rest, and with an obstinate sorrow
resolves to <i>go mourning to his Grave. </i><scripRef passage="Gen. 35. 37" id="xiii-p3.3" parsed="|Gen|35|37|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.35.37">Gen. 35. 37</scripRef>. David after that signal victory which
had preserved his life, reinstated him in his Throne, and restored him to the
Ark and Sanctuary, yet suffered the loss of his rebellious son, who was the
Author of his danger, to overwhelm the sense of his deliverance, and instead of
Hymns and praises, breaks out into ejaculations and effeminate wailings. <scripRef passage="2Samuel 18:33" id="xiii-p3.4" parsed="|2Sam|18|33|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.18.33">2. 
Sam. 18. 33</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p4.1">But</span> God knows the most of our
complaints cannot pretend to such considerable motives: they are not the bowels
of a Father, the impresses of Nature that excite our repinings, but the
impulses of our lusts and inordinate appetites. Our discontents are usually such as <i>Ahab’s</i> for his
neighbor’s vineyard, <i>Haman’s</i> for <i>Mordecai’s</i> obeisance, <i>Achitophel’s</i>
for having his counsel rejected. Every disappointment of our avarice, ambition, and pride, fills our
hearts with bitterness and our mouths with clamors. For if we should examine the numerous complaints which sound
in every corner, it would doubtless be found that the greatest part of them
have some such original: and that whether the pretended grievances be public or
private. For the first: many a man
is a state malcontent merely because he sees another advanced to that honor or
wealth which he thinks he has better deserved. He is always inveighing against such unequal distributions,
where the best services (such you may be sure his own are) are the worst
rewarded: nor does he ever cease to predict public ruins, till his private are
repaired. But as soon as that is
done, his Augury grows more mild: and as if the estate and he were like <i>Hippocrate’s</i>
twins, his recruits give new vigor to that, and till his next suit is denied
everything is well administered. So full, alas, are men of themselves, that tis hard to find any the most
splendid pretenses which have not something of that at the bottom: and would
every man ransack his own heart, and resolve not to cast a stone till he had
first cleared it of all sinister respects, perhaps the number of our
complainers would be much abated.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p5.1">Nor</span> is it otherwise in private
discontents. Men are apt to think
themselves ill used by any man who will not serve their interest or their
humor, nay, sometimes their vices; and are prone in all companies to arraign
such an unpliant Person, as if he were an enemy to mankind, because he is not a
slave to their will. How many have
quarreled even with their dearest friends, because they would not assist them
to their own ruin, or have striven to divert them from it: so forcible are our
propensions to mutiny, that we equally take occasions from benefits or
injuries.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p6.1">But</span> the highest and most
unhappy instance of all is in our behavior toward God, whose allotments we
dispute with the same, or rather greater boldness than we do those of men. What else mean those impatient murmurs
at those things which are the immediate issues of Providence? Such are our native blemishes, disease,
death of friends, and the like. Nay, what indeed are our displeasure even at those things which we
pretend to fasten upon the Second Causes? For those being all under the subordination of the first, cannot move
but by its permission. This holy <i>Job</i>
well discerned, and therefore does not indite the <i>Chaldeans</i> or <i>Sabeans</i>
for his plunder, but knowing they were but the instruments he submissly
acknowledges that there was a higher agent in his loss, <i>The Lord has taken
away, </i><scripRef passage="Job 1. 21" id="xiii-p6.2" parsed="|Job|1|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Job.1.21">Job 1. 21</scripRef>. When therefore,
we ravingly execrate the rapine of one man, the deceit of another for our
impoverishment, when we angrily charge our defamation on the malice of our
maligners, our disappointments on the treachery or negligence of our friends,
we do interpretatively conclude either that there is no over-ruling providence
which could have restrained those events, or else (which is equally horrid) we
accuse it as not having done well in permitting them. So that against whomsoever we direct our clamors, their last
rebound is against Heaven; this Querulous humor carrying always an implicit
repugnance to God’s disposals: but where it is indulged to, it usually is its
own expositor, and explicitly avows it, charges God foolishly, and by impious
murmurs blasphemes that power which it cannot resist. Indeed, the progress is very natural for our impatiences at
men to swell into mutinies against God: for when the mind is once embittered,
it distinguishes not of objects, but indifferently lets fly its venom. <i>He that frets himself, </i>the
Prophet tells us, <i>will curse his King, </i>nay <i>his God, </i><scripRef passage="Isa. 8. 21" id="xiii-p6.3" parsed="|Isa|8|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.8.21">Isa. 8. 21</scripRef>.
and he that quarrels at God’s distributions is in the direct road to defy His
Being.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p7.1">By</span> this we may estimate the
danger of our discontents, which though at first they are introduced by the
inordinate love of ourselves, yet are very apt to terminate in hatred and
Blasphemies against God. He
therefore, that would secure himself from the highest degree, just watch
against the lowest; as he that would prevent a total Inundation must avert the
smallest breach in his Banks. Not
but that even the first beginnings are in themselves well worth our guarding:
for abstracting from all the danger of this enormous increase, there murmurings
(like a mortiferous Herb) are poisonous even in their first Spring, before they
arrive to their full maturity. To
be always moralizing the Fable of <i>Prometheus</i> upon one’s self, playing
the Vulture upon one’s own entrails, is no desirable thing, though we were
accountable to none but ourselves for it: to dip our tongues in gall, to have
nothing in our mouths but the extract, and exhalation of our inward bitterness,
is sure no greater Sensuality. So
that did we consult only our own ease, we might from that single Topic draw
arguments enough against our mutinies.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p8.1">But</span> besides our duty and ease,
our credit and reputation make their plea also. Fortitude is one of the noblest of moral virtues, and has
the luck to appear considerable even to those who despise all the rest. Now one of the most proper and eminent
acts of that is, the bearing adverse events with evenness and temper. This passive valor is as much the mark
of a great mind as the active, nay, perhaps more, the later being often owing
to the Animal, this to the Rational part of man. And sure we must strangely have corrupted the principles of <i>Morality</i>
as well as <i>Religion, </i>if every turbulent, unruly Spirit, that fills the
world with blood and rapine, shall have his ferocity called gallantry; yet that
sober courage that maintains itself against all the shocks of Fortune, that
keeps its Post in spite of the rudest encounters, shall not be allowed at least
as good a name. And then on the
contrary we may conclude, that to sink under every cross accident, to be still
whining and complaining, crying our upon every touch, is a note of a mean,
degenerous soul, below the dignity of our reasonable nature. For certainly God never gave us reason
for so unkind a purpose, as only to quicken and enhance the resentment of our sufferings,
but rather to control those disorders, which the more tumultuous part of us,
our senses, are apt to raise in us: and we are so far men and no farther, as we
use it to that end. Therefore, if
the dictates of religion cannot restrain our murmurs, if we are not Christians
enough to submit to the divine precepts of meekness and acquiescence: yet let
us at least keep within those bounds which ingenious nature has set us, and not
by our unmanly impatiences enter common with Brutes and Animals.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p9.1">Nay</span>, I may fuller add, if
neither for God’s nor our own sakes, yet for others, for humane society’s sake,
this querulous inclination should be suppressed; there being nothing that
renders a man more unpleasant, more uneasy company. For (besides that tis very apt to vent itself upon those
with whom he converses, rendering him capricious and exceptious; and tis a
harsh, a grating sound to hear a man always in complaining Key) no man would
willingly dwell within the noise of shrieks and groans; and the exclamations of
the discontented differ from those only by being more articulate. It is a very unwelcome importunity, to
entertain a man’s company with remonstrances of his own infelicities and
misadventures, and he that will relate all his grievance to others, will
quickly make himself one to them. For though he that is full of the inward sense of them, thinks it rather
an ease than oppression to speak them out, yet the case if far otherwise with
his Auditors: they are perhaps as much taken up with themselves, as he is, and
as little at leisure to consider his concerns, as he theirs. Alas, we are not now in those primitive
days, when there was as it were one common sense among Christians, when <i>if
one member suffered, all the members suffered with it. </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 12. 26" id="xiii-p9.2" parsed="|1Cor|12|26|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.12.26">1 Cor. 12. 26</scripRef>. That Charity which gave that
sympathetic motion to the whole, is now itself benumbed, flows rarely beyond
the narrow compass of our personal interest; and therefore we cannot expect
that men should be very patient of our complaints who are not concerned in the
causes of them. The Priest answer
to <i>Judas</i> does speak the sense of most men in the case <i>What is that to
us? See thou to that. </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 27. 4" id="xiii-p9.3" parsed="|Matt|27|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.4">Matt. 27. 4</scripRef>. I do not deny but that the
discharging one’s griefs into the bosom of a true friend, is both innocent and
prudent: nay indeed, he that has such a treasure is unkind to himself if he use
it not. But that which I would
dissuade, is the promiscuous use of this liberty in common Conversation, the
satisfying our Spleen, when we cannot ease our hearts by it, the loud
declaimings at our misery, which is seldom severed from as severe reflections
on those whom we suppose the causes of it; by which nothing can be acquired but
the opinion of our Impatience, or perhaps some new grievance from some, who
think themselves concerned to vindicate those whom we asperse. In a word, tis as indecent as it is
unacceptable, and we may observe all men are willing to slink out of such
company, the Sober for the hazards, and Jovial for the unpleasantness. So that the murmurer seems to be turned
off to the company of those doleful Creatures which the Prophet mentions which
were to <i>inhabit the ruins of Babylon, </i><scripRef passage="Isa. 13. 12" id="xiii-p9.4" parsed="|Isa|13|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.13.12">Isa. 13. 12</scripRef>. For he is ill Conversation to all men,
though the worst of all to himself.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiii-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="xiii-p10.1">And</span> now upon the force of all
these considerations, I may reasonably impress the Wise man’s Counsel, <i>Therefore
beware of murmuring, </i><scripRef passage="Wisd. 1. 11" id="xiii-p10.2" parsed="|Wis|1|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Wis.1.11">Wisd. 1. 11</scripRef>. And indeed, it is not the precept of the Wise man alone, but of all who
have made any just pretence to that title. For when we consider those excellent lectures of
contentation and acquiescence, wherewith the writings of Philosophers abound,
tis hard to say whether they speak more of instruction or reproach to us. When their confused notions of a Deity
had given them such impressions of His Wisdom and goodness, that they would not
pretend to make any elections for themselves, how does it shame our more
explicit knowledge, who dare not depend on Him in the smallest instance? who
will not take His disposals for good unless our senses become His sureties?
which amounts but to that degree of credit, which the most faithless man may
expect from us, the trusting him as far as we see him. This is such a contumely to Him, as the
Ethic world durst not offer Him, and is the peculiar insolence of us degenerated
Christians, who sure cannot be thought in earnest when we talk of singing <i>Hallelujahs</i>
in the next world to Him, whilst we entertain Him here only with the sullen
noise of murmurs and repinings. For we are not to think that Heaven will Metamorphose us on a sudden,
and turn our exclamations and wild clamors into Lauds and Magnificats. It does indeed perfect and crown those
graces which were here inchoate and begun, but no man’s conversion ever
succeeded his being there: for Christ has expressly told us, <i>That except we
be converted, we shall not enter the kingdom of heaven</i>; and if we go hence
in our froward discontents, they will associate us with those with whom is <i>Weeping
and wailing and gnashing of teeth</i>.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 11: Of Positiveness" progress="84.44%" id="xiv" prev="xiii" next="xv">
<h2 id="xiv-p0.1">Section XI. <br />
Of Positiveness.</h2>


<p class="normal" id="xiv-p1"> <span class="sc" id="xiv-p1.1">Another</span> very unhandsome circumstance in discourse is the being over confident and
peremptory, a thing which does very much unfit men for conversation, it being
looked on as the common birth-right of mankind, that every man is to opine
according to the dictates of his own understanding, not another’s. Now this Peremptoriness is of two
sorts, the one a Magisterialness in matters of opinion and speculation, the
other a Positiveness in relating matters of fact: in the one we impose upon
men’s understandings, in the other on their faith.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p2.1">For</span> the first, he must be much
a stranger in the world who has not met with it: there being a generation of
men, who as the Prophet speaks, <i>Are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in
their own sight, </i><scripRef passage="Isa. 5. 21" id="xiv-p2.2" parsed="|Isa|5|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.5.21">Isa. 5. 21</scripRef>. Nay, not only so, but who make themselves the standards of wisdom, to
which all are bound to conform, and whoever weighs not in their balance, be his
reasons never so weighty, they write <i>Tekel</i> upon them. This is one of the most oppressive
Monopolies imaginable: all others can concern only something without us, but this
fastens upon our natures, yea, and the better part of it too, our reason, and
if it meet with those who have any considerable share of that within them, they
will often be tempted to rally it, and not too tamely resign this native
liberty. Reason submits only to
Reason, and he that assaults it with bare Authority (that which is Divine
always excepted) may as well cut flame with his sword, or harden wax in the
sun.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p3.1">Tis</span> true indeed, these great
Dictators do sometimes run down the company, and carry their Hypothesis without
contest: but of this there may be divers reasons besides the weight of their
arguments. Some unspeculative men
may not have the skill to examine their assertions, and therefore, an assent is
their fastest course; others may be lazy and not think it worth their pains; a
third sort may be modest and awed by a severe brow and an imperious nod: and
perhaps the wiser may providently foresee the impossibility of convincing one
who thinks himself not subject to error. Upon these or other like grounds tis very possible all may be silenced
when never a one is convinced so that these great Masters may often make very
false estimates of their conquests, and <i>sacrifice to their own nets, </i><scripRef passage="Heb. 1. 16" id="xiv-p3.2" parsed="|Heb|1|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.1.16">Heb. 1. 16</scripRef>. when they have taken nothing.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p4.1">Nay</span> indeed, this insolent way
of proposing is so far from propagating their notions, that it gives prejudice
against them. They are the gentle
insinuations which pierce (as oil is the most penetrating of all liquors) but in
these Magisterial documents men think themselves attacked, and stand upon their
guard, and reckon they must part with Honor together with their Opinion, if
they suffer themselves to be Hectored out of it. Besides, this imposing humor is so unamiable, that it gives
an aversion to the Person; and we know how forcible personal prejudices are
(though tis true they should not be) towards the biasing of Opinions. Nay indeed, men of this temper do cut
themselves off from the opportunities of Proselyting others, by averting them
from their company. Freedom is the
endearing thing in Society, and where that is controlled, men are not very fond
of associating themselves. Tis
natural to us to be uneasy in the presence of those who assume an Authority
over us. Children care not for the
company of their Parents or Tutors, and men will care less for theirs, who
would make them children by usurping a Tutorage.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p5">5. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p5.1">All</span> these inconveniences are
evidently consequent to this Dogmatizing, supposing men be never so much in the
right: but if they happened to be in the wrong, what a ridiculous pageantry is
it, to see such a Philosophical gravity set to man-out a Solecism? A concluding Face put upon no
concluding Argument, is the most contemptible sort of folly in the world. They do by this sound a trumpet to
their own defeat: and whereas a modest mistake might slip by undiscerned, these
Rodomontade errors force themselves upon men’s observations, and make it
impossible for men not to see, as it is not to despise them when they do. For indeed, Pride is as ill linked with
Error, as we usually say it is with Beggary, and in this as well as that,
converts pity into contempt.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p6.1">And</span> then it would be
considered, what security any man that will be imposing has, that this will not
be his case. Human nature is very
fallible, and as it is possible a man may err in a great many things, so tis
certain every man does in something or other. Now who knows at the instant he is so positive, but this may
be his erring turn? Alas, how
frequently are we mistaken even in common ordinary things! for as the Wiseman
speaks, <i>hardly do we judge aright even in things that are before us, </i>
<scripRef passage="Wisd. 9. 16" id="xiv-p6.2" parsed="|Wis|9|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Wis.9.16">Wisd. 9. 16</scripRef>. our very senses do sometimes delude us. How then may we wander in things of abstruse
speculation? The consideration of
this hath with some so prevailed, that it has produced a Sect of Skepticism:
and though I press it not for that purpose, yet sure it may reasonably be urged
to introduce some modesty and calmness in our assertions. For when we have no other certainty of
our being in the right, but our own persuasions that we are so; this may often
be but making one error the gauge for another. For God knows confidence is so far from a certain mark of
truth, that tis often the seducer into falsehood, none being so apt to lose
their way as those who, out of an ungrounded presumption of knowing it, despise
all direction from others.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p7.1">Let</span> all this be weighed, and
the result will be, that this peremptoriness is a thing that can befit no form
of understanding. It renders Wise
men disobliging and troublesome, and fools ridiculous and contemptible. It casts a prejudice up on the most
solid reasoning, and it renders the lighter more notoriously despicable. Tis pity good parts should be leavened
by it, made a snare to the owners, and useless to others. And tis pity too that weak parts should
by it be condemned to be always so, by despising those Aids which should
improve them. Since therefore, tis
so ill calculated for every Meridian, would God all Climes might be purged from
it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p8.1">And</span> as there are weighty
objections against it in respect of its effects, so there are no inconsiderable
prejudices in relation to its causes, of which we may reckon Pride to be the
most certain and universal: for whatever else casually occurs to it, this is
the fundamental constitutive principle; nothing but a great overweening of a
man’s own understanding being able to inflate him in that imaginary empire over
other men’s. For here sure we may
ask the Apostle’s question, <i>Who made thee to differ from another</i>? When God has made Rationality the
common portion of mankind, how came it to be thy inclosure? or what Signature
has he set upon thine, what mark of excellency, that thine should be
paramount? Doubtless if thou
fanciest thou hast that part of <i>Jacob’s</i> blessing, <i>To be Lord of they
brethren, and that all they mother’s sons should bow down to thee, </i><scripRef passage="Gen. 27. 29" id="xiv-p8.2" parsed="|Gen|27|29|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.27.29">Gen. 27. 
29</scripRef>. thou hast got it more surreptitiously than he did, and with less effect:
for though <i>Isaac</i> could not retract his mistaken benediction, God will
never ratify that fantastic thou hast pronounced to thyself, with his real
effective one.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p9.1">But</span> there happens many times to
be another ingredient besides Pride, and that is Ignorance: for those qualities
however they may seem at war, do often very closely combine. He who has narrow notions, that knows
but a few things, and has no glimpse of any beyond him, thinks there are no
such: and therefore, as if he had (like <i>Alexander</i>) no want but that of
worlds to conquer, he thinks himself the absolute Monarch of all
knowledge. And this is of all
others the most unhappy composition: for ignorance being of itself like stiff
clay, and infertile soil, when Pride comes to scorch and harden it, it grows
perfectly impenetrable: and accordingly we see none are so inconvincible as
your half-witted people; who know just enough to excite their pride, but not so
much as to cure their ignorance.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p10.1">There</span> remains yet a 2d kind of
Peremptoriness which I am to speak to, and that is of those who can make no
relation without an attestation of its certainty: a sort of hospitable people,
who entertain all the idle vagrant reports, and send them out with passports
and testimonials; who when they have once adopted a story, will have it pass
for legitimate how spurious soever it originally was. These somewhat resemble those hospitals in <i>Italy</i>,
where all bastards are sure of reception, and such a provision as may enable
them to subsist in the world: and were it not for such men, many a Fatherless
lie would be stifled in its birth. It is indeed strange to see, how suddenly loose rumors knit into formal
stories, and from thence grow to certainties; but tis stranger to see that men
can be of such profligated impudence, as knowingly to give them that
advance. And yet tis no rarity to
meet with such men who will pawn their honor, their souls, for that unworthy
purpose: nay, and that too with as much impertinence as baseness, when no
interest of their own, or perhaps any man’s else is to be served by it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p11">11. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p11.1">This</span> is so prodigious a thing,
as seems to excite one’s Curiosity to inquire the cause of so wonderful an
effect. And here as in other
unnatural productions, there are several concurrents. If we trace it from its original, its first Element seems to
be Idleness: this diverting a man from serious useful entertainments, forces
him upon (the usual refuge of vacant Persons) the inquiring after News; which
when he has got, the venting of it is his next business. If he be of a credulous Nature, and
believe it himself, he does the more innocently impose it on others: yet then
to secure himself from the imputation of Levity and too easy Faith, he is often
tempted to lend some probable circumstance. Nay, if he be of a proud humor, and have that miserable
vanity of loving to speak big, and to be thought a man of greater
correspondence and intelligence than his neighbors, he will not bate an Ace of
absolute certainty, but however doubtful or improbable the thing is, coming
form him it must go for an indisputable truth. This seems to be the descent of this unhappy folly, which
yet is often nursed up by a mean or imprudent Education. A man that hat conversed only with that
lower sort of company, who durst not dispute his veracity, thinks the same
false Coin will pass over the world, which went current among his Father’s
Servants or Tenants: and therefore we may observe, that this is most usual in
young men, who have come raw into company with good fortunes and ill
breeding. But it is too true also
that too many never lose the habit, but are as morosely positive in their Age,
as they were childishly so in their Youth. Indeed, tis impossible they should be otherwise, unless they
have the wit to disentangle themselves first from the love of Flattery, and
after from the company of Flatterers: for (as I have before observed) no vice
will ever wither under their shade. I think I shall do the Reader no ill office to let in a little light
upon them, and shew him some of those many mischiefs that attend this unworthy
practice.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p12">12. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p12.1">First</span>, it engages a man to oaths,
and for ought he knows to perjuries. When he has launched out boldly into an incredible relation, he thinks
he has put his Credit upon the forlorn hope, and must take care to relieve it:
and there is no succor so constantly ready at hand as that of oaths and imprecations,
and therefore whole vollies of them are discharged upon the doubtful. Thus do we make God a witness, and our
Souls parties in the cause of every trifling rumor, as if we had modeled our
Divinity by the Scheme of that Jesuitical Casuist, who legitimates the Killing
of a man for an Apple.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p13">13. A <span class="sc" id="xiv-p13.1">Second</span> mischief is, that it
betrays a man to quarrels. He that
is peremptory in his own Story, may meet with another that is as peremptory in
the contradiction of it, and then the two Sir <i>Positives</i> must have a
skirmish indeed. He that has
attested the truth of a false, or the certainty of a doubtful thing, has
brought himself into the same trait with <i>Balaam’s</i> Ass, he must either
fall down flat or run upon a sword, <scripRef passage="Num. 22. 27" id="xiv-p13.2" parsed="|Num|22|27|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Num.22.27">Num. 22. 27</scripRef>. For if his Hearers do but express a diffidence, either he
must sink to a down-right confession that he was a Liar: or else he must huff
and bluster till perhaps he raise a counter-storm, and as he fooled himself out
of his truth, so be beaten out of his pretence to it. Indeed, there is scarce any quality that does so tempt and
invite affronts as this does: for he that can descend to such a meanness, may
reasonably enough be presumed to have little (as of true worth, so) even of
that which the world calls Gallantry, and so every puny swordman will think him
a good tame Quarry to enter and flesh himself upon.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p14">14. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p14.1">In</span> the third place, it exposes
him to all the contempt and scorn which either good or ill men can fling upon
him: the good abominate the sin, the ill triumph over the folly of it. The truth is, there can be nothing more
wretchedly mean. To be Knight of
the Post to every fabulous relation, is such a sordid thing, that there can
scarce be any name of reproach too vile for it. And certainly he that can pawn his faith upon such miserable
terms, will by those frequent mortgages quickly be snapped upon a forfeiture;
or however will have his credit so impaired by it, that no man will think his
word a competent gauge for the slightest concern.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p15">15. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p15.1">And</span> this may pass for a fourth
consideration, That this Positiveness is so far from gaining credit to his
present affirmation, that it destroys it for the future: for he that sees a man
make no difference in the confidence of his asserting realities and fictions,
can never take his measures by anything he avers, but according to the common
Proverb, will be in danger of disbelieving him even when he speaks truth. And of this no man can want conviction,
who will but consult his own observation. For what an allay do we find it to the credit of the most probable
event, that it is reported by one who uses to stretch? Thus unhappily do such men defeat their
own designs: for while they aver stoutly that they may be believed, that very
thing makes them doubted, the world being not now to learn how frequently
Confidence is made a supplement for truth. Nor let any man who uses this, flatter himself that he alone
does (like <i>Job’s</i> messenger) escape the common fate: for though perhaps
he meet with some who in civility or pity will not dispute the probability of
his narrations, or with others who for raillery will not discourage the humor
with which they mean (in his absence) to divert themselves, yet he may rest
assured he is discerned by all and derided for it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p16">16. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p16.1">It</span> therefore concerns men who
either regard their truth, or their reputation, not to indulge to this humor,
which is the most silly way of shipwrecking both. For he that will lay those to stake upon every flying story,
may as well wager his estate which way the wind will sit next morning, there
being nothing less to be confided in, than the breath of fame, or the whispers
of private tale-bearers. Wise men
are afraid to report improbable truths: what a foolhardiness is it then to
attest improbable falsities, as it often is the luck of these Positive men to
do?</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p17">17. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p17.1">Certainly</span> there is nothing which they
design by this, which may not be obtained more effectually by a modest and
unconcerned relation. He that
barely relates what he has heard, and leaves the hearer to judge of the probability,
does as much (I am sure more civilly) entertain that company, as he that throws
down his gauntlet in attestation. He as much satisfies the itch of telling news; he as much persuades his
hearers: nay, very much more (for these over earnest asseverations serve by to
give men suspicion that the Speaker is conscious of his own falseness:) and all
this while he has his retreat secure, and stands not responsible for the truth
of his relation. Nay indeed,
though men speak never so known and certain truths, tis most advisable not to
press them too importunately. For
boldness, like the Bravoes and Banditti, is seldom employed but upon desperate
services, and is so known a Pander for lying, that truth is but defamed by its
attendance.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xiv-p18">18. <span class="sc" id="xiv-p18.1">To</span> conclude, modesty is so
amiable, so insinuating a thing, that all the rules of Oratory cannot help men
to a more agreeable ornament of discourse. And if they will try it in both the foregoing instances,
they will undoubtedly find the effects of it: a modest proposal will soonest
captivate men’s reasons, and a modest relation their belief.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Section 12: Of Obscene Talk" progress="91.07%" id="xv" prev="xiv" next="xvi">
<h2 id="xv-p0.1">Section XII. <br />
Of Obscene Talk.</h2>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p1"> <span class="sc" id="xv-p1.1">There</span> is
another vice of the Tongue which I cannot but mention, though I knew not in
which of the former Classes to place it: not that it comes under none, but that
tis so common to all, that tis not easy to resolve to which peculiarly to
assign it, I mean obscene, and immodest talk, which is offensive to the purity
of God, damageable and infectious to the innocence of our Neighbors, and most
pernicious to ourselves: and yet is now grown a thing so common, that one would
think we were fallen into an Age of Metamorphosis, and that the Brutes did (not
only Poetically and in fiction) but really speak. For the talk of many is so bestial, that it seems to be but
the conceptions of the more libidinous Animals clothed in human Language.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="xv-p2.1">And</span> yet even this must pass for
Ingenuity, and this vile descent below Humanity, must be counted among the
highest strains of Wit. A wretched
debasement of that sprightful Faculty, this to be made the interpreter to a
Goat or Boar: for doubtless had those Creatures but the organs of Speech, their
Fancies lie enough that way to make them as good company, as those who more
studiously apply themselves to this sort of entertainment.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xv-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="xv-p3.1">The</span> crime is comprehensive
enough to afford abundance of matter for the most Satyrical zeal, but I
consider the dissecting of putrid Bodies may cast such pestilential fumes, as
all the benefits of the scrutiny will not recompense. I shall therefore, in respect to the Reader dismiss this
noisome Subject, and thereby give an example with what abhorrence he should
always reject such kind of discourse, remembering the advice of <i>St. Paul,
That all uncleanness should not be once named among those who would walk as
becometh Saints, </i><scripRef passage="Eph. 5. 3" id="xv-p3.2" parsed="|Eph|5|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eph.5.3">Eph. 5. 3</scripRef>.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="The Close" progress="91.77%" id="xvi" prev="xv" next="xvii">
<h2 id="xvi-p0.1">The Close</h2>


<p class="normal" id="xvi-p1">I <span class="sc" id="xvi-p1.1">Have</span> now touched upon those
enormities of Speech which I principally designed to observe, wherein I have
been far from making a full and exact Catalogue: therefore, I would have no man
take this little Tract for a just Criterion, by which to try himself in
reference to his words. Yet God
grant that all that read it, may be able to approve themselves even by this
imperfect essay: and he that does so, makes fair approaches towards being <i>that
perfect man</i> <i>St. James</i> speaks of, <scripRef passage="James 3:1" id="xvi-p1.2" parsed="|Jas|3|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.3.1">Jam. 3. 1</scripRef>. these being such faults
of the Tongue as are the harder to avoid, because they are every day
exemplified to us in common practice, (nay, some of them recommended as
reputable and ingenious). And it
is a strange insinuative power which example and custom have upon us. We see it in every trivial secular
instance, in our very habit: those dresses which we laugh at in our forefathers
wardrobes or pictures, when by the circulation of time and vanity they are
brought about, we think very becoming. Tis the same in our diet: our very palates conform to the fashion, and
everything grows amiable to our fancies, according as tis more or less received
in the world. And upon this
account all sobriety and strict virtue lies now under a heavy prejudice, and no
part of it more, than this of the Tongue, which custom has now enfranchised
from all the bonds Moralists or Divines laid upon it.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p2">2. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p2.1">But</span> the greater the
difficulties are, the more it ought to awake our diligence: if we lie loose and
carelessly, tis odds we shall be carried away with the stream. We had need therefore fix ourselves,
and by a sober recollection of the ends of which our Speech was given us, and
the account we must one day give of it, impress upon ourselves the baseness and
the danger of misemploying it. Yet
a negative innocence will not serve our turns, twill but put us in the
condition of him, <i>who wrapped up the talent he was commanded to employ, </i><scripRef passage="Matt. 25. 25" id="xvi-p2.2" parsed="|Matt|25|25|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.25.25">Matt. 25. 25</scripRef>. Nay indeed, twill be
impossible to preserve even that if we aspire no farther. The Tongue is a busy active Part, will
scarce be kept from motion: and therefore, if that activity be not determined
to good objects, twill be practicing upon bad. And indeed, I believe a great part of its licentiousness is owing
to this very thing. There are so
few good Themes of discourse in use, that many are driven to the ill for want
of better. Learning is thought
Pedantic, Agriculture Peasantlike, and Religion the most insufferable of all:
so by excluding all useful Subjects of converse, we come together as <i>St.
Paul</i> (in another case) says, <i>Not for better but for the worse. </i><scripRef passage="1 Cor. 11. 17" id="xvi-p2.3" parsed="|1Cor|11|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.11.17">1 Cor. 11. 17</scripRef>. And if the
Philosopher thought he had lost that day wherein he had not learned something
worthy of his notice, how many days do we worse than lose, by having them not
only empty of solid useful acquisitions, but full of noxious and pernicious
ones? And indeed, if they be the
one, they will not miss to be the other also: for the mind is like the stomach,
which if it be not supplied with wholesome nourishment, will at last suck in
those humors with which the body most abounds. So that if in our converse we do not interchange sober
useful notions, we shall at the best but traffic toys and baubles, and most
commonly infection and poison. He
therefore, that would keep his tongue from betraying himself or others to sin,
must tune it to a quite contrary Key, make it an instrument, an incentive to
virtue, by which he shall not only secure the negative part of his duty, but
comply with the positive also, employing it to those uses for which it was
given him.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p3">3. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p3.1">It</span> would be too vast an
undertaking to prescribe the particular subjects of such discourse, nay indeed,
impossible, because many of them are occasional, such as cannot aforehand be
reduced to any certain account. This only in the general we may rest upon, that all speech tending to
the glory of God, or the good of man, is aright directed. Which is not to be understood so
restrictively, as if nothing but Divinity or the necessary concerns of human
life, may lawfully be brought into discourse: something is to be indulged to
common civility, more to the intimacies and endearments of friendships, and a
competency to those recreative discourses which maintain the cheerfulness of
society; all which are, if moderately used, within the latitude of the rule, as
tending (though in a lower degree) to the well-being of men, and by consequent
to the honor of God, who indulges us those innocent refreshments. But if the subordinate uses come to
encroach upon the higher, if we dwell here and look no farther, they then
become very sinful by the excess which were not so in their nature. That inordinacy sets them in opposition
to God’s designation, in which they were allowed only a secondary place. We should therefore, be careful to
improve all opportunities of letting our tongues pay their more immediate
homage to God, in the duties of prayers, and praises, making them not only the
interpreters of our pious affections, but the promoters of the like in others. And indeed, he can scarce be thought in
earnest, who prays, <i>Hallowed by Thy Name, </i>and does not as much endeavor
it with men, as he solicits it from God.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p4">4. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p4.1">And</span> if we answer our
obligations in this point, we shall in it discharge the highest part of our
duty to man also: for in whose heart we can implant a true reverential awe of
God, we sow the seed of immortality, of an endless happy being, the greatest
the most superlative good whereof he is capable. Besides, in the interim we do by it help to manumit and
release him from those servile drudgeries to vice, under which those remain who
live without God in the world. And
these indeed, are benefits worthy the dignity of human nature to communicate. And it is both sad and strange to see
among the multitude and variety of Leagues that are contracted in the world,
how few there are of these pious combinations; how those who show themselves
concerned in all the petty secular interests of their friends, never take this
at all into their care; a pregnant evidence how little true friendship there is
among men.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p5">5. I <span class="sc" id="xvi-p5.1">Know</span> some thing they
sufficiently excuse themselves when they shift off this office to Divines,
whose peculiar business they say it is. But this is as if one who sees a poor fainting wretch, should forbear to
administer a Cordial he has at hand, for fear of entrenching on the Physician’s
Faculty. Man opportunities a
Friend or Companion may have which a Divine may want. He often sees a man in the very fit, and so may more aptly
apply: for where there is an intimacy of Converse, men lay themselves open,
discover those passions, those vices, which they carefully veil when a strange
or severer eye approaches. Besides, as such a one may easier discern the disease, so he has better
advantages for administering remedies: so Children will not take those
Medicines from the Doctor’s hand, which they will from a Nurse or Mother: and
we are usually too Childish in what relates to our Souls, look on good counsel
from an Ecclesiastic as a Divinity Potion, and set our stomachs against it; but
a Familiar may insensibly insinuate it into us, and ere we are aware beguile us
into health. Yet if Lay Persons
will needs give the Clergy the enclosure of this office, they should at least
withdraw those impediments they have laid in their way, by depositing those
prejudices which will certainly frustrate their endeavor. Men have in these later days been
taught to look on Preaching as a thing of form to the Hearers, and of profit
only to the Speakers, a <i>craft whereby</i> as <i>Demetrius</i> says <i>They
get their living. </i><scripRef passage="Acts. 19. 25" id="xvi-p5.2" parsed="|Acts|19|25|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.19.25">Acts. 19. 25</scripRef>. But admit it were so in this
last respect, yet it does not infer it should be so in the former. If it be a Trade, twas sure thought (as
in all Ages but this) a very useful one, or else there would never have been
such encouragement given to it. No
State ever allotted public certain Salaries for a set of men that were thought
utterly useless: and if there be use to be made of them, shall we lose our
advantages merely because they gain theirs? We are in nothing else so senseless: no man will refuse
counsel from a Physician, because he lives by the Profession. Tis rather an argument on his side,
that because such an interest of his own depends on it, he has been the more
industrious to fit himself for it. But not to run farther in this digression, I shall apply it to my
purpose, by making this equitable proposal, that Lay men will not so moralize
the common Fable, as neither to admonish one another themselves, nor suffer
Ministers to do it without them. And truly tis hard if neither of these can be granted when
both ought. I am sure all is
little enough that can be done, though we should have as the Prophet speaks, <i>Precept
upon precept, Line upon line, here a little and there a little. </i><scripRef passage="Isa. 28. 13" id="xvi-p5.3" parsed="|Isa|28|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.28.13">Isa. 28. 13</scripRef>. Man’s nature is so unattentive to good, that there can
scarce be too many monitors. We
see <i>Satan</i> though he have a much stronger party in our inclinations,
dares not rely upon it, but is still employing his emissaries, to confirm and
excite them, and if whilst he has so many Agents among us, God shall have none,
we are like to give but an ill account of our zeal either to God or our
neighbor, or of those tongues which were given us to glorify the one, and
benefit the other. Indeed, without
this, our greatest officiousness in the secular concerns of others is no
kindness. When we strive to
advance the fame, to increase the fortune of a wicked man, what do we do in it,
but enable him to do the more mischiefs, by his wealth to foment his own
luxuries, and by his reputation commend them to the practice of others? He only makes his friend truly rich and
great, who teaches him to employ those advantages aright; and would men turn
their tongues to this sort of Oratory, they would indeed shew they understood
for what ends they were given them.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p6">6. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p6.1">But</span> as all good receives
enhancement from its being more diffusive, so these attempts should not be
confined to some one or two intimates or relatives, but be as extensive as the
common needs, or at least as our opportunities. Tis a generous ambition to benefit many, to oblige
communities: which can no way so well be done, as by endeavoring to subvert
vicious customs, which are the pest and poisons of all societies. The heathens had many ceremonies of
lustrations for their cities and countries, but he that could purify and refine
their manners, would indeed attain to the substance of those shadows. And because the Apostle tells us that <i>Evil
words corrupt good manners, </i>twould be a fundamental piece of reformation,
to introduce a better sort of converse into the world: which is an instance so
agreeable to my present subject, that I cannot Close more pertinently, than to
commend the endeavor to the Reader, which if he have been by this Tract at all
convinced of the sin and mischief of those Schemes of discourse deciphered in
it, cannot be more just to his convictions, than by attempting to supplant
them.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p7">7. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p7.1">It</span> were indeed a design worthy
of a noble soul, to try to new model the Age in this particular, to make it
possible for men, to be at once conversable and innocent. I know twill be objected, tis too vast
a project for one or many single Persons to undertake: yet difficulties use to
animate generous spirits, especially when (as here) the very attempt is
laudable. But as <i>Christ</i>
says of Wisdom, so may we of Courage, The Children of this world are more
daring than the Children of light. The great corrupters of discourse have not been so distrustful of
themselves: for tis visible to any that will reflect, that tis within man’s memory
since much of this monstrous exorbitancy of discourse grew in fashion,
particularly the Atheistical and Blasphemous. The first propugners of it were but few, and durst then but
whisper their black rudiments, yet the world now sees what a Harvest they have
from their devilish industry.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p8">8. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p8.1">And</span> shall we give over our
Clime as forlorn and desperate, and conclude that nothing which is not venomous
will thrive in our Soil. Would
some of parts and authority but make the experiment, I cannot think that all
places are yet so vitiated, but that they may meet with many who would relish
sober and ingenuous discourse, and by their example be animated to propagate it
to others: but as long as Blasphemy, Ribaldry, and Detraction set up for Wit,
and carry it without any competition, we do implicitly yield that title we
dispute not: and tis hard to say, whether their triumphs be more owing to the
boldness of ill men, or the pusillanimity of the good. What if upon the trial they should meet
with the worser part of <i>St. Paul’s</i> fate at Athens, <i>That some will
mock, </i><scripRef passage="Acts 17. 32" id="xvi-p8.2" parsed="|Acts|17|32|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.17.32">Acts 17. 32</scripRef>. yet perhaps they may partake of the better also, and
find others that would be willing <i>to hear them again, </i>and some few at
least <i>may cleave unto them. </i>And sure they are too tender and delicate, that will run no hazard, nor
be willing to bear a little share in that profane drollery, with which an
Apostle was, and their God is daily assaulted: especially when by this exposing
themselves, they may hope to give some check to that impious liberty. However besides the satisfaction of
their own consciences, they may also gain this advantage by the attempt, that
it may be a good test by which to try their company. For those whom they find impatient of innocent and
profitable converse, they may assure themselves can only ensnare not benefit
them; and he is a very weak Gamester, that will be drawn to play upon such
terms, as make it highly probable for him to lose, but impossible for him to
win. Therefore, in that case the
advice of <i>Solomon</i> is very proper, <i>Go from the presence of a foolish
man, when thou perceivest not in him the lips of Knowledge. </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 14. 7" id="xvi-p8.3" parsed="|Prov|14|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.14.7">Prov. 14. 7</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p9">9. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p9.1">But</span> he that will undertake so
Heroic and enterprise, must qualify himself for it, by being true to his own
pretensions. He must leave no
uneven thread in his loom, or by indulging to any one sort of reprovable
discourse himself, defeat all his endeavors against the rest. Those airy Speculators that have writ
of the Philosopher’s Stone have required many personal qualifications, strict
abstinences and purities in those who make the experiment. The thing may have this sober
application, that those who would turn this Iron Age into Gold, that would
convert our rusty, drossy converse into a purer strain, must be perfectly clean
themselves. For alas, what effect
can that man hope from this most zealous reprehensions, who lays himself open
to recrimination? He that hears a
man bitterly inveigh against Blasphemy and profaneness, and yet (in that almost
the same breath) hears his monitor inveigh bitterly against his Neighbor, will
scarce think him a good guide of his tongue, that has but half the mastery of
his own. Let every man, therefore,
be sure to begin at the right end of his work, to wash his own mouth clean, before
he prescribe Gargarisms to others. And to that purpose let him impartially reflect on all the undue
liberties he has given his tongue, whether which have been here remarked, or
those others which he may find in all Practical books, especially in (the most
Practical of all books) his own Conscience. And when he has traced his talk through all its wild
rambles, let him bring home his stray; not like the lost sheep with joy, but
with tears of penitence and contrition, and keep a strict watch over it that it
break not loose again; nay, farther require it to make some restitution for the
trespass it has committed in its former excursions, to restore to God what it
has robbed of his Honor, by devoting itself an instrument of His service; to
his Neighbor what it has detracted from him, by wiping off that fullage it has
cast upon his Fame; and to himself by defacing those ill Characters of vanity
and folly it has imprinted on him. Thus may the Tongue cure its own sting, and by a kind of Sympathetic
virtue, the wound may be healed by dressing the weapon. But alas, when we have done all, the
Tongue is so slippery that it will often be in danger to deceive our watch:
nay, it has a secret intelligence with the heart, which like a corrupted Gaoler
is too apt to connive at its escape. Let us therefore strengthen our guards, call in Him who sees all the
secret practices of our treacherous hearts, and commit both them and our
tongues to His custody. Let us say
with the Psalmist, <i>Try me, O God, and seek the ground of my heart. </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 129. 23" id="xvi-p9.2" parsed="|Ps|129|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.129.23">Psa. 129. 23</scripRef>. And with him again, <i>Set
a watch, O Lord, before my mouth, and keep the door of my lips, O let not my
heart be inclined to any evil thing, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 141. 3" id="xvi-p9.3" parsed="|Ps|141|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.141.3">Psa. 141. 3</scripRef>. And if <i>hand thus join in hand, </i><scripRef passage="Prov. 16. 6" id="xvi-p9.4" parsed="|Prov|16|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.16.6">Prov. 16. 6</scripRef>. if God’s
grace be humbly invoked, and our own endeavor honestly employed, even this <i>unruly
evil</i> of the Tongue (as <i>St. James</i> calls it <scripRef passage="James 3:8" id="xvi-p9.5" parsed="|Jas|3|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.3.8">Chap. 3. 8</scripRef>.) may be in
some degree tamed. If now and then
it get a little out by stealth, yet it will not like the Demoniac be so raving,
as quite to break all its chains. If we cannot always secure ourselves from inadvertence and surprise, but
that a forbidden word may sometimes escape us, yet we may from deliberate
willful offences of the Tongue. And thought we should all aspire higher, yet if we can but reach this,
we ought not to excuse ourselves (upon remaining infirmities) from the
Christian generous undertaking I was recommending, the reforming of
others. Indeed, I had made a very
impertinent exhortation to that, if this degree of fitness may not be admitted;
for I fear there would be none on earth could attempt it upon other terms: the
world must still remain as it is, and await only the Tongues of Angels to
reduce it. Nor need we fear that censure of Hypocrisy which we find, <scripRef passage="Matt. 7. 5" id="xvi-p9.6" parsed="|Matt|7|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7.5">Matt. 7. 5</scripRef>. for the case is very
differing. Tis indeed as
ridiculous as insolent an attempt, for one that has a Beam in his own eye, to
pretend to cast a Mote out of his brother’s: but it hold not on the contrary,
that he that has a Mote in his own, should not endeavor to remove the Beam in
his Brother’s. Every speck does
not blind a man, nor does every infirmity make one unable to discern, or
incompetent to reprove the grosser faults of others.</p>

<p class="normal" id="xvi-p10">10. <span class="sc" id="xvi-p10.1">Yet</span> after all, let us as much
as is possible clear our eyes even of this mote, and make our Copy as worth
transcribing as we can: for certainly the best instrument of reformation is
example: and though admonition may sometimes be necessary, yet there are many
circumstances required to the right ordering of that, so that it cannot always
be practicable, but a good example ever is. Besides, it has a secret magnetic virtue like the Loadstone,
it attracts by a power of which we can give no account: so that it seems to be
one of those occult qualities, those secrets in nature, which have puzzled the
enquirers, only experience demonstrates it to us. I am sure it does (too abundantly) in ill examples, and I
doubt not might do the like in good, if they were as plentiful experimented. And that they may be so, let every man
be ambitious to cast in his mite: for the two make but a farthing, yet they may
be multiplied to the vastest sum. However, if a man cannot reform, yet I am sure twill be worth his while,
so to <i>save himself from this untoward generation, </i><scripRef passage="Acts 2:40" id="xvi-p10.2" parsed="|Acts|2|40|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.40">Acts. 2. 40</scripRef>. I have now presented the Tongue under a
double aspect, such as may justify the ancient Definition of it, that it is the
worst and best part of man, the best in its original and design, and the worst
in its corruption and degeneration. In David, the man after God’s heart, it was his glory, <scripRef passage="Psa. 57. 8" id="xvi-p10.3" parsed="|Ps|57|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.57.8">Psa. 57. 8</scripRef>.<i> The best member that he had, </i>
<scripRef passage="Psa. 108. 1" id="xvi-p10.4" parsed="|Ps|108|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.108.1">Psa. 108. 1</scripRef>.<i> But in the wicked
it cuts like a sharp Razor, </i><scripRef passage="Psa. 52. 2" id="xvi-p10.5" parsed="|Ps|52|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.52.2">Psa. 52. 2</scripRef>.<i> Tis as the venom of Asps, </i>140. 3. The Tongues from heaven were <i>Cloven </i>
<scripRef passage="Acts. 2. 2" id="xvi-p10.6" parsed="|Acts|2|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.2">Acts. 2. 2</scripRef>. to be the more diffusive of good: but those that are <i>fired from
hell</i> are forked, <scripRef passage="James 3:6" id="xvi-p10.7" parsed="|Jas|3|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.3.6">Jam. 3. 6</scripRef>. to be the more impressive of mischief: it must
be referred to every man’s choice, into which of the forms he will mold
his. Solomon tells us <i>Death and
Life are in the power of the Tongue, </i>and that not only directly in regard
of the good or ill we may do to others, but reflexively also, in respect of
what may rebound to ourselves. Let
<i>Moses</i> then make the inference from <i>Solomon’s</i> premises, <i>Therefore
choose life, </i><scripRef passage="Deut. 30. 15" id="xvi-p10.8" parsed="|Deut|30|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Deut.30.15">Deut. 30. 15</scripRef>. a proposal so reasonable, so agreeable to
nature, that no flourishes can render it more inviting. I shall therefore leave it to the
Reader’s contemplation, and shall hope that if he please but to resolve it with
that seriousness which the importance exacts, he will new set his tongue, compose
it to those pious Divine strains, which may be a proper preludium to those
Allelujahs he hopes eternally to sing.</p>

<h3 id="xvi-p10.9">F I N I S.</h3>
</div1>

    <!-- added reason="AutoIndexing" -->
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      <h1 id="xvii-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

      <div2 title="Index of Scripture References" id="xvii.i" prev="xvii" next="toc">
        <h2 id="xvii.i-p0.1">Index of Scripture References</h2>
        <insertIndex type="scripRef" id="xvii.i-p0.2" />

<!-- added reason="insertIndex" class="scripRef" -->
<!-- Start of automatically inserted scripRef index -->
<div class="Index">
<p class="bbook">Genesis</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#iv-p1.2">2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=5#v-p5.3">6:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=23#ix-p29.2">14:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=27&amp;scrV=0#ix-p29.5">27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=27&amp;scrV=29#xiv-p8.2">27:29</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=35&amp;scrV=37#xiii-p3.3">35:37</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=39&amp;scrV=14#viii-p9.2">39:14</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Exodus</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Exod&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=26#vi-p19.2">8:26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Exod&amp;scrCh=21&amp;scrV=24#ix-p28.2">21:24</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Exod&amp;scrCh=21&amp;scrV=29#ix-p15.3">21:29</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Exod&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=1#ix-p28.3">22:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Exod&amp;scrCh=32&amp;scrV=19#ix-p29.3">32:19</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Numbers</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Num&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=27#xiv-p13.2">22:27</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Deuteronomy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Deut&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=6#xi-p6.2">13:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Deut&amp;scrCh=25&amp;scrV=3#ix-p37.3">25:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Deut&amp;scrCh=30&amp;scrV=15#xvi-p10.8">30:15</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Joshua</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Josh&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=0#ix-p25.2">8</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Judges</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Judg&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=31#vi-p19.3">6:31</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Samuel</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Sam&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=39#ix-p11.3">2:39</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Samuel</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Sam&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=22#x-p7.8">6:22</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Sam&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=7#ix-p38.2">12:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Sam&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=3#viii-p9.3">16:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Sam&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=23#ix-p12.2">18:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Sam&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=33#xiii-p3.4">18:33</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Kings</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Kgs&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=44#ix-p10.3">18:44</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Kings</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Kgs&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=0#v-p4.2">10</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Job</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Job&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=21#xiii-p6.2">1:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Job&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=2#v-p4.5">2:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Job&amp;scrCh=29&amp;scrV=25#x-p3.3">29:25</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Psalms</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=39#vii-p1.2">7:39</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=4#vi-p8.2">12:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=0#ix-p11.2">14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=32&amp;scrV=9#x-p3.2">32:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=34&amp;scrV=3#iv-p5.5">34:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=39&amp;scrV=0#v-p4.3">39</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=39&amp;scrV=3#xiii-p3.2">39:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=50&amp;scrV=21#vi-p12.2">50:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=52&amp;scrV=2#xvi-p10.5">52:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=56&amp;scrV=21#xi-p1.2">56:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=57&amp;scrV=8#xvi-p10.3">57:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=57&amp;scrV=9#iv-p5.4">57:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=57&amp;scrV=10#iv-p5.4">57:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=64&amp;scrV=3#vii-p1.3">64:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=69&amp;scrV=12#x-p7.2">69:12</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=73&amp;scrV=9#v-p4.4">73:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=106&amp;scrV=33#v-p3.2">106:33</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=108&amp;scrV=1#xvi-p10.4">108:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=109&amp;scrV=18#xi-p12.2">109:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=115&amp;scrV=5#vi-p14.2">115:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=129&amp;scrV=23#xvi-p9.2">129:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=141&amp;scrV=3#xvi-p9.3">141:3</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Proverbs</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=24#vi-p18.2">1:24</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=8#x-p12.2">9:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=7#vii-p7.4">10:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=1#x-p12.3">13:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=7#xvi-p8.3">14:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=9#viii-p8.3">14:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=13#vi-p13.2">14:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=6#xvi-p9.4">16:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=7#ix-p28.4">18:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=21#i-p2.1">18:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=19&amp;scrV=29#x-p12.4">19:29</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=1#vii-p7.2">22:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=12#xii-p11.2">26:12</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=18#viii-p8.2">26:18-19</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=27#ix-p43.2">26:27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=27&amp;scrV=19#iv-p2.2">27:19</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=28&amp;scrV=23#xi-p11.2">28:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=30&amp;scrV=0#viii-p4.2">30</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Ecclesiastes</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=1#vii-p7.3">7:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=1#ix-p10.2">10:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=4#ix-p31.2">11:4</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Isaiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=21#xiv-p2.2">5:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=21#xiii-p6.3">8:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=12#xiii-p9.4">13:12</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=28&amp;scrV=13#xvi-p5.3">28:13</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Jeremiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jer&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=11#vi-p2.2">2:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jer&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=0#v-p5.2">9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jer&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=7#x-p7.3">20:7</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Ezekiel</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ezek&amp;scrCh=33&amp;scrV=0#ix-p18.2">33</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ezek&amp;scrCh=33&amp;scrV=11#ix-p42.3">33:11</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Daniel</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Dan&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=0#viii-p7.2">3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Dan&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=4#x-p13.2">6:4</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Jonah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jonah&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=7#xi-p12.3">4:7</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Micah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Mic&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=11#ix-p27.2">6:11</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Matthew</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=4#xi-p6.3">5:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=11#x-p7.7">5:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=0#xii-p8.2">6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=1#ix-p24.3">7:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=5#xvi-p9.6">7:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=38#x-p6.3">8:38</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=18#x-p14.2">10:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=30#ix-p14.2">12:30</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=37#iv-p6.2">12:37</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=32#ix-p15.2">13:32</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=7#vii-p10.2">18:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=20#viii-p10.2">22:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=25&amp;scrV=25#xvi-p2.2">25:25</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=27&amp;scrV=4#xiii-p9.3">27:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=27&amp;scrV=39#x-p7.5">27:39</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Luke</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=55#ix-p29.4">9:55</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=7#vii-p4.2">10:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=14#ix-p24.2">12:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=14#x-p7.4">16:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=1#vi-p19.4">17:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=0#ix-p9.2">18</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">John</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=7#ix-p38.3">8:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=44#viii-p2.2">8:44</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Acts</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=2#xvi-p10.6">2:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=40#xvi-p10.2">2:40</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=4#ix-p42.2">9:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=0#ix-p37.2">17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=32#xvi-p8.2">17:32</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=19&amp;scrV=25#xvi-p5.2">19:25</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=19&amp;scrV=28#x-p2.2">19:28</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Romans</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=25#xii-p17.3">1:25-26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=1#ix-p27.3">2:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=14#iv-p4.2">10:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=20#ix-p37.8">11:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=21#xii-p17.4">11:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=10#ix-p39.2">14:10</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Corinthians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=5#ix-p24.5">4:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=7#ix-p37.7">4:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=10#vi-p4.2">4:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=2#ix-p37.4">5:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=3#ix-p24.6">6:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=8#ix-p21.2">7:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=17#xvi-p2.3">11:17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=26#xiii-p9.2">12:26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=5#ix-p7.2">13:5</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Galatians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=13#ix-p34.2">2:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=1#ix-p37.6">6:1</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Ephesians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=3#xv-p3.2">5:3</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Philippians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=4#xii-p13.2">2:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=19#xii-p16.2">3:19</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=8#vii-p7.5">4:8</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Timothy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Tim&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=13#ix-p24.4">1:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Tim&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=13#ix-p21.3">5:13-14</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Timothy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Tim&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=7#xii-p11.3">3:7</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Hebrews</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=16#xiv-p3.2">1:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=23#vi-p16.2">2:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=3#x-p7.6">12:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=28#vi-p16.3">12:28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=7#vi-p12.3">13:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=15#iv-p5.3">13:15</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">James</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=26#ii-p4.2">1:26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=4#ix-p24.7">2:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=13#ix-p43.3">2:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=1#xvi-p1.2">3:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=2#ii-p2.2">3:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=6#xvi-p10.7">3:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=8#xvi-p9.5">3:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=6#xii-p17.2">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=6#ix-p37.5">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=12#ix-p39.3">4:12</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Peter</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=4#viii-p9.4">4:4</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 John</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1John&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=18#xi-p4.2">3:18</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Jude</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jude&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=2#ix-p33.3">1:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jude&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=16#xiii-p1.2">1:16</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Revelation</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=21&amp;scrV=0#viii-p3.2">21</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Wisdom of Solomon</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Wis&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=11#xiii-p10.2">1:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Wis&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=14#x-p6.2">2:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Wis&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=16#xiv-p6.2">9:16</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Sirach</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Sir&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=7#x-p8.2">6:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Sir&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=7#xi-p5.2">16:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Sir&amp;scrCh=19&amp;scrV=8#ix-p33.2">19:8-9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Sir&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=6#viii-p8.4">26:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Sir&amp;scrCh=40&amp;scrV=4#xi-p8.2">40:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Sir&amp;scrCh=51&amp;scrV=22#iv-p5.2">51:22</a>  
 </p>
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