Date: 1756, 1766
"Then only you are qualified for life, when you are able to oppose your appetites, and bravely dare to call your opinions to account; when you have established judgment or reason as the ruler in your mind, and by a patience of thinking, and a power of resisting, before you choose, can bring your ...
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
"I will love thee therefore, O Lord, my strength; yea, I will love thee: and it ever shall be my heart's desire, that my soul may behold by faith in its self, as in a glass, the glory of the Lord, able and ready to change it into the same image from glory to glory, reflected upon, and conveyed to...
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
"In the softest, sweetest voice, she expressed herself, and without the least appearance of labour, her ideas seemed to flow from a vast fountain"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
Gold may invert the proper order of mind and body and produce "an apostasy that sets the inferior powers in the throne, and enslaves the mind to the body"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
We are "endued with an understanding which can acquire large moral dominion, and may ... sit as queen upon the throne over the whole corporeal system"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
From "the natural lights of our understanding" we have the highest reason to conclude we will be rewarded or punished in the afterlife
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
"This is the excellent law of reason or nature. There is a light sufficient in every human breast, to conduct the soul to perfect day, if men will follow it right onwards"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
God may cast his "bright beams of light upon our souls, and irradiate our understandings with the rays of ... wisdom"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
"But this is far from being the case of all gentlemen. If there be something stronger than virtue in too many of them, something that masters and subdues it; a passion, or passions, rebellious and lawless, which makes them neglect some high relations, and take the throne from God and reason; gami...
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
"The throne of God rests upon reason"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)