Date: 1660, 1676
"The Apostle says, that they use the testimony of conscience, who have the law written in their hearts."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"I do suppose that this is the very spirit, which by the Apostle is said to be with the soul, as a pedagogue and social governor, that it may admonish the soul of better things, and chastise her for her faults, and reprove her."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"Because no man knows the things of a man but the spirit of a man which is in him; and that is the spirit of our conscience, concerning which, he saith, That spirit gives testimony to our spirit."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"Thus, conscience is the Mind, and God writing his laws in our minds, is, informing our conscience, and furnishing it with laws, and rules, and measures, and it is called by S. Paul, [GREEK], the law of the mind."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"Now there are two ways by which God reigns in the mind of a man, 1. Faith, and, 2. Conscience."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"For the conscience is a Judge and a Guide, a Monitor and a Witness, which are the offices of the knowing, not of the chusing faculty."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"But to accuse or excuse is the office of a faculty which can neither will nor chuse, that is, of the conscience, which is properly a record, a book, and a judgment-seat."
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: 1660, 1676
"That is, of that which God hath declared to be good or evil respectively, the conscience is to be informed. God hath taken care that his laws shall be published to all his subjects, he hath written them where they must needs read them, not in Tables of stone or Phylacteries on the forehead, but ...
preview | full record— Taylor, Jeremy (bap. 1613, 1667)
Date: September, 1661
"Circumstances, which vary cases, are infinite; therefore, when all is done, much must be left to the equity and chancery of our own breasts."
preview | full record— Tillotson, John (1630–1694)
Date: 1665
"There is no passion in which love of self rules so despotically as love, and we are always more inclined to sacrifice the loved one's tranquillity than to lose our own."
preview | full record— La Rochefoucauld, François, duc de (1613-1680)