[A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume I (of 3) by Thomas Clarkson]@TWC D-Link bookA Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume I (of 3) INTRODUCTION 191/423
The first may comprehend the regulation of the internal affairs of the society, such as the management of the poor belonging to it, the granting of certificates of removal to its members, the hearing of their appeals upon various occasions, the taking cognizance of their proposals of marriage, and the like.
The second may comprehend the notice or observance of the moral conduct of individuals, with a view of preserving the rules, which the Quakers have thought it their duty to make, and the testimonies which they have thought it their duty to bear, as a Christian people.
It is to the latter part of the discipline that I shall principally confine myself in the ensuing part of my work. Nothing is more true than that, when men err in their moral practice, it is not for want of good precepts or of wholesome advice.
There are few books from which we cannot collect some moral truths; and few men so blind, as not to be able to point out to us the boundaries of moral good.
The pages of revelation have been long unfolded to our view, and diffusively spread among us.
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