[A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume I (of 3) by Thomas Clarkson]@TWC D-Link book
A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume I (of 3)

INTRODUCTION
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Now these principles the Quakers adopt in the exercise of their discipline, because, as a Christian community, they believe they ought to be guided only by Christian principles, and they know of no other, which the letter, or the spirit of Christianity, can warrant.
I shall trespass upon the patience of the reader in this place, only till I have made an application of these principles, or till I have shewn him how far these might be extended, and extended with advantage to morals, beyond the limits of the Quaker-society, by being received as the basis, upon which a system, of penal laws might be founded, among larger societies, or states.
It is much to be lamented, that nations, professing Christianity, should have lost sight, in their various acts of legislation, of Christian principles: or that they should not have interwoven some such beautiful principles as those, which we have seen adopted by the Quakers, into the system of their penal laws.

But if this negligence or omission would appear worthy of regret, if reported of any Christian nation, it would appear most so, if reported of our own, where one would have supposed, that the advantages of civil and religious liberty, and those of a reformed religion, would have had their influence is the correction of our judgments, and in the benevolent dispositions of our will.

And yet nothing is more true, than that these good influences have either never been produced, or, if produced, that they have never been attended to, upon this subject.

There seems to be no provision for religions instruction in our numerous prisons.

We seem to make no patient trials of those, who are confined in them, for their reformation.


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