John Tillotson
Archbishop of Canterbury, 1630-1694
Cited as Tillotson. — 123 quotations
Apprehensive
Not at all apprehensive of evils as a distance.
Artificially
The spider's web, finely and artificially wrought.
Awaken
Their consciences are thoroughly awakened.
Beside
That man that does not know those things which are of necessity for him to know is but an ignorant man, whatever he may know besides.
Blame
We have none to blame but ourselves.
Blanch
Blanch over the blackest and most absurd things.
Blessedness
The assurance of a future blessedness.
Carnality
Because of the carnality of their hearts.
Commensurate
Those who are persuaded that they shall continue forever, can not choose but aspire after a happiness commensurate to their duration.
Comply
They did servilely comply with the people in worshiping God by sensible images.
Conclude
No man can conclude God's love or hatred to any person by anything that befalls him.
Condescension
It forbids pride . . . and commands humility, modesty, and condescension to others.
Conformity
By our conformity to God.
Considerable
Eternity is infinitely the most considerable duration.
Contrive
What more likely to contrive this admirable frame of the universe than infinite wisdom.
Cry
Men of dissolute lives cry down religion, because they would not be under the restraints of it.
Cultivate
The mind of man hath need to be prepared for piety and virtue; it must be cultivated to the end.
Deal
If he will deal clearly and impartially, . . . he will acknowledge all this to be true.
Declaration
Declarations of mercy and love . . . in the Gospel.
Defeat
He finds himself naturally to dread a superior Being that can defeat all his designs, and disappoint all his hopes.
Degeneracy
Willful degeneracy from goodness.
Degenerate
When wit transgresseth decency, it degenerates into insolence and impiety.
Demolish
I expected the fabric of my book would long since have been demolished, and laid even with the ground.
Demonstrate
We can not demonstrate these things so as to show that the contrary often involves a contradiction.
Design
Is he a prudent man . . . that lays designs only for a day, without any prospect to the remaining part of his life?
Deter
Potent enemies tempt and deter us from our duty.
Determinately
The principles of religion are already either determinately true or false, before you think of them.
Disband
Human society would in a short space disband.
Disbelief
Our belief or disbelief of a thing does not alter the nature of the thing.
Disobedience
He is undutiful to him other actions, and lives in open disobedience.
Distort
Wrath and malice, envy and revenge, do darken and distort the understandings of men.
Dread
The secret dread of divine displeasure.
Equity
Christianity secures both the private interests of men and the public peace, enforcing all justice and equity.
Err
The man may err in his judgment of circumstances.
Evermore
Which flow from the presence of God for evermore.
Face
This is the man that has the face to charge others with false citations.
Fatal
These thing are fatal and necessary.
Filth
To purify the soul from the dross and filth of sensual delights.
For
It is for the general good of human society, and consequently of particular persons, to be true and just; and it is for men's health to be temperate.
Furniture
The form and all the furniture of the earth.
Gird
Conscience . . . is freed from many fearful girds and twinges which the atheist feels.
Go
If we go over the laws of Christianity, we shall find that . . . they enjoin the same thing.
Habituate
Men are first corrupted . . . and next they habituate themselves to their vicious practices.
Hamper
They hamper and entangle our souls.
Head
The heads of the chief sects of philosophy.
Hence
Hence, perhaps, it is, that Solomon calls the fear of the Lord the beginning of wisdom.
Heresy
Deluded people! that do not consider that the greatest heresy in the world is a wicked life.
Hold
Fear . . . by which God and his laws take the surest hold of.
However
Our chief end is to be freed from all, if it may be, however from the greatest evils.
Hydropic
Every lust is a kind of hydropic distemper, and the more we drink the more we shall thirst.
Ignorant
He that doth not know those things which are of use for him to know, is but an ignorant man, whatever he may know besides.
In the first ages of Christianity, not only the learned and the wise, but the ignorant and illiterate, embraced torments and death.
Imaginable
Men sunk into the greatest darkness imaginable.
Impertinent
Things that are impertinent to us.
Improvement
I shall make some improvement of this doctrine.
Incompliance
Self-conceit produces peevishness and incompliance of humor in things lawful and indifferent.
Inconvenience
Man is liable to a great many inconveniences.
Indirect
Indirect dealing will be discovered one time or other.
Infallibility
Infallibility is the highest perfection of the knowing faculty.
Instead
This very consideration to a wise man is instead of a thousand arguments, to satisfy him, that in those times no such thing was believed.
Involve
The contrary necessarily involves a contradiction.
Juggle
A juggle of state to cozen the people.
Just
Men are commonly so just to virtue and goodness as to praise it in others, even when they do not practice it themselves.
Lap
Men expect that happiness should drop into their laps.
Light
There is no greater argument of a light and inconsiderate person than profanely to scoff at religion.
Main
Our main interest is to be happy as we can.
Many
He is liable to a great many inconveniences.
Mastery
He could attain to a mastery in all languages.
Minded
If men were minded to live virtuously.
Mistake
Infallibility is an absolute security of the understanding from all possibility of mistake.
Mortification
The mortification of our lusts has something in it that is troublesome, yet nothing that is unreasonable.
Necessary
A certain kind of temper is necessary to the pleasure and quiet of our minds.
Nibble
Instead of returning a full answer to my book, he manifestly falls a-nibbling at one single passage.
Oblige
Religion obliges men to the practice of those virtues which conduce to the preservation of our health.
Openly
How grossly and openly do many of us contradict the precepts of the gospel by our ungodliness!
Order
The best knowledge is that which is of greatest use in order to our eternal happiness.
Pitch
Pitch upon the best course of life, and custom will render it the more easy.
Plunge
To plunge into guilt of a murther.
Principle
The soul of man is an active principle.
Prohibition
The law of God, in the ten commandments, consists mostly of prohibitions.
Prospect
Is he a prudent man as to his temporal estate, that lays designs only for a day, without any prospect to, or provision for, the remaining part of life ?
Rally
Innumerable parts of matter chanced just then to rally together, and to form themselves into this new world.
Reason
Virtue and vice are not arbitrary things; but there is a natural and eternal reason for that goodness and virtue, and against vice and wickedness.
When anything is proved by as good arguments as a thing of that kind is capable of, we ought not, in reason, to doubt of its existence.
Reduce
Nothing so excellent but a man may fasten upon something belonging to it, to reduce it.
Reserve
The virgins, besides the oil in their lamps, carried likewise a reserve in some other vessel for a continual supply.
Respect
They believed but one Supreme Deity, which, with respect to the various benefits men received from him, had several titles.
Everything which is imperfect, as the world must be acknowledged in many respects.
Rest
Religion gives part of its reward in hand, the present comfort of having done our duty, and, for the rest, it offers us the best security that Heaven can give.
Result
Pleasure and peace do naturally result from a holy and good life.
Rule
We profess to have embraced a religion which contains the most exact rules for the government of our lives.
Season
The proper use of wit is to season conversation.
See
Many sagacious persons will find us out, . . . and see through all our fine pretensions.
Service
God requires no man's service upon hard and unreasonable terms.
Set
Setting aside all other considerations, I will endeavor to know the truth, and yield to that.
Singular
To be singular in anything that is wise and worthy, is not a disparagement, but a praise.
Slander
Whether we speak evil of a man to his face or behind his back; the former way, indeed, seems to be the most generous, but yet is a great fault, and that which we call “reviling;” the latter is more mean and base, and that which we properly call “slander”, or “Backbiting.”
So
It concerns every man, with the greatest seriousness, to inquire into those matters, whether they be so or not.
Sore
Malice and hatred are very fretting and vexatious, and apt to make our minds sore and uneasy.
Space
God may defer his judgments for a time, and give a people a longer space of repentance.
Strain
Intemperance and lust breed diseases, which, propogated, spoil the strain of nation.
The genius and strain of the book of Proverbs.
Studier
Lipsius was a great studier of the stoical philosophy.
Substantially
The laws of this religion would make men, if they would truly observe them, substantially religious toward God, chastle, and temperate.
Sullen
Things are as sullen as we are.
Suppose
When we have as great assurance that a thing is, as we could possibly, supposing it were, we ought not to make any doubt of its existence.
Supposition
This is only an infallibility upon supposition that if a thing be true, it is imposible to be false.
Sustain
No comfortable expectations of another life to sustain him under the evils in this world.
Sway
Let not temporal and little advantages sway you against a more durable interest.
Synonymous
These words consist of two propositions, which are not distinct in sense, but one and the same thing variously expressed; for wisdom and understanding are synonymous words here.
Take
The firm belief of a future judgment is the most forcible motive to a good life, because taken from this consideration of the most lasting happiness and misery.
Tend
The laws of our religion tend to the universal happiness of mankind.
Tender
The civil authority should be tender of the honor of God and religion.
Thing
Wicked men who understand any thing of wisdom.
Toss
To toss and fling, and to be restless, only frets and enrages our pain.
Train
The first Christians were, by great hardships, trained up for glory.
Turn
God will make these evils the occasion of a greater good, by turning them to advantage in this world.
Twit
This these scoffers twitted the Christians with.
Uncertain
Man, without the protection of a superior Being, . . . is uncertain of everything that he hopes for.
Wed
Men are wedded to their lusts.
Wink
They are not blind, but they wink.
Within
Till this be cured by religion, it is as impossible for a man to be happy -- that is, pleased and contented within himself -- as it is for a sick man to be at ease.
Worship
The worship of God is an eminent part of religion, and prayer is a chief part of religious worship.