15 Quotes About Puritanical

Puritanism is a state of mind in which there is a tendency to create a very strict, narrow, and rigid way of life. The Puritans were a group of English Protestants who separated from the Church of England during the reign of Elizabeth I, the last Stuart monarch. They emphasized separation from the world and their desire to create a pure, godly community.

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When the world is worth nothing, then heaven is worth something. I leave every Christian to judge by his own experience, whether we do not overlove the world more in prosperity than in adversity (374) [.] Richard Baxter
Seriousness is the very thing wherein consisteth our sincerity. If...
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Seriousness is the very thing wherein consisteth our sincerity. If thou art not serious, thou art not a Christian (279). Richard Baxter
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The falseness of your own hearts, if you look not to them, may undo you(15). Richard Baxter
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[O]ur applications are quicker about our sufferings, than our sins(77)[.] Richard Baxter
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So then, let "Deserved" be written on the door of hell, but on the door of Heaven and life, "The free gift" (68). Richard Baxter
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Oh! what a potent instrument for Satan is a misguided conscience(93)! Richard Baxter
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O sirs, how many souls, then, have every one of us been guilty of damning! What a number of our neighbours and acquaintance are dead, in whom we discerned no signs of sanctification, and never did once plainly tell them of it, or how to be recovered! If you had been the cause but of burning a man's house through your negligence, or of undoing him in the world, or of destroying his body, how would it trouble you as long as you lived! If you had but killed a man unadvisedly, it would much disquiet you. We have known those that have been guilty of murder, that could never sleep quietly after, nor have one comfortable day, their own consciences did so vex and torment them. O, then, what a heart mayst thou have, that hast been builty of murdering such a multitude of precious souls! Remember this when thou lookest thy friend or carnal neighbour in the face, and think with thyself, Can I find in my heart, through my silence and negligence, to be guilty of his everlasting burning in hell? Methinks such a thought should even untie the tongue of the dumb. [H]e that is guilty of a man's continuing unregenerate, is also guilty of the sins of his unregeneracy. Eli did not commit the sin himself, and yet he speaketh so coldly against it that he also must bear the punishment. Guns and cannons spake against sin in England, because the inhabitants would not speak. God pleadeth with us with fire and sword, because we would not plead with sinners with our tongues (410-11). Richard Baxter
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As all our senses are the inlets of sin, so they are become the inlets of sorrow (99). Richard Baxter
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What if you had seen haven open as Stephen did, and all the saints there triumphing in glory, and enjoying the end of their labours and sufferings, what a life would you lead after such a sight as this! Why, you will see this with your eyes before it be long. Thou hast the more cause to doubt a great deal, because thou never didst doubtl and yet more because thou hast been so careless in thy confidence. What do these expressions discover, but a wilful neglect of thy own salvation? As a shipmaster that should let his vessel alone, and mind other matters, and say, I will venture it among the rocks, and sands, and gulfs, and waves, and winds; I will never touble myself to know wheter it shall come safe to the harbour; I will trust God with it; it will speed as well as other men's vessels do. Indeed, as well as other men's that are as careless and idle, but not so well as other mens's that are diligent and watchful. What horrible abuse of God is this, for men to pretend that they trust God with their souls only to cloak their own wilful negligence! (290-291) . Richard Baxter
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What if you had once seen hell open, and all the damned there in their easeless torments, and had heard them crying out of their slothfulness in the day of their visitation, and wishing that they had but another life to live, and that God would but try them once again; one crying out of this neglect of duty, and another of his loitering and trifling, when he should have been labouring for his life; what manner of person would you have been after such a sight as this ? (284) . Richard Baxter
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Even innocent Adam is liker to forget God in a paradise, than Joseph in a prison, or Job upon a dunghill(376)[.] Richard Baxter
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The way of painful duty is the way of fullest comfort. Christ carrieth all our comforts in his hand : if we are out of that way where Christ is to be met, we are out of the way where comfort is to be had (312). Richard Baxter
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He that dare not die, dare scarce fight valiantly (475). Richard Baxter
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The physical vanity of the diet-and-exercise obsessive is recast as the pursuit of a kind of ritual purity, hedged about with taboos and guilt trips and mysticized by yoga. Ross Douthat