they had been largely anticipated. If the inner
motion or manifestation of the Spirit in each mind,
in interpretation of the Bible or over and above the
Bible, is the sole true teaching of the Gospel, and
if the manifestation cometh as the Spirit listeth,
and cannot be commanded, a regular Ministry of the
Word by a so-called Clergy is an absurdity, and a hired
Ministry an abomination! So said the Quakers.
In reaching this conclusion, however, they had only
added themselves to masses of people, known as Brownists,
Seekers, and Anabaptists, who had already, by the same
route or by others, advanced to the standing-ground
of absolute Voluntaryism. What did distinguish
the early Quakers seems to have been, in the first
place, the thorough form of their apprehension of
that doctrine of the Inner Light, or Immediate Revelation
of the Spirit, which they held in common with other
sects, and, in the second place, their courage and
tenacity in carrying out the practical inferences
from that doctrine in every sentence of their own
speech and every hour of their own conduct. As
to the form in which they held the doctrine itself
Barclay will be again our best authority. “The
testimony of the Spirit,” he says, “is
that alone by which the true knowledge of God hath
been, is, and can only be, revealed; who, as by the
moving of his own Spirit he converted the Chaos of
this world into that wonderful Order wherein it was
in the beginning, and created Man a living Soul to
rule and govern it, so by the same Spirit he hath
manifested himself all along unto the sons of men,
both Patriarchs, Prophets, and Apostles: which
revelations of God by the Spirit, whether by outward
voices and appearances, dreams, or inward objective
manifestations in the heart, were of old the formal
object of their faith and remain yet so to be,—since
the object of the Saints’ faith is the same
in all ages, though set forth under divers administrations.”
This Inner Light of the Spirit, seizing men and women
at all times and places, and illuminating them in
the knowledge of God, was, Barclay elsewhere explains,
something altogether supernatural, something totally
distinct from natural Reason. “That Man,
as he is a rational creature, hath Reason as a natural
faculty of his soul, we deny not; for this is a property
natural and essential to him, by which he can know
and learn many arts and sciences, beyond what any
other animal can do by the mere animal principle.
Neither do we deny that by this rational principle
Man may apprehend in his brain, and in the notion,
a knowledge of God and spiritual things; yet, that
not being the right organ, ... it cannot profit him
towards salvation, but rather hindereth.”
And what of the use and value of the Scriptures?
“From these revelations of the Spirit of God
to the saints have proceeded the Scriptures of Truth,
which contain (1) A faithful historical account of
the actings of God’s people in divers ages,
with many singular and remarkable providences attending