A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume 3.

A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume 3.

But the great question after all is, whether the Quakers believe themselves in this or in any other of their religious scruples, to be right, as a Christian body?  If there are those among them who do not, they give into the customs of the world, and either leave the society themselves, or become disowned.  It is therefore only a fair and a just presumption, that all those who continue in the society, and who keep up to these scruples to the detriment of their worldly interest, believe themselves to be right.  But this belief of their own rectitude, even if they should happen to be wrong, is religion to them, and ought to be estimated so by us in matters in which an interpretation of Gospel principles is concerned.  This is but an homage due to conscience, after all the blood that has been shed in the course of Christian persecutions, and after all the religious light that has been diffused among us since the reformation of our religion.

CHAP.  XIII.

SECT.  I.

Next trait is that of a money-getting spirit—­Probability of the truth of this trait examined—­An undue eagerness after money not unlikely to be often the result of the frugal and commercial habits of the society—­but not to the extent, as insisted on by the world—­This eagerness, wherever it exists, seldom chargeable with avarice.

The next trait in the character of the Quakers is that of a money-getting spirit, or of a devotedness to the acquisition of money in their several callings and concerns.

This character is considered as belonging so generally to the individuals of this society, that it is held by the world to be almost inseparable from Quakerism.  A certain writer has remarked, that they follow their concerns in pursuit of riches, “with a step as steady as time, and with an appetite as keen as death.”

I do not know what circumstances have given birth to this trait.  That the Quakers are a thriving body we know.  That they may also appear, when known to be a domestic people, and to have discarded the amusements of the world, to be more in their shops and counting-houses than others, is probable.  And it is not unlikely, that, in consequence of this appearance, connected with this worldly prosperity, they may be thought to be more intent than others upon the promotion of their pecuniary concerns.  There are circumstances, however, belonging to the character and customs of the society, which would lead to an opposite conclusion.  The Quakers, in the first place, are acknowledged to be a charitable people.  But if so, they ought not to be charged, at least, with that species of the money-getting spirit, which amounts to avarice.  It is also an undoubted fact, that they give up no small portion of their time, and put themselves to no small expence, on account of their religion.  In country places they allot one morning in the week, and in the towns generally

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A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.