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THE

DOCTRINES OF FRIENDS:

OR, THE

Principles of the Christian Religion,

AS HELD BY

THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS,

COMMONLY CALLED QUAKERS.

BY ELISHA BATES.

MOUNTPLEASANT, OHIO, PRINTED.

YORK:

REPRINTED AND SOLD BY W. ALEXANDER AND SON, CASTLEGATE ;
SOLD ALSO BY

HARVEY AND DARTON, EDMUND FRY, AND WILLIAM DARTON,

LONDON;

R. PEART, BIRMINGHAM ; D. F. GARDINER, DUBLIN; WETHERELD & oo.

BELFAST.

ADVERTISEMENT

To the English Edition.

As different artists frequently furnish considerable variety in the landscapes they exhibit from the same subject; so this description of the Doctrines of the Society, whilst it maintains the ancient ground of our Principles, presents us, in many instances, with an agreeable variety, in the manner of advocating our acknowledged Doctrines.

PREFACE.

BX7731
B 35

In publishing, at the present day, a Treatise on the Doctrines of Friends, it is not intended to convey an idea, that the works of this kind, already extant, are not judiciously written. Nor is it intended, by the present performance, to supercede those valuable writings on the contrary, I would recommend them to more general attention than they now receive. Nor is it to propagate or defend new principles, that I have entered into the present engagement; but to present, in a concise and yet explicit manner, an account of the acknowledged Doctrines of the Society. For, though I consider the doctrinal works that have been published, with the consent of the Society, are all well adapted to the particular views of the respective writers, and to the times at which they were written; yet it may be noticed, that the writings of our primitive Friends are voluminous and scarce, while those of modern date do not notice many points of doctrine, which sometimes become interesting, from the particular course of religious inquiry.

It has long been a settled sentiment in my mind, that a work setting forth clearly the acknowledged Principles of the Society, in all material points, without being tedious or expensive, would be useful both to the members of the Society itself, and to serious inquirers of other religious denominations. With this sentiment, I cherished, for several years, a hope that some qualified individual would undertake the task. Finding, however, this hope not

808

realized, and feeling more impressively the importance of the work, the apprehension of duty gradually and permanently settled on my mind, to make the attempt.

Though the arrangement of the subjects, and the manner of treating them, have been dictated by the views presented to my own mind; yet in the subjects themselves, I have endeavoured to keep to the acknowledged Doctrines of the Society. And in compiling the following pages, I have made such extracts from the writings of our early Friends, as seemed necessary to establish the position, that they held the Principles laid down. In taking 'these extracts, I have consulted those parts of their writings, in which they make a statement of what they believe, rather than those in which they expose the errors of contrary opinions.

that many

And here it may not be improper to remark, of the Essays which were published by the members of this Society, in the early periods of its history, were in direct and pointed controversy; and frequently in reply to effusions from the press, which have long since been consigned to merited oblivion. In these replies of our Friends, the object of the writer was, frequently, to expose the consequences of the opinions which they opposed. And as the publications thus opposed and exposed, are now out of print and generally forgotten, while the replies of our Friends are preserved, there is some possibility that their views and sentiments may not be gathered from such of their writings, without a knowledge of the causes which gave rise to them.

This remark will not apply exclusively to the writings of Friends; it will hold in relation to controversial works in general. And the more bold and animated the manner of the writer, the more occasion there will be to keep this particular distinction in

view.

My intention, at first, was to compile a general History of the Society; embracing its Doctrines and Discipline, together with

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