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Was ever any wicked man free from the stings of a guilty conscience?
John Tillotson
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John Tillotson
Age: 64 †
Born: 1630
Born: October 10
Died: 1694
Died: November 22
Archbishop Of Canterbury
Priest
Wickedness
Wicked
Guilty
Conscience
Free
Ever
Men
Stings
More quotes by John Tillotson
Men sunk in the greatest darkness imaginable retain some sense and awe of the Deity.
John Tillotson
Wickedness is a kind of voluntary frenzy, and a chosen distraction.
John Tillotson
True wisdom is a thing very extraordinary. Happy are they that have it: and next to them, not those many that think they have it, but those few that are sensible of their own defects and imperfections, and know that they have it not.
John Tillotson
The art of using deceit and cunning grow continually weaker and less effective to the user.
John Tillotson
Convulsive anger storms at large or pale And silent, settles into full revenge.
John Tillotson
With the history of Moses no book in the world, in point of antiquity, can contend.
John Tillotson
We have no cause to be ashamed of the Gospel of Christ but the Gospel of Christ may justly be ashamed of us.
John Tillotson
Of some calamity we can have no relief but from God alone and what would men do, in such a case if it were not for God?
John Tillotson
For the spiritual efficacy of the Sacrament doth not depend upon the nature of the thing received, supposing we received what our Lord appointed, and receive it with a right preparation and disposition of mind, but upon the supernatural blessing that goes along with it, and makes it effectual to those spiritual ends for which it was appointed.
John Tillotson
Ignorance and inconsideration are the two great causes of the ruin of mankind.
John Tillotson
Is not he imprudent, who, seeing the tide making haste towards him apace, will sleep till the sea overwhelms him?
John Tillotson
The covetous man heaps up riches, not to enjoy them, but to have them and starves himself in the midst of plenty, and most unnaturally cheats and robs himself of that which is his own and makes a hard shift, to be as poor and miserable with a great estate, as any man can be without it.
John Tillotson
Some things will not bear much zeal and the more earnest we are about them, the less we recommend ourselves to the approbation of sober and considerate men.
John Tillotson
How often might a man, after he had jumbled a set of letters in a bag, fling them out upon the ground before they would fall into an exact poem, yea, or so much as make a good discourse in prose? And may not a little book be as easily made by chance as this great volume of the world?
John Tillotson
To be able to bear provocation is an argument of great reason, and to forgive it of a great mind.
John Tillotson
The true ground of most men's prejudice against the Christian doctrine is because they have no mind to obey it.
John Tillotson
Every man hath greater assurance that God is good and just than he can have of any subtle speculations about predestination and the decrees of God.
John Tillotson
In all the affairs of this world, so much reputation is in reality so much power.
John Tillotson
There are two restraints which God has laid upon human nature, shame and fear shame is the weaker, and has place only in those in whom there are some reminders of virtue.
John Tillotson
They who are in the highest places, and have the most power, have the least liberty, because they are the most observed.
John Tillotson