This spirit was not only given
to man as a teacher, but as a primary and infallible
guide — Hence the Scriptures are a subordinate
or secondary guide — Quakers, however, do
not undervalue them on this account — Their
opinion concerning them.
The spirit of God, which we have seen
to be thus given to men as a spiritual teacher, and
to act in the ways described, the Quakers usually
distinguish by the epithets of primary and infallible.
But they have made another distinction with respect
to the character of this spirit; for they have pronounced
it to be the only infallible guide to men in their
spiritual concerns. From this latter declaration
the reader will naturally conclude, that the scriptures,
which are the outward teachers of men, must be viewed
by the Quakers in a secondary light. This conclusion
has indeed been adopted as a proposition in the Quaker
theology; or, in other words, it is a doctrine of the
society, that the spirit of God is the primary and
only infallible, and the scriptures but a subordinate
or secondary guide.
This proposition the Quakers usually
make out in the following manner:
It is, in the first place, admitted
by all Christians, that the scriptures were given
by inspiration, or that those who originally delivered
or wrote the several parts of them, gave them forth
by means of that spirit, which was given to them by
God. Now in the same manner as streams, or rivulets
of water, are subordinate to the fountains which produce
them; so those streams or rivulets of light must be
subordinate to the great light from whence they originally
sprung. “We cannot, says Barclay, call
the scriptures the principal fountain of all truth
and knowledge, nor yet the first adequate rule of faith
and manners; because the principal fountain of truth
must be the truth itself, that is, whose certainty
and authority depend not upon another.”
The scriptures are subordinate or
secondary, again, in other points of view. First,
because, though they are placed before us, we can only
know or understand them by the testimony of the spirit.
Secondly, because there is no virtue or power in them
of themselves, but in the spirit from whence they
came.
They are, again, but a secondary guide;
because “that, says Barclay, cannot be the only
and principal guide, which doth not universally reach
every individual that needeth it.” But the
scriptures do not teach deaf persons, nor children,
nor idiots, nor an immense number of people, more
than half the Globe, who never yet saw or heard of
them. These, therefore, if they are to be saved
like others, must have a different or a more universal
rule to guide them, or be taught from another source.
They are only a secondary guide, again,
for another reason. It is an acknowledged axiom
among Christians, that the spirit of God is a perfect
spirit, and that it can never err. But the scriptures
are neither perfect of themselves as a collection,
nor are they perfect in their verbal parts. Many
of them have been lost. Concerning those which
have survived, there have been great disputes.
Certain parts of these, which one Christian council
received in the early times of the church, were rejected
as not canonical by another. Add to this, that
none of the originals are extant. And of the
copies, some have suffered by transcription, others
by translation, and others by wilful mutilation, to
support human notions of religion; so that there are
various readings of the same passage, and various
views of the same thing. “Now what, says
Barclay, would become of Christians, if they had not
received that spirit and those spiritual senses, by
which they know how to discover the true from the
false? It is the privilege of Christ’s sheep,
indeed, that they hear his voice, and refuse that
of the stranger; which, privilege being taken away,
we are left a prey to all manner of wolves.”
The scriptures, therefore, in consequence of the state
in which they have come down to us, cannot, the Quakers
say, be considered to be a guide as entirely perfect
as the internal testimony of their great author, the
spirit of God.
But though the Quakers have thought
it right, in submitting their religious creed to the
world on this subject, to be so guarded in the wording
of it as to make the distinction described, they are
far from undervaluing the scriptures on that account.
They believe, on the other hand, whatever mutilations
they may have suffered, that they contain sufficient
to guide men in belief and practice; and that all internal
emotions, which are contrary to the declaration of
these, are wholly inadmissible. “Moreover,
says Barclay, because the scriptures are commonly
acknowledged by all to have been written by the dictates
of the holy spirit, and that the errors, which may
be supposed by the injury of time to have slipt in,
are not such but there is a sufficient clear testimony
left to all the essentials of the Christian faith,
we do look upon them as the only fit outward judge
of controversies among Christians, and that whatsoever
doctrine is contrary to their testimony, may therefore
justly be rejected as false.”
The Quakers believe also, that as
God gave a portion of his spirit to man to assist
him inwardly, so he gave the holy scriptures to assist
him outwardly in his spiritual concerns. Hence
the latter, coming by inspiration, are the most precious
of all books that ever were written, and the best
outward guide. And hence the things contained
in them, ought to be read, and, as far as possible,
fulfilled.
They believe, with the apostle Paul,
that the scriptures are highly useful, “so that,
through patience and comfort of them, they may have
hope; and also that they are profitable for reproof,
for correction, and for instruction in righteousness:”
that in the same manner as land, highly prepared and
dressed by the husbandman, becomes fit for the reception
and for the promotion of the growth of the seed that
is to be placed in it, so the scriptures turn the
attention of man towards God, and by means of the
exhortations, reproofs, promises, and threatenings,
contained in them, prepare the mind for the reception
and growth of the seed of the Holy Spirit.
They believe, again, that the same
scriptures show more of the particulars of God’s
will with respect to man, and of the scheme of the
Gospel-dispensation, than any ordinary portion of his
spirit, as usually given to man, would have enabled
him to discover. They discover that “the
wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal
life through Jesus Christ:” “That
Jesus Christ was set forth to be a propitiation through
faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for
the remission of sins that are past through the forbearance
of God;” that “he tasted death for
every man;” that he was “delivered
for our offences, and raised again for our justification;”
that “he is set down at the right hand of
the throne of God;” “and ever liveth
to make intercession for us; and, that he is the substance
of all the types and figures under the Levitical priesthood,
being the end of the law for righteousness to
every one that believeth.”
They believe, again, that, in consequence
of these various revelations, as contained in the
scriptures, they have inestimable advantages over
the Heathen nations, or over those, where the gospel-sun
has never yet shone; and that, as their advantages
are greater, so more will be required of them, or
their condemnation will be greater, if they fail to
attend to those things which are clearly revealed.
They maintain, again, that their discipline
is founded on the rules of the gospel; and that in
consequence of giving an interpretation different
from that of many others, to some of the expressions
of Jesus Christ, by which they conceive they make
his kingdom more pure and heavenly, they undergo persecution
from the world — so that they confirm their
attachment to the scriptures by the best of all credible
testimonies, the seal of their own sufferings.