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| Alphabetical [« »] makes 5 making 3 malice 1 man 75 managed 1 management 1 manifest 6 | Frequency [« »] 78 can 78 one 76 from 75 man 74 other 74 upon 73 god | John Locke A letter concerning toleration IntraText - Concordances man |
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1 1| vices. It is in vain for any man to unsurp the name of Christian, 2 1| apostles may be credited, no man can be a Christian without 3 1| kingdom of God.~That any man should think fit to cause 4 1| think fit to cause another man—whose salvation he heartily 5 1| to enjoy. But seeing no man does willingly suffer himself 6 1| those that violate any other man’s rights.~Now that the whole 7 1| any such authority to one man over another as to compel 8 1| of the people, because no man can so far abandon the care 9 1| he shall embrace. For no man can, if he would, conform 10 1| do what becomes any good man to do. Magistracy does not 11 1| authority enough. Every man has commission to admonish, 12 1| that matter stands. No man by nature is bound unto 13 1| Church. And let not any man think me impertinent, if 14 1| preserved on all sides, and no man will have a legislator imposed 15 1| members, and unto which no man has any civil right, comes 16 1| that belong to him as a man, or as a denizen, are inviolably 17 1| into requires of us. If any man err from the right way, 18 1| as they pleased. Will any man say that any right can be 19 1| different from each other. No man, therefore, with whatsoever 20 1| dignified, can deprive another man that is not of his church 21 1| of mind which either any man’s fiery zeal for his own 22 1| of bodily health, every man may consider what suits 23 1| course he likes best. No man complains of the ill-management 24 1| neighbour’s affairs. No man is angry with another for 25 1| substance in taverns. Let any man pull down, or build, or 26 1| his liberty. But if any man do not frequent the church, 27 1| cause be heard and the poor man be, according to form, condemned 28 1| cannot be denied unto any man. The care, therefore, of 29 1| care, therefore, of every man’s soul belongs unto himself 30 1| possessors themselves. No man can be forced to be rich 31 1| magistrate than every private man’s search and study discovers 32 1| Those things that every man ought sincerely to inquire 33 1| different things, that no man in his wits (I had almost 34 1| prescribes laws to another man’s religion pretend to do 35 1| outward show of another man’s profession. Faith only 36 1| cram a medicine down a sick man’s throat, which his particular 37 1| be done by each private man apart.~These religious societies 38 1| what is lawful for every man in particular to take care 39 1| liberty, or estate of any man. For example, let it be 40 1| altogether indifferent. Will any man, therefore, say that these 41 1| no prejudice to another man’s goods. And for the same 42 1| be no injury done to any man, either in life or estate. 43 1| their religious uses. If any man may lawfully take bread 44 1| framed unto himself. No man whatsoever ought, therefore, 45 1| consent of men, which yet no man ever said were to be punished 46 1| obedience, we find not one man forced into the Jewish religion 47 1| tell lies, both to God and man, for the salvation of their 48 1| of Christ which another man calls bread, he does no 49 1| equally secure whether any man believe these things or 50 1| and of every particular man’s goods and person. And 51 1| difficulty in this matter.~Every man has an immortal soul, capable 52 1| Secondly, that seeing one man does not violate the right 53 1| any prejudice to another man’s affairs, therefore, the 54 1| therefore, the care of each man’s salvation belongs only 55 1| the promoting of another man’s salvation. But all force 56 1| himself is persuaded. Every man in that has the supreme 57 1| in the meanwhile to every man the care of his own eternal 58 1| be facilitated by another man’s industry, nor can the 59 1| loss of it turn to another man’s prejudice, nor the hope 60 1| for the security of each man’s private possessions; for 61 1| but only to secure every man’s possession of the things 62 1| this life. The care of each man’s soul and of the things 63 1| is left entirely to every man’s self. Thus the safeguard 64 1| worldly things from this man or party and give them to 65 1| liberty of conscience is every man’s natural right, equally 66 1| we drive at is that every man may enjoy the same rights 67 1| Church. Is it lawful for any man in his own house to kneel, 68 1| in divine worship. Let no man’s life, or body, or house, 69 1| his own actions, and no man is to be laid under a suspicion 70 1| truth, and as becomes one man to another, neither Pagan 71 1| conscience of every particular man for the conduct of which 72 2| a Christian; and if any man fall off from the Christian 73 2| magistrate, that can make any man guilty of heresy, but he 74 2| do not think there is any man arrived to that degree of 75 2| in deed and in truth this man cannot be either a heretic