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Alphabetical    [«  »]
lastly 1
latin 1
laugh 1
law 37
law-making 2
lawful 12
lawfully 3
Frequency    [«  »]
38 does
38 himself
38 society
37 law
37 more
37 should
37 themselves
John Locke
A letter concerning toleration

IntraText - Concordances

law

   Part
1 1| Christ has imposed that law upon His Church. And let 2 1| magistrate provide by an express law that such a one shall not 3 1| Shall it be provided by law that they must consult none 4 1| shall they all be obliged by law to become merchants or musicians? 5 1| has no power to enforce by law, either in his own Church, 6 1| presently be established by law.~And further, things never 7 1| to be taken care of by a law. In that case he may order 8 1| same right to ordain by law that all children shall 9 1| ought to be prohibited by a law. Meliboeus, whose calf it 10 1| that, in this case, the law is not made about a religious, 11 1| kneeling in his own house, the law ought not to abridge him 12 1| rules of equity and the law of Nature and no ways offending 13 1| urged farther that, by the law of Moses, idolaters were 14 1| out. True, indeed, by the law of Moses; but that is not 15 1| generally enjoined by the law of Moses ought to be practised 16 1| judicial, and ceremonial law, which men ordinarily make 17 1| use of. For no positive law whatsoever can oblige any 18 1| restrains the obligations of the law of Moses only to that people. 19 1| urge the authority of the law of Moses for the inflicting 20 1| government, with which the law of Christ hath not at all 21 1| the rites of the Mosaical law; but, on the contrary, in 22 1| land of Canaan. But that law (as I have said) did not 23 1| imposed on any Church by the law of the land. For it is absurd 24 1| faith as to enact them by a law?~Further, the magistrate 25 1| any person concerning a law enacted in political matters, 26 1| away the obligation of that law, nor deserve a dispensation. 27 1| dispensation. But if the law, indeed, be concerning things 28 1| these cases obliged by that law, against their consciences. 29 1| subjects (no not even by a law), for a cause that has no 30 1| magistrate believe such a law as this to be for the public 31 1| him from the obligation of law, so the private judgement ( 32 1| men, the one managed by law, the other by force; and 33 1| would soon cease if the law of toleration were once 34 1| matters of religion either by law or force. The establishment 35 1| things are left free by law in the common occasions 36 1| their own consciences to the law of God and less solicitous 37 2| use, which is the supreme law in matter of language, has


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