Paperback Bookstore - Hail & Fire reprints and republications
BOOKSTORE »

LIBRARY BOOKS - Browse the H&F Books free Online Christian Library
LIBRARY BOOKS »

Articles: Exhortations - Richard Baxter on the Lamentations of the Lost

"Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip. For if the word spoken by angels was stedfast, and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward; How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him" Hebrews 2:1-3 (KJV)

HOME | LIBRARY: BOOKS | CATEGORIES | SERMONS | The Government of the Tongue by Richard Allestree, 1675 Edition

LIBRARY BOOKS: SERMONS

The Hail & Fire Books Library is a FREE online Christian resource for Christian books, Puritan, Reformed and Protestant exhortative works, Catholic and Protestant polemical and apologetical works, bibles, histories, martyrologies, and works on

 

eschatology; in real text, PDF, and scanned image formats. By using the Hail & Fire Library you agree to the following.

By using the Hail & Fire Library you agree to the following copyright notice.

 

ONLINE LIBRARY - Read Rare Christian Books Online

back to books listarrow right - back to books list

FREE EBOOK (FULL VIEW)  |  ADDED November 29, 2020

The Government of the Tongue

by

Richard Allestree

Richard Allestre (1619-1681) was an English churchman, chaplain to the King of England, Regius Professor of Divinity, and provost of Eton College in 1665.

Published Oxford 1675

Hail & Fire Books
2020

The Government of the Tongue by Richard Allestree

Our books are scanned from private collections; please respect the labor that has gone into scanning and formatting these works for free online perusal. To request special printing of a work or special pricing for a reprint: CONTACT H&F BOOKS

ORDER PAPERBACK:

Now available in paperback:

The Updated Edition of the Government of the Tongue
by Richard Allestree
Edited, Modernized, and Annotated by
H&F Books 2022

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Unable to view the content at right? Download this free ebook as a pdf file:

The Government of the Tongue by Richard Allestree, 1675 Edition (76MB)

PREVIEW EBOOK CONTENT

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PREFACE

SECTION 1. Of the Use of Speech . . . p.1

SECTION 2. Of the manifold Abuse of Speech . p.7

SECTION 3. Of Atheistical Discourse . . . p.12

SECTION 4. Of Detraction . . . p.39

SECTION 5. Of Lying Defamation . . . p.49

SECTION 6. Of Uncharitable Truth . . . p.62

SECTION 7. Of Scoffing and Derision . . . p.113

SECTION 8. Of Flattery . . . p.134

SECTION 9. Of Boasting . . . p.155

SECTION 10. Of Querulousness . . . p.174

SECTION 11. Of Positiveness . . . p.188

SECTION 12. Of Obscene Talk . . . p.204

The Close . . . p.206

“Death and Life are in the power of the Tongue." Proverbs 18:21

OF THE USE OF SPEECH

"Man at his first creation was substituted by God as his vicegerent, to receive the homage and enjoy the services of all inferior beings: nay farther, was endowed with excellencies fit to maintain the port of so vast an empire. Yet those very excellencies, as they qualified him for dominion, so they unfitted him for a satisfaction or acquiescence in those his vassals: the dignity of his nature set him above the society or converse of mere animals: so that in all the pomp of his royalty, amidst all the throng and variety of creatures, he still remain’d solitary. But God, who knew what an appetite [for] society he had implanted in him, judged this no agreeable state for him, "It is not meet that man should be alone." Genesis 2:18. And as in the universal frame of nature, he ingraffed such an abhorrence of vacuity, that all creatures do rather submit to a praeternatural motion than admit it; so, in this em(p)ty, this destitute condition of man, he relieved him by a miraculous expedient, divided him that he might unite him, and made one part of him an associate for the other.

Neither did God take this care to provide him a companion merely for the (i)ntercourses of sense: had that b(ee)n the sole aim, there needed no new productions, there were sensitive creatures enough: the design was to entertain his nobler principle, his reason, with a more equal converse, assign him an intimate whose intellect as much corresponded with his as did the outward form, whose heart, according to Solomon's resemblance, answered his, "As in water face answers face." Proverbs 27:19, with whom he might communicate minds, traffic and (i)nterchange all the notions and sentiments of a reasonable soul.

But tho there were this sympathy in their sublimer part which disposed them to the most intimate union, yet there was a cloud of flesh in the way which intercepted their mutual view, nay, permitted no intelligence between them other than by the mediation of some organ equally commensurate to soul and body. And to this purpose the infinite wisdom of God ordained speech which, as it is a sound resulting from the modulation of the air, has most affinity to the spirit, but as it is uttered by the tongue, has immediate cognation with the body, and so is the fittest instrument to manage a commerce between the rational yet invisible powers of human souls clothed in flesh.

And as we have reason to admire the excellency of this contrivance, so have we to applaud the extensiveness of the benefit. From this it is we derive all the advantages of society: without this, men of the nearest neighborhood would have signified no more to each other than our Antipodes now do to us. All our arts and sciences for the accommodation of this life, had remained only a rude chaos in their first matter, had not speech by a mutual comparing of notions arranged them into order. By this it is we can give one another notice of our wants, and solicit relief; by this we interchangeably communicate advises, reproofs, consolations, all the necessary aids of human imbecility. This is that which possesses us of the most valuable blessing of human life, I mean friendship, which could no more have b[ee]n contracted amongst dumb men, then it can between pictures and statues. Nay farther to this we owe in a great degree the interests even of our spiritual being, all the oral, yea and written revelations too of God’s will: for had there b[ee]n no language there had been no writing. And though we must not pronounce how far God might have evidenced himself to mankind by immediate inspiration of every individual, yet we may safely rest in the Apostles inference Romans 10:14, “How shall they believe in him whom they have not heard, and how shall they hear without a preacher?”

From all these excellent uses of it in respect of man, we may collect another in relation to God, that is, the praising and magnifying his goodness, as for all other effects of his bounty, so particularly that he hath given us language, and all the consequent advantages of it. This is the just inference of the son of Syrach Ecclus. 51:22, "The Lord hath given me a tongue, and I will praise him therewith.” This is the sacrifice which God calls for so often by the Prophets, “the praise of our lips,” which answers to all “the oblations out of the herd,” and which the Apostle makes equivalent to those of the 'floor' and 'winepress,' also Hebrews 13:15, “The fruit of our lips, giving thanks to his name.” To this we frequently find the Psalmist exciting both himself and others, “Awake up my glory, I will give thanks unto thee, O Lord, among the people, and I will sing unto thee among the nations.” Psalms 57:9-10. And “O praise the Lord with me, and let us magnify his name together,” Psalms 34:3. And indeed whoever observes that excellent magazine of devotion, the book of Psalms, shall find that the lauds make up a very great part of it.

By what hath been said, we may define what are the grand uses of speech, viz. the glorifying of God , and the benefiting of men. And this helps us to an infallible test by which to try our words. For since everything is so far approvable as it answers the end of its being, what part so ever of our discourses agrees not with the primitive ends of speech, will not hold weight in the balance of the sanctuary. It will therefore nearly concern us to enter upon this scrutiny, to bring our words to this touchstone: for though, in our depraved estimate, the eloquence of language is more regarded than the innocence, though we think our words vanish with the breath that utters them, yet they become records in God’s court, are laid up in his archives as witnesses either for or against us: for he who is Truth itself hath told us, that “By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.” Matthew 12:37."

back to top arrow up - back to top

READ THE FULL EBOOK

DOWNLOAD PDF (76MB): "The Government of the Tongue by Richard Allestree, 1675 Edition

ORDER THE PAPERBACK (2022)

UPDATED PAPERBACK EDITION: "The Updated Edition of the Government of the Tongue" by Richard Allestree. Originally Published at Oxford 1675. Edited, Modernized, and Annotated by H&F Books 2022.

back to top arrow up - back to top