Day #1... Extra Addition John Locke's Government Treatise: A Letter Concerning Toleration
https://isaiah58ministries.blogspot.com/2025/03/extra-addition-tjohn-lockes-government.html
#2 Page 10 pdf Extra Addition John Locke's Government Treatise: A Letter Concerning Toleration
#3 Page 10 pdf Extra Addition John Locke's Government Treatise: A Letter Concerning Toleration
# 5 Page 32b pdf Extra Addition John Locke's Government Treatise: A Letter Concerning Toleration
https://isaiah58ministries.blogspot.com/2025/05/5-page-32b-pdf-extra-addition-john.html
A Letter Concerning Toleration by John Locke
Translated by William Popple [1689]
http://fs2.american.edu/dfagel/www/Philosophers/Locke/Letter Concerning Toleratin PDF.pdf
![]() |
| DAY 31 |
PG here, Extra Addition "A Letter if Concerning Toleration," Day 31,
Page 16b of pdf. 17a : to restore me in any measure, much less entirely, to a good estate. What security can be given for the Kingdom of Heaven? fs2.american.edu/dfagel/www/Philosophers/Locke/Letter Concerning Toleratin PDF.pdf The individual's right to seek salvation, like medical help for an ailing body, is his free choice. Those things that Every man ought sincerely to inquire into himself and, by meditation, study, search, and his own endeavours, attain the knowledge of, cannot be looked upon as the peculiar possession of any sort of men.
![]() |
| SAME |
Princes, indeed, are born superior unto other men in power, but in nature equal. Neither the right nor the art of ruling does necessarily carry along with it the certain knowledge of other things, and least of all of true religion. For if it were so, how could it come to pass that the lords of the earth should differ so vastly as they do in religious matters? But let us grant that it is probable the way to eternal life may be better known by a prince than by his subjects, or at least that in this incertitude of things the safest and most commodious way for private persons is to follow his dictates. You will say: “What then?” If he should bid you follow merchandise for your livelihood, would you decline that course for fear it should not succeed? I answer: I would turn merchant upon the prince’s command, because, in case I should have ill-success in trade, he is abundantly able to make up my loss some other way. If it be true, as he pretends, that he desires I should thrive and grow rich, he can set me up again when unsuccessful voyages have broken me. But this is not the case in the things that regard the life to come; if there I take a wrong course, if in that respect I am once undone, it is not in the magistrate’s power to repair my loss, to ease my suffering, nor to restore me in any measure, much less entirely, to a good estate. What security can be given for the Kingdom of Heaven?
![]() |
| DAY 32 |
to restore me in any measure, much less entirely, to a good estate. What security can be given for the Kingdom of Heaven? Perhaps some will say that they do not suppose this infallible judgement, that all men are bound to follow in the affairs of religion, to be in the civil magistrate, but in the Church. What the Church has determined, that the civil magistrate orders to be observed; and he provides by his authority that nobody shall either act or believe in the business of religion otherwise than the Church teaches. So that the judgement of those things is in the Church; the magistrate himself yields obedience thereunto and requires the like obedience from others. I answer: Who sees not how frequently the name of the Church, which was venerable in time of the apostles, has been made use of to throw dust in the people’s eyes in the following ages? But, however, in the present case it helps us not. The one only narrow way which leads to heaven is not better known to the magistrate than to private persons, and therefore I cannot safely take him for my guide, who may probably be as ignorant of the way as myself, and who certainly is less concerned for my salvation than I myself am. Amongst so many kings of the Jews, how many of them were there whom any Israelite, thus blindly following, had not fallen into idolatry and thereby into destruction? Yet, nevertheless, you bid me be of good courage and tell me that all is now safe and secure, because the magistrate does not now enjoin the observance of his own decrees in matters of religion, but only the decrees of the Church. Of what Church, I beseech you? of that, certainly, which likes him best. As if he that compels me by laws and penalties to enter into this or the other Church, did not interpose his own judgement in the matter.
![]() |
| DAY 33 |
PG here, Sunday, April 6, 2025. The topic is, should anyone submit their will to another person for salvation? Can the law or magistrate demand a certain religion over another? Socinians were members of a 16th and 17th-century Christian group, named after the Italian theologian Faustus Socinus, who rejected the Trinity, the divinity of Christ, and other traditional Christian doctrines, emphasizing reason and moral living. `Church Papist' was a nickname, a term of abuse, for those English Catholics who outwardly conformed to the established Protestant Church and yet inwardly remained Roman Catholics.
![]() |
| DAY 34 |
PG here, April 7, 2025, Monday, Day 34 Martin Luther of the Reformation. Wrote the first Declaration of Independence from the Catholic Church with 95 wrongs the church was doing called The 95 Theses" in 1517. It is called Reformation Day. October 31. He testified before a court: "I can not recant; I will not recant (his writings and pamphlets). To do so is to go against my conscience, and that is a very dangerous thing." John Locke is expressing the same TRUTH of the gospel of Jesus Christ, who delivers us and sets us free from sin. The bottom sentence here, ***"No way whatsoever that I shall walk in against the dictates of my conscience will ever bring me to the mansions of the blessed."***
![]() |
| DAY 35 |
PG here, Day 35 Page 18b, according to the pdf of our Extra Addition. "A Letter Concerning Toleration." Considerations from John Locke. PG here, April 8, 2025. I have been sharing 1/2 a page a day. I loved the opening sentence here in 18b. And when you are really close to God and all the people you know are, people speak this way by the unction of the Holy Spirit. When all the laws and people are Christian, as America is. No way whatsoever that I shall walk in against the dictates of my conscience will ever bring me to the mansions of the blessed. If you know it is wrong, it would be great harm to you if you did what you knew to be wrong. The blessed are people who died and went to heaven. Jesus said he has built each person a mansion in heaven to live in for eternity. Jesus's earthly father was Joseph, a carpenter. Maybe you know a contractor or a person who builds homes, a construction worker.
![]() |
| DAY 36 |
1.) PG here, Day 36, Pages 19, 20 and 21 of 40 according to the PDF. I got behind because I was running a yard sale. Worshipping God with others. John Locke uses the words "Own it" in 1680s. Yes, own it; do not be ashamed that you worship God with other believers. In peace and Holiness. This worship is nothing like worship of God today. Page 19: excerpt....Men, therefore, constituted in this liberty are to enter into some religious society, that they meet together, not only for mutual edification, but to own to the world that they worship God and offer unto His Divine Majesty such service as they themselves are not ashamed of and such as they think not unworthy of Him, nor unacceptable to Him; and, finally, that by the purity of doctrine, holiness of life, and decent form of worship, they may draw others unto the love of the true religion, and perform such other things in religion as cannot be done by each private man apart. These religious societies I call Churches; .......
![]() |
| DAY 36 |
2.) PG here Page 20 of 40 according to the PDF. Extra Addition of John Locke's Letter of Consideration. Divine Worship can not be ordered by law. It must be done by a person conscience. The same with Baptism. Page 20 of 40 according to pdf: excerpt: Again, things in their own nature indifferent cannot, by any human authority, be made any part of the worship of God—for this very reason: because they are indifferent. For, since indifferent things are not capable, by any virtue of their own, to propitiate the Deity, no human power or authority can confer on them so much dignity and excellency as to enable them to do it. In the common affairs of life that use of indifferent things which God has not forbidden is free and lawful, and therefore in those things human authority has place. But it is not so in matters of religion. Things indifferent are not otherwise lawful in the worship of God than as
![]() |
| DAY 36 |
3.) PG here. Worshipping God as a relationship to him can not be ordered by the law. That last sentence of 21 od 40....In the next place: As the magistrate has no power to impose by his laws the use of any rites and ceremonies in any Church, so neither has he any...another excerpt: He that worships God does it with design to please Him and procure His favour. But that cannot be done by him who, upon the command of another, offers unto God that which he knows will be displeasing to Him, because not commanded by Himself. This is not to please God, or appease his wrath, but willingly and knowingly to provoke Him by a manifest contempt
![]() |
| DAY 37 |
Page 22 of 40 of the PDF. If you are following along in the book "John Locke's "The Second Treatise of Government And A Letter Concerning Toleration," Dover Thrifty Edition, we are on page 135 in the middle of the second paragraph. I am using a PDF to copy and paste. This page deals with an issue Americans struggle with today. Religious Freedom. It has been twisted to allow gruesome murders, molestations, sex trafficking, and mutilations of children. All are abominations to true law, which is to protect each person's, even a woman's or child's, right to themselves, their minds, goods, preservation of their life, liberty, freedom, and body. No one has a right to molest or do harm to another being. Anywhere in the entire world. excerpt: In the next place: As the magistrate has no power to impose by his laws the use of any rites and ceremonies in any Church, so neither has he any***You will say, by this rule, if some congregations should have a mind to sacrifice infants, or (as the primitive Christians were falsely accused) lustfully pollute themselves in promiscuous uncleanness, or practise any other such heinous enormities, is the magistrate obliged to tolerate them, because they are committed in a religious assembly? I answer: No. These things are not lawful in the ordinary course of life, nor in any private house; and therefore neither are they so in the worship of God or in any religious meeting. But, indeed, if any people congregated upon account of religion should be desirous to sacrifice a calf, I deny that that ought to be prohibited by a law. Meliboeus, whose calf it is, may lawfully kill his calf at home, and burn any part of it that he thinks fit. For no injury is thereby done to any one, no prejudice to another man’s goods. And for the same reason he may kill his calf also in a religious meeting. Whether the doing so be well-pleasing to God or no, it is their part to consider that do it. The part of the magistrate is only to take care that the commonwealth receive no prejudice, and that there be no injury done to any man, either in life or estate***
![]() |
| DAY 38 |
And thus what may be spent on a feast may be spent on a sacrifice. But if peradventure such were the state of things that the interest of the commonwealth required all slaughter of beasts should be forborne for some while, in order to the increasing of the stock of cattle that had been destroyed by some extraordinary murrain, who sees not that the magistrate, in such a case, may forbid all his subjects to kill any calves for any use whatsoever? Only it is to be observed that, in this case, the law is not made about a religious, but a political matter; nor is the sacrifice, but the slaughter of calves, thereby prohibited. By this we see what difference there is between the Church and the Commonwealth. Whatsoever is lawful in the Commonwealth cannot be prohibited by the magistrate in the Church. Whatsoever is permitted unto any of his subjects for their ordinary use, neither can nor ought to be forbidden by him to any sect of people for their religious uses. If any man may lawfully take bread or wine, either sitting or kneeling in his own house, the law ought not to abridge him of the same liberty in his religious worship; though in the Church the use of bread and wine be very different and be there applied to the mysteries of faith and rites of Divine worship. But those things that are prejudicial to the commonweal of a people in their ordinary use and are, therefore, forbidden by laws, those things ought not to be permitted to Churches in their sacred rites. Only the magistrate ought always to be very careful that he do not misuse his authority to the oppression of any Church, under pretence of public good. It may be said: “What if a Church be idolatrous, is that also to be tolerated
![]() |
| DAY 39 |
PG here, Thursday, 17, 2025, Extra Addition "A Letter if Concerning Toleration," Day 38, Page 23a of the PDF. The question is about giving the government power to make laws and rules concerning religion. How disastrous that would be? Page 23a of 40 It may be said: “What if a Church be idolatrous, is that also to be tolerated by the magistrate?” I answer: What power can be given to the magistrate for the suppression of an idolatrous Church, which may not in time and place be made use of to the ruin of an orthodox one? For it must be remembered that the civil power is the same everywhere, and the religion of every prince is orthodox to himself. If, therefore, such a power be granted unto the civil magistrate in spirituals as that at Geneva, for example, he may extirpate, by violence and blood, the religion which is
there reputed idolatrous, by the same rule another magistrate, in some neighbouring country, may oppress the reformed religion and, in India, the Christian. The civil power can either change everything in religion, according to the prince’s pleasure, or it can change nothing. If it be once permitted to introduce anything into religion by the means of laws and penalties, there can be no bounds put to it, but it will in the same manner be lawful to alter everything, according to that rule of truth which the magistrate has framed unto himself. No man whatsoever ought, therefore, to be deprived of his terrestrial enjoyments upon account of his religion. Not even Americans, subjected unto a Christian prince, are to be punished either in body or goods for not embracing our faith and worship. If they are persuaded that they please God in observing the rites of their own country and that they shall obtain happiness by that means, they are to be left unto God and themselves. Let us trace this matter to the bottom. Thus it is: An inconsiderable and weak number of Christians, destitute of everything, arrive in a Pagan country; these foreigners beseech the inhabitants, by the bowels of humanity, that they would succour them with the necessaries of life; those necessaries are given them, habitations are granted, and they all join together and grow up into one body of people.
![]() |
| DAY 40 |
![]() |
| DAY 41 |
PG here, an extra addition of 3 days, April 18, 19, and 20, for an Easter gift that correlates with this morning's readings of John Locke's "Second Treatise on Government and A Letter of Toleration." On Sunday, April 20, 2025. Both are pointing out the source of power of government. The government receives its power from the people to represent them, not corporations, nor special interests, nor receiving bribes, nor their own interests and their families, relatives, friends, etc. We can not individually go to the seat of government; there are too many people, so we elect people to go for all of us. They can not give that power to anyone else.
![]() |
| DAY 42 |
Please read each picture to get the message given here by John Locke. A government can embrace Christianity, Christian principles, and ways of government. But those who forsake public worship, observants of Christian holidays like Easter and Christmas, and good works can not be punished by governments.




.png)
.png)
%202nd%20time%2019.png)




%20Day%2038%20page%2023a%20of%2040.png)




No comments:
Post a Comment