<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE issue SYSTEM "spectator.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet href="spectator.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<?cocoon-process type="xslt"?>
<issue>
<title>The Spectator 213</title>
<header>
  <number>no. 213</number>
  <date>1711-11-03</date>
  <author>Joseph Addison</author>
  <quotation>------Mens sibi conscia recti.----Virg.</quotation>
  <translation>Virg. &#198;n. i.608.</translation>
  <translation>A good intention.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>IT is the great Art and Secret of
Christianity, if I may use that Phrase, to manage our Actions to
the best Advantage, and direct them in such a manner, that every
thing we do may turn to Account at that great Day, when every thing
we have done will be set before us.</paragraph>
<paragraph>In order to give this
Consideration its full Weight, we may cast all our Actions under
the Division of such as are in themselves either Good, Evil, or
Indifferent. If we divide our Intentions after the same Manner, and
consider them with regard to our Actions, we may discover that
great Art and Secret of Religion which I have here mentioned.</paragraph>
<paragraph>A good Intention joined to a good Action, gives it its proper Force
and Efficacy; joined to an Evil Action, extenuates its Malignity,
and in some Cases may take it wholly away; and joined to an
indifferent Action turns it to a Virtue, and makes it meritorious
as far as human Actions can be so.</paragraph>
<paragraph>In the next Place, to consider
in the same manner the Influence of an Evil Intention upon our
Actions. An Evil Intention perverts the best of Actions, and makes
them in reality, what the Fathers with a witty kind of Zeal have
termed the Virtues of the Heathen World, so many <italic>shining Sins.</italic> It
destroys the Innocence of an indifferent Action, and gives an evil
Action all possible Blackness and Horror, or in the emphatical
Language of Sacred Writ, makes <italic>Sin exceeding sinful.</italic><footnote name="(1)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote>
</paragraph>
<paragraph>If, in the last Place, we consider the Nature of an indifferent Intention, we
shall find that it destroys the Merit of a good Action; abates, but
never takes away, the Malignity of an evil Action; and leaves an
indifferent Action in its natural State of Indifference.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is therefore of unspeakable Advantage to possess our Minds with an
habitual good Intention, and to aim all our Thoughts, Words, and
Actions at some laudable End, whether it be the Glory of our Maker,
the Good of Mankind, or the Benefit of our own Souls.</paragraph>
<paragraph>This is a sort of Thrift or Good-Husbandry in moral Life, which does not
throwaway any single Action, but makes everyone go as far as it
can. It multiplies the Means of Salvation, increases the Number of
our Virtues, and diminishes that of our Vices.</paragraph>
<paragraph>There is something very devout, though not solid,
in <italic>Acosta's</italic> Answer to <italic>Limborch,</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote>
who objects to him the Multiplicity of Ceremonies in the <italic>Jewish</italic>
Religion, as Washings, Dresses, Meats, Purgations, and the like.
The Reply which the <italic>Jew</italic> makes upon this Occasion, is, to the best
of my Remembrance, as follows: 'There are not Duties enough (says
he) in the essential Parts of the Law for a zealous and active
Obedience. Time, Place, and Person are requisite, before you have
an Opportunity of putting a Moral Virtue into Practice. We have,
therefore, says he, enlarged the Sphere of our Duty, and made many
Things, which are in themselves indifferent, a Part of our
Religion, that we may have more Occasions of shewing our Love to
God, and in all the Circumstances of Life be doing something to
please him.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Monsieur <italic>St. Evremond</italic> has endeavoured to palliate the
Superstitions of the Roman Catholick Religion with the same kind of
Apology, where he pretends to consider the differing Spirit of the
Papists and the Calvinists, as to the great Points wherein they
disagree. He tells us, that the former are actuated by Love, and
the other by Fear; and that in their Expressions of Duty and
Devotion towards the Supreme Being, the former seem particularly
careful to do every thing which may possibly please him, and the
other to abstain from every thing which may possibly displease him.<footnote name="(3)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>But notwithstanding this plausible Reason with which both the
Jew and the Roman Catholick would excuse their respective
Superstitions, it is certairn there is something in them very
pernicious to Mankind, and destructive to Religion; because the
Injunction of superfluous Ceremonies makes such Actions Duties, as
were before indifferent, and by that means renders Religion more
burdensome and difficult than it is in its own Nature, betrays many
into Sins of Omission which they could not otherwise be guilty of,
and fixes the Minds of the Vulgar to the shadowy unessential
Points, instead of the more weighty and more important Matters of
the Law.</paragraph>
<paragraph>This zealous and active Obedience however takes place in
the great Point we are recommending; for, if, instead of
prescribing to our selves indifferent Actions as Duties, we apply a
good Intention to all our most indifferent Actions, we make our
very Existence one continued Act of Obedience, we then our
Diversions and Amusements to our eternal Advantage, and are
pleasing him (whom we are made to please) in all the Circumstances
and Occurrences of Life.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is this excellent Frame of Mind, this
<italic>holy Officiousness</italic> (if I may be allowed to call it such) which is
recommended to us by the Apostle in that uncommon Precept, wherein
he directs us to propose to ourselves the Glory of our Creator in
all our most indifferent Actions, <italic>whether we eat or drink, or
whatsoever we do.</italic><footnote name="(4)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>A Person therefore who is possessed with such
an habitual good Intention, as that which I have been here speaking
of, enters upon no single Circumstance of Life, without considering
it as well-pleasing to the great Author of his Being, conformable
to the Dictates of Reason, suitable to human Nature in general, or
to that particular Station in which Providence has placed him. He
lives in a perpetual Sense of the Divine Presence, regards himself
as acting, in the whole Course of his Existence, under the
Observation and Inspection of that Being, who is privy to all his
Motions and all his Thoughts, who knows all his <italic>Down-sitting and
his Up-rising, who is about his Path, and about his Bed, and spieth
out all his Ways.</italic><footnote name="(5)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote> In a word, he remembers that the Eye of his
Judge is always upon him, and in every Action he reflects that he
is doing what is commanded or allowed by Him who will hereafter
either reward or punish it. This was the Character of those holy
Men of old, who in that beautiful Phrase of Scripture are said to
have walked with God.<footnote name="(6)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>When I employ myself upon a Paper of
Morality, I generally consider how I may recommend the particular
Virtue which I treat of, by the Precepts or Examples of the ancient
Heathens; by that Means, if possible, to shame those who have
greater Advantages of knowing their Duty, and therefore greater
Obligations to perform it, into a better Course of Life; Besides
that many among us are unreasonably disposed to give a fairer
hearing to a Pagan Philosopher, than to a Christian Writer.</paragraph>
<paragraph>I shall therefore produce an Instance of this excellent Frame of Mind in a
Speech of <italic>Socrates,</italic> which is quoted by <italic>Erasmus.</italic> This great
Philosopher on the Day of his Execution, a little before the
Draught of Poison was brought to him, entertaining his Friends with
a Discourse on the Immortality of the Soul, has these Words:
<italic>Whether or no God will approve of my Actions, I know not; but this
I am sure of, that I have at all Times made it my Endeavour to
please him, and I have a good Hope that this my Endeavour will be
accepted by him.</italic> We find in these Words of that great Man the
habitual good Intention which I would here inculcate, and with
which that divine Philosopher always acted. I shall only add, that
<italic>Erasmus,</italic> who was an unbigotted Roman Catholick, was so much
transported with this Passage of <italic>Socrates,</italic> that he could scarce
forbear looking upon him as a Saint, and desiring him to pray for
him; or as that ingenious and learned Writer has expressed himself
in a much more lively manner: <italic>When I reflect on such a Speech
pronouced by such a Person, I can scarce forbear crying out,</italic> Sancte
Socrates, <italic>ora pro nobis: O holy</italic> Socrates, <italic>pray for us.</italic><footnote name="(7)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote213.xml"></footnote>
</paragraph>
<paragraph>L.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. Rom, vii, 16.</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. <italic>Amica Collatio de Veritate Relig. Christ. cum Erudito
Judaeo,</italic> published in 1687, by Philippe de Limborch, who was eminent
as a professor of Theology at Amsterdam from 1667 until his death,
in 1712, at the age of 79. But the learned Jew was the Spanish
Physician Isaac Orobio, who was tortured for three years in the
prisons of the Inquisition on a charge of Judaism. He admitted
nothing, was therefore set free, and left Spain for Toulouse, where
he practised physic and passed as a Catholic until he settled at
Amsterdam. There he made profession of the Jewish faith, and died
in the year of the publication of Limborch's friendly discussion
with him.  The Uriel Acosta, with whom Addison confounds Oporto, was
a gentleman of Oporto who had embraced Judaism, and, leaving
Portugal, had also gone to Amsterdam. There he was circumcised, but
was persecuted by the Jews themselves, and eventually whipped in
the synagogue for attempting reformation of the Jewish usages, in
which, he said, tradition had departed from the law of Moses. He
took his thirty-nine lashes, recanted, and lay across the threshold
of the synagogue for all his brethren to walk over him. Afterwards
he endeavoured to shoot his principal enemy, but his pistol missed
fire. He had another about him, and with that he shot himself. This
happened about the year 1649, when Limborch was but a child of six
or seven.</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. 'Sur la. Religion.' Oeuvres (Ed. 1752), Vol. III. pp. 267, 268.</paragraph>
<paragraph>4. I Cor. x. 31.</paragraph>
<paragraph>5. Pslam cxxxix. 2, 3.</paragraph>
<paragraph>6. Genesis v. 22; vi. 9. 7.</paragraph>
<paragraph>7. Erasm. Apophthegm. Bk. III.</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
