Excerpt from The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor, D.D., Lord Bishop of Down, Connor, and Dromore, Vol. 6 of 15: With a Life of the Author, and a Critical Examination of His Writings
He that is better than the dregs of his Own age, whose religion is something above profaneness, and whose sobriety is 93) step or two from downright intemperance, whose dis course is not swearing, nor yet apt to edify, whose charity is set out in piety, and a gentle yearning and saying God. Help, ' whose alms are contemptible, and his devotion infre quent; yet, as things are now, he is unus e millibus, ' one of a thousand, ' and he stands eminent and conspicuous in the vallies and lower grounds of the present piety; for a bank is a mountain upon a level but what is rare and eminent in the manners of men this day, would have been scandalous, and have deserved the rod of an apostle, if it had been con fronted with the fervours and rare devotion and religion of our fathers in the Gospel.
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Jeremy Taylor was a clergyman in the Church of England who achieved fame as an author during The Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell. He is sometimes known as the "Shakespeare of Divines" for his poetic style of expression and was often presented as a model of prose writing. He is remembered in the Church of England's calendar of saints with a Lesser Festival on 13 August.
He went on to become chaplain in ordinary to King Charles I as a result of Laud's sponsorship. This made him politically suspect when Laud was tried for treason and executed in 1645 by the Puritan Parliament during the English Civil War. After the Parliamentary victory over the King, he was briefly imprisoned several times.
Eventually, he was allowed to live quietly in Wales, where he became the private chaplain of the Earl of Carbery. At the Restoration, his political star was on the rise, and he was made Bishop of Down and Connor in Ireland. He also became vice-chancellor of the University of Dublin.
Taylor's fame has been maintained by the popularity of his sermons and devotional writings rather than by his influence as a theologian or his importance as an ecclesiastic.
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