Reformed Covenanter
Cancelled Commissioner
In a debate at the Belfast Presbytery in 1850, Dr Henry Cooke pointed out that many advocates of temperance or teetotalism were not very temperate when it came to speech:
Dr COOKE … He had no doubt that there might be a number of little coteries assembled round dinner tables and tea tables, who united the cup of temperance with the enjoyment of intemperance of the tongue, and who, while they remember that a man should govern his appetite, forget that a man is equally bound to govern his tongue, and that it is not Christian, having heard an evil report, to take it up and cast it abroad, to the ruin of a brother’s character. ...
For the reference, see Henry Cooke on the intemperance of temperance.
Dr COOKE … He had no doubt that there might be a number of little coteries assembled round dinner tables and tea tables, who united the cup of temperance with the enjoyment of intemperance of the tongue, and who, while they remember that a man should govern his appetite, forget that a man is equally bound to govern his tongue, and that it is not Christian, having heard an evil report, to take it up and cast it abroad, to the ruin of a brother’s character. ...
For the reference, see Henry Cooke on the intemperance of temperance.