CHAPTER V.
Excommunication or disowning—nature of disowning as a punishment.
PECULIAR CUSTOMS.
CHAPTER I.
SECT. I.—Dress—extravagance of the dress of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries—plain manner in which the grave and religious were then habited—the Quakers sprang out of these.
SECT. II.—Quakers carried with them their plain dresses into their new society—extravagance of the world continuing, they defined the objects of dress as a Christian people—at length incorporated it into their discipline—hence their present dress is only a less deviation from that of their ancestors, than that of other people.
SECT. III.—Objections of the world to the Quaker dress—those examined—a comparison between the language of Quakerism and of Christianity on this subject—opinion of the early Christians upon it.
CHAPTER II.
Furniture—the Quakers use plain furniture—reasons for their singularities in this respect.