1.
The church is in Christ, as Eve was in Adam.
Richard Hooker
2.
God is no captious sophister, eager to trip us up whenever we say amiss, but a courteous tutor, ready to amend what, in our weakness or our ignorance, we say ill, and to make the most of what we say aright.
Richard Hooker
3.
Think of your child, then, not as dead, but as living; not as a flower that has withered, but as one that is transplanted, and touched by a Divine hand, is blooming in richer colors and sweeter shades than those of earth.
Richard Hooker
4.
He that goeth about to persuade a multitude that they are not so well governed as they ought to be shall never want attentive and favorable hearers.
Richard Hooker
5.
For men to be tied and led by authority, as it were with a kind of captivity of judgment, and though there be reason to the contrary not to listen unto it, but to follow like beasts the first in the herd, they know not, nor care not whither, this were brutish.
Richard Hooker
6.
Of Law there can be no less acknowledged, than that her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world: all things in heaven and earth do her homage, the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power.
Richard Hooker
7.
See we not plainly that obedience of creatures unto the law of nature is the stay of the whole world?
Richard Hooker
8.
Angels are unsatisfiable in their longing to do by all means all manner of good unto all the creatures, ...especially the children of men.
Richard Hooker
9.
Whatsoever is good; the same is also approved of God.
Richard Hooker
10.
Man doth seek a triple perfection: first a sensual, consisting in those things which very life itself requireth either as necessary supplements, or as beauties and ornaments thereof; then an intellectual, consisting in those things which none underneath man is either capable of or acquainted with; lastly a spiritual and divine, consisting in those things whereunto we tend by supernatural means here, but cannot here attain unto them.
Richard Hooker
11.
The reason why the simpler sort are moved with authority, is the consciousness of their own ignorance; whereby it cometh to pass that having learned men in admiration, they rather fear to dislike them than know wherefore they should allow and follow their judgments. Contrariwise with them that are skilful authority is much more strong and forcible; because they only are able to discern how just cause there is why to some men's authority so much should be attributed.
Richard Hooker
12.
Even ministers of good things are like torches, a light to others, waste and destruction to themselves.
Richard Hooker
13.
The reason why the simpler sort are moved by authority is the consciousness of their own ignorance
Richard Hooker
14.
So that every man lawfully ordained must bring a bow which hath two strings, a title of present right and another to provide for future possibility or chance.
Richard Hooker
15.
I observe there is in Mr. Hooker no affected language; but a grave, comprehensive, clear manifestation of reason, and that backed with the authority of the Scriptures, the fathers and schoolmen, and with all law both sacred and civil.
Richard Hooker
16.
Words must be taken according to the matter whereof they are uttered.
Richard Hooker
17.
Of two Evils we take the less.
Richard Hooker
18.
To live by one man's will becomes the cause of all misery.
Richard Hooker