Six Characters in Search of a Republic: Studies in the Political Thought of the American ColoniesRevised version of Part II of [the author's] Seedtime of the Republic. |
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Page 64
... true religion , that there was one true church , that the central purpose of the divinely ordained state was to defend the church , that prince and bishop or minister and magistrate must support each other with the sanctions at their ...
... true religion , that there was one true church , that the central purpose of the divinely ordained state was to defend the church , that prince and bishop or minister and magistrate must support each other with the sanctions at their ...
Page 66
... true Church of God in those places , and consequently no spiritual heavenly peace : The Peace Spiritual ( whether true or false ) being of a higher and farre different nature from the Peace of the place or people , being meerly and ...
... true Church of God in those places , and consequently no spiritual heavenly peace : The Peace Spiritual ( whether true or false ) being of a higher and farre different nature from the Peace of the place or people , being meerly and ...
Page 199
... true of England , the Rome of the modern world ; this was especially true of America , the Rome of the future , to which Virtue was even now moving her seat . Bland did not express this interesting refinement of Whig political thought ...
... true of England , the Rome of the modern world ; this was especially true of America , the Rome of the future , to which Virtue was even now moving her seat . Bland did not express this interesting refinement of Whig political thought ...
Contents
Apostle of Soul Liberty | 35 |
A Star of the First Magnitude | 79 |
Herald of Revolution | 116 |
Copyright | |
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Adams American arguments Assembly authority belief Benjamin Franklin Bland's Boston British character charter church civil clergy colonial America colonists common compact congregation Connecticut consent Constitution Cotton Cotton Mather Court covenant democracy democratic doctrine duty early ecclesiastical election England English equality fact faith Franklin freedom friends Fundamental Orders Governor hath honor Hooker House of Burgesses ideas Jefferson John Adams John Winthrop John Wise Jonathan Mayhew King land law of nature learned letter London magistrates Massachusetts matter ment mind ministers natural rights never opinion pamphlets Parliament peace persons Peyton Randolph philosophy political thinker political thought Poor Richard says popular preached principles Puritan reason religion representative Revolution Rhode Island Richard Bland right of resistance Roger Williams royal Salem Samuel Samuel Adams sermon social society sovereign Stamp Act theory things Thomas Hooker tion town truth Virginia Whig Williams's Winthrop Wise's words writings wrote