13604 lines
756 KiB
Text
13604 lines
756 KiB
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THE DEVELOPMENT OF RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN CONNECTICUT
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BY
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M. LOUISE GREENE, PhD.
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PREFACE
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The following monograph is the outgrowth of three earlier and shorter
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essays. The first, "Church and State in Connecticut to 1818," was
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presented to Yale University as a doctor's thesis. The second, a
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briefer and more popularly written article, won the Straus prize
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offered in 1896 through Brown University by the Hon. Oscar S. Straus.
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The third, a paper containing additional matter, was so far approved
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by the American Historical Association as to receive honorable mention
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in the Justin Winsor prize competition of 1901.
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With such encouragement, it seemed as if the history of the
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development of religious liberty in Connecticut might serve a larger
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purpose than that of satisfying personal interest alone. In
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Connecticut such development was not marked, as so often elsewhere, by
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wild disorder, outrageous oppression, tyranny of classes, civil war,
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or by any great retrograde movement. Connecticut was more modern in
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her progress towards such liberty, and her contribution to advancing
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civilization was a pattern of stability, of reasonableness in
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government, and of a slow broadening out of the conception of liberty,
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as she gradually softened down her restrictions upon religious and
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personal freedom.
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And yet, Connecticut is recalled as a part of that New England where
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those not Congregationalists, the unorthodox or radical thinkers,
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found early and late an uncomfortable atmosphere and restricted
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liberties. By a study of her past, I have hoped to contribute to a
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fairer judgment of the men and measures of colonial times, and to a
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correct estimate of those essentials in religion and morals which
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endure from age to age, and which alone, it would seem, must
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constitute the basis of that "ultimate union of Christendom" toward
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which so many confidently look. The past should teach the present,
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and one generation, from dwelling upon the transient beliefs and
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opinions of a preceding, may better judge what are the non-essentials
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of its own.
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Connecticut's individual experiment in the union of Church and State
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is separable neither from the New England setting of her earliest days
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nor from the early years of that Congregationalism which the colony
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approved and established. Hence, the opening chapters of her story
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must treat of events both in old England and in New. And because
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religious liberty was finally won by a coalition of men like-minded in
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their attitude towards rights of conscience and in their desire for
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certain necessary changes and reforms in government, the final
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chapters must deal with social and political conditions more than with
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those purely religious. It may be pertinent to remark that the passing
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of a hundred years since the divorce of Church and State and the
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reforms of a century ago have brought to the commonwealth some of the
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same deplorable political conditions that the men of the past, the
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first Constitutional Reform Party, swept away by the peaceful
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revolution of 1818.
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For encouragement, assistance, and suggestions, I am especially
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indebted to Professor George B. Adams and Professor Williston Walker
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of Yale University, to Professor Charles M. Andrews of Bryn Mawr, to
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Dr. William G. Andrews, rector of Christ Church, Guilford, Conn., and
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to Professor Lucy M. Salmon of Vassar College. Of numerous libraries,
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my largest debt is to that of Yale University.
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M. LOUISE GREENE.
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NEW HAVEN, October 20, 1905.
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CONTENTS
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CHAPTER
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I. THE EVOLUTION OF EARLY CONGREGATIONALISM
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Preparation of the English nation for the two earliest forms of
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Congregationalism, Brownism and Barrowism.--Rise of Separatism and
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Puritanism.--Non-conformists during Queen Mary's reign.--Revival of
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the Reformation movement under Queen Elizabeth.--Development of
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Presbyterianism.--Three Cambridge men, Robert Browne, Henry Greenwood,
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and Henry Barrowe.--Brownism and Barrowism.--The Puritans under
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Elizabeth, her early tolerance and later change of policy.--Arrest of
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the Puritan movement by the clash between Episcopal and Presbyterian
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forms of polity and the pretensions of the latter.--James the First
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and his policy of conformity.--Exile of the Gainsborough and Scrooby
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Separatists.--Separatist writings.--General approachment of Puritans
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and Separatists in their ideas of church polity.--The Scrooby exiles
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in America.--Sympathy of the Separatists of Plymouth Colony with both
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the English Established Church and with English Puritans.
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II. THE TRANSPLANTING OF CONGREGATIONALISM
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English Puritans decide to colonize in America.--Friendly relations
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between the settlements of Salem and Plymouth.--Salem decides upon the
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character of her church organization.--Arrival of Higginson and
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Skelton with recruits.--Formation of the Salem church and election of
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officers.--Governor Bradford and delegates from Plymouth present.--The
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beginning of Congregational polity among the Puritans and the break
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with English Episcopacy.--Formation and organization of the New
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England churches.
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III. CHURCH AND STATE IN NEW ENGLAND
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Church and State in the four New England colonies.--Early theological
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dissensions and disturbances.--Colonial legislation in behalf of
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religion.--Development of state authority at the cost of the
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independence of the church.--Desire of Massachusetts for a platform of
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church discipline.--Practical working of the theory of Church and
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State in Connecticut.
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IV. THE CAMBRIDGE PLATFORM AND THE HALF-WAY COVENANT
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Necessity of a church platform to resist innovations, to answer
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English criticism, and to meet changing conditions of colonial
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life.--Summary of the Cambridge Platform.--Of the history of
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Congregationalism to the year 1648.--Attempt to discipline the
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Hartford, Conn., church according to the Platform.--Spread of its
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schism.--Petition to the Connecticut General Court for some method of
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relief.--The Ministerial Convention or "Synod" of 1657.--Its Half-Way
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Covenant.--Attitude of the Connecticut churches towards the
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measure.--Pitkin's petition to the General Court of Connecticut for
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broader church privileges.--The Court's favorable reply.--Renewed
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outbreak of schism in the Hartford and other churches.--Failure in the
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calling of a synod of New England churches.--The Connecticut Court
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establishes the Congregational Church.--Connecticut's first toleration
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act.--Settlement of the Hartford dispute.--The new order and its
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important modifications of ecclesiastical polity.
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V. A PERIOD OF TRANSITION
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Drift from religious to secular, and from intercolonial to individual
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interests.--Reforming Synod of 1680.--Religious life in the last
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quarter of the seventeenth century.--The "Proposals of 1705" in
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Massachusetts.--Introduction in Connecticut of the Saybrook System of
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Consociated Church government.
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VI. THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM
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The Confession of Faith.--Heads of Agreement.--Fifteen
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Articles.--Attitude of the churches towards the Platform.--Formation
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of Consociations.--The "Proviso" in the act of establishment.--Neglect
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to read the proviso to the Norwich church.--Contention arising.--The
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Norwich church as an example of the difficulty of collecting church
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rates.
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VII. THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM AND THE TOLERATION ACT
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Toleration in the "Proviso" of the act establishing the Saybrook
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Platform.--Reasons for passing the Toleration Act of 1708.--Baptist
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dissenters.--Rogerine-Baptists, Rogerine-Quakers or Rogerines, and
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their persecution.--Attitude toward the Society of Friends or
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Quakers.--Toward the Church of England men or
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Episcopalians.--Political events parallel in time with the dissenters'
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attempts to secure exemption from the support of the Connecticut
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Establishment.--General Ineffectiveness of the Toleration Act.
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VIII. THE FIRST VICTORY FOR DISSENT
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General dissatisfaction with the Toleration Act.--Episcopalians resent
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petty persecution.--Their desire for an American
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episcopate.--Conversion of Cutler, Rector of Yale College, and
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others.--Bishop Gibson's correspondence with Governor Talcott.
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--Petition of the Fairfield churchmen.--Law of 1727 exempting
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Churchmen.--Persecution growing out of neglect to enforce the
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law.--Futile efforts of the Rogerines to obtain exemption.--Charges
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against the Colony of Connecticut.--The Winthrop case.--Quakers
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attempt to secure exemption from ecclesiastical rates.--Exemption
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granted to Quakers and Baptists.--Relative position of the dissenting
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and established churches in Connecticut.
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IX. "THE GREAT AWAKENING"
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Minor revivals in Connecticut before 1740.--Low tone of moral and
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religious life.--Jonathan Edwards's sermons at Northampton.--Revival
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of religious interest and its spread among the people.--The
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Rev. George Whitefield.--The Great Awakening.--Its immediate results.
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X. THE GREAT SCHISM
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The Separatist churches.--Old Lights and New.--Opposition to the
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revival movement.--Severe colony laws of 1742-43--Illustrations of
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oppression of reformed churches, as the North Church of New Haven, the
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Separatist Church of Canterbury, and that of Enfield.--Persecution of
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individuals, as of Rev. Samuel Finlay, James Davenport, John Owen,
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and Benjamin Pomeroy.--Persecution of Moravian missionaries,--The
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colony law of 1746, "Concerning who shall vote in Society
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meeting."--Change in public opinion.--Summary of the influence of the
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Great Awakening and of the great schism.
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XI. THE ABROGATION OF THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM
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Revision of the laws of 1750.--Attitude of the colonial authorities
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toward Baptists and Separatists.--Influence on colonial legislation of
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the English Committee of Dissenters.--Formation of the Church of Yale
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College.--Separatist and Baptist writers in favor of
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toleration.--Frothingham's "Articles of Faith and Practice."--Solomon
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Paine's "Letter."--John Bolles's "To Worship God in Spirit and in
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Truth."--Israel Holly's "A Word in Zion's Behalf."--Frothingham's "Key
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to Unlock the Door."--Joseph Brown's "Letter to Infant
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Baptizers."--The importance of the colonial newspaper.--Influence of
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English non-conformity upon the religious thought of New England.--The
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Edwardean School.--Hopkinsinianism and the New Divinity.--The clergy
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and the people.--Controversy over the renewed proposal for an American
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episcopate.--Movement for consolidation among all religious
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bodies.--Influences promoting nationalism and, indirectly, religious
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toleration.--Connecticut at the threshold of the
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Revolution.--Connecticut clergymen as advocates of civil
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liberty.--Greater toleration in religion granted by the laws of
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1770.--Development of the idea of democracy in Church and
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State.--Exemption of Separatists by the revision of the laws in
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1784.--Virtual abrogation of the Saybrook Platform.--Status of
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Dissenters.
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XII. CONNECTICUT AT THE CLOSE OF THE REVOLUTION
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Expansion of towns.--Revival of commerce and industries.--Schools and
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literature.--Newspapers.--Rise of the Anti-Federal party.--Baptist,
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Methodist, and Separatist dissatisfaction.--Growth of a broader
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conception of toleration within the Consociated churches.
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XIII. CERTIFICATE LAWS AND WESTEKN LAND BILLS
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Opposition to the Establishment from dissenters, Anti-Federalists, and
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the dissatisfied within the Federal ranks.--Certificate law of 1791 to
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allay dissatisfaction.--Its opposite effect.--A second Certificate law
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to replace the former.--Antagonism created by legislation in favor of
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Yale College.--Storm of protest against the Western Land bills of
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1792-93.--Congregational missions in Western territory.--Baptist
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opposition to legislative measures.--The revised Western Land bill as
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a basis for Connecticut's public school fund.--Result of the
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opposition roused by the Certificate laws and Western Land bills.
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XIV. THE DEVELOPMENT OF POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONNECTICUT
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Government according to the charter of 1662.--Party tilt over town
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representation.--Anti-Federal grievances against the Council or
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Senate, the Judiciary, and other defective parts of the machinery of
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government.--Constitutional questions.--Rise of the
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Democratic-Republican party.--Influence of the French Revolution.--The
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Federal members of the Establishment or "Standing Order," the
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champions of religious and political stability.--President Dwight, the
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leader of the Standing Order.--Leaders of the
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Democratic-Republicans.--Political campaigns of 1804-1806.--Sympathy
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for the defeated Republicans.--Politics at the close of the War of
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1812.
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XV. DISESTABLISHMENT
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Waning of the power of the Federal party in Connecticut.--Opposition
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to the Republican administration during the War of
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1812.--Participation in the Hartford Convention.--Economic benefits of
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the war.--Attitude of the New England clergy toward the war.--The
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Toleration party of 1816.--Act for the Support of Literature and
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Religion.--Opposition.--Toleration and Reform Ticket of 1817.--New
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Certificate Law.--Constitution and Reform Ticket of 1818.--Its
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victory.--The Constitutional Convention.--New Constitution of
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1818.--Separation of Church and State.
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APPENDIX
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NOTES
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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THE DEVELOPMENT OF RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN CONNECTICUT
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CHAPTER I
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THE EVOLUTION OF EARLY CONGREGATIONALISM
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The stone which the builders rejected is become the head of the
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corner.--Psalm cxviii, 22.
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The colonists of Plymouth, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Haven
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were grounded in the system which became known as Congregational, and
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later as Congregationalism. At the outset they differed not at all in
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creed, and only in some respects in polity, from the great Puritan
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body in England, out of which they largely came.[a]
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For more than forty years before their migration to New England there
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had been in old England two clearly developed forms of
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Congregationalism, Brownism and Barrowism. The term Congregationalism,
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with its allied forms Congregational and Congregationalist, would not
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then have been employed. They did not come into general use until the
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latter half of the seventeenth century, and were at first limited in
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usage to defining or referring to the modified church system of New
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England. The term "Independent" was preferred to designate the
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somewhat similar polity among the nonconformist churches in old
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England.[b] Brownism and Barrowism are both included in Dr. Dexter's
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comprehensive definition of Congregationalism, using the term "to
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designate that system of thought, faith, and practice, which starting
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with the dictum that the conditions of church life are revealed in the
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Bible, and are thence to be evolved by reverent common-sense, assisted
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but never controlled by all other sources of knowledge; interprets
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that book as teaching the reality and independent competency of the
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local church, and the duty of fraternity and co-working between such
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churches; from these two truths symmetrically developing its entire
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system of principles, privileges, and obligations." [1] The
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"independent competency of the local church" is directly opposed to
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any system of episcopal government within the church, and is
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diametrically opposed to any control by king, prince, or civil
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government. Yet this was one of the pivotal dogmas of Browne and of
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the later Separatists; this, a fundamental doctrine which Barrowe
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strove to incorporate into a new church system, but into one having
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sufficient control over its local units to make it acceptable to a
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people who were accustomed to the autonomy and stability of a church
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both episcopal and national in character.
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In order to appreciate the changes in church polity and in the
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religious temper of the people for which Browne and Barrowe labored,
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one must survey the field in which they worked and note such
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preparation as it had received before their advent. It is to be
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recalled that Henry VIII substituted for submission to the Pope
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submission to himself as head of a church essentially Romish in
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ritual, teaching, and authority over his subjects. The religious
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reformation, as such, came later and by slow evolution through the
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gradual awakening of the moral and spiritual perceptions of the
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masses. It came very slowly notwithstanding the fact that the first
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definite and systematic opposition to the abuses and assumptions of
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the clergy had arisen long before Henry's reign. As early as 1382, the
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itinerant preachers, sent out by Wyckliff, were complained of by the
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clergy and magistrates as teachers of insubordinate and dangerous
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doctrines. Thenceforward, outcroppings of dissatisfaction with the
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clergy appear from time to time both in English life and
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literature. This dissatisfaction was silenced by various acts of
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Parliament which were passed to enforce conformity and to punish
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heresy. Their character and intent were the same whether the head of
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the church wore the papal tiara or the English crown. Two hundred
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years after Wyckliff, in 1582, laws were still fulminated against
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"divers false and perverse people of certain new sects," for
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Protestant England would support but one form of religion as the moral
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prop of the state. She regarded all innovations as questionable, or
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wholly evil, and their authors as dangerous men. Chief among the
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latter was Robert Browne. But before Browne's advent and in the days
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of Henry the Eighth, there had been a large, respectable, and steadily
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increasing party whose desire was to remain within the English church,
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but to purify it from superstitious rites and practices, such as
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penances, pilgrimages, forced oblations, and votive offerings. They
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wished also to free the ritual from many customs inherited from the
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days of Rome's supremacy. It was in this party that the leaven of
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Protestantism had been working. Luther and Henry, be it remembered,
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had died within a year of each other. Under the feeble rule of Edward
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the Sixth, the English reform movement gained rapidly, and, in 1550,
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upon the refusal of Bishop Hooper to be consecrated in the usual
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Romish vestments, it began to crystallize in two forms, Separatism and
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Puritanism.[c] In spite of much opposition, the teachings of Luther,
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Calvin, and other Continental reformers took root in England, and
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interested men of widely different classes. They stirred to new
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activity the scattered and persecuted groups, that, from time to time,
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had met in secret in London and elsewhere to read the Scriptures and
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to worship with their elected leaders in some simpler form of service
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than that prescribed by law. Under Mary's persecution, these
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Separatists increased, and with other Protestants swelled the roll of
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martyrs. In her severity, the Queen also drove into exile many able
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and learned men, who sought shelter in Geneva, Zurich, Basle, and
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Frankfort, where they were hospitably entertained. Upon their return,
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there was a marked increase in the Calvinistic tone both of preaching
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and teaching in the English church and in the university lecture
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rooms, especially those of Cambridge. Among the most influential
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teachers was Thomas Cartwright,[d] in 1560-1562, Lady Margaret
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Professor of Divinity at Cambridge. While having no sympathy with the
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nonconformist or Separatist of his day, Cartwright accepted the polity
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and creed of Calvin in its severer form. He became junior-dean of
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St. John's, major-fellow of Trinity, and a member of the
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governing-board. In 1565 he went to Ireland to escape the heated
|
||
|
controversy of the period which centred in the "Vestiarian"
|
||
|
movement. He was recalled in 1569 to his former professorship, and in
|
||
|
September, 1571, was forced out of it because, when controversy
|
||
|
changed from vestments to polity, he took extreme views of church
|
||
|
discipline and repudiated episcopal government.[e] While Cartwright
|
||
|
was very pronounced in his views, his desire at first was that the
|
||
|
changes in church polity should be brought about by the united action
|
||
|
of the Crown and Parliament. Such had been the method of introducing
|
||
|
changes under the three sovereigns, Henry, Mary, and Elizabeth. With
|
||
|
this brief summary of the reform movements among the masses and in the
|
||
|
universities covering the years until Cartwright, through the
|
||
|
influence of the ritualistic church party, was expelled from
|
||
|
Cambridge, and Robert Browne, as a student there, came under the
|
||
|
strong Puritan influence of the university, we pass to a consideration
|
||
|
of Brownism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Robert Browne was graduated from Cambridge in 1572, the year after
|
||
|
Cartwright's expulsion. The next three years he taught in London and
|
||
|
"wholly bent himself to search and find out the matters of the church:
|
||
|
as to how it was guided and ordered, and what abuses there were in the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical government then used." [2] When the plague broke out in
|
||
|
London, Browne went to Cambridge. There, he refused to accept the
|
||
|
bishop's license to preach, though urged to do so, because he had come
|
||
|
to consider it as contrary to the authority of the
|
||
|
Scriptures. Nevertheless, he continued preaching until he was silenced
|
||
|
by the prelate. Browne then went to Norwich, preaching there and at
|
||
|
Bury St. Edmunds, both of which had been gathering-places for the
|
||
|
Separatists. At Norwich, he organized a church. Writing of Browne's
|
||
|
labors there in 1580 and 1581, Dr. Dexter says: "Here, following the
|
||
|
track which he had been long elaborating, he thoroughly discovered and
|
||
|
restated the original Congregational way in all its simplicity and
|
||
|
symmetry. And here, by his prompting and under his guidance, was
|
||
|
formed the first church in modern days of which I have any knowledge,
|
||
|
which was intelligently and one might say philosophically
|
||
|
Congregational in its platform and processes; he becoming its pastor."
|
||
|
[3] Persecution followed Browne to Norwich, and in order to escape it
|
||
|
he, in 1581, migrated with his church to Middelburg, in
|
||
|
Zealand. There, for two years, he devoted himself to authorship,
|
||
|
wherein he set forth his teachings. His books and pamphlets, which had
|
||
|
been proscribed in England, were printed in Middelburg and secretly
|
||
|
distributed by his friends and followers at home. But Browne's
|
||
|
temperament was not of the kind to hold and mould men together, while
|
||
|
his doctrine of equality in church government was too strong food for
|
||
|
people who, for generations, had been subservient to a system that
|
||
|
demanded only their obedience. His church soon disintegrated. With but
|
||
|
a remnant of his following, he returned in 1583 by way of Scotland
|
||
|
into England, finding everywhere the strong hand of the government
|
||
|
stretched out in persecution. Three years later, after having been
|
||
|
imprisoned in noisome cells some thirty times within six years,
|
||
|
utterly broken in health, if not weakened also in mind, and never
|
||
|
feeling safe from arrest while in his own land, Browne finally sought
|
||
|
pardon for his offensive teachings and, obtaining it, reentered the
|
||
|
English communion. Though he was given a small parish, he was looked
|
||
|
upon as a renegade, and died in poverty about 1631, at an extreme old
|
||
|
age. He died while the Pilgrim Separatists were still a struggling
|
||
|
colony at Plymouth, repudiating the name of Brownists; before the
|
||
|
colonial churches had embodied in their system most of the
|
||
|
fundamentals of his; and long before the value of his teachings as to
|
||
|
democracy, whether in the church or by extension in the state, had
|
||
|
dawned upon mankind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The connecting link between Brownism and Barrowism, whose similarities
|
||
|
and dissimilarities we shall consider together, or rather the
|
||
|
connecting link between Robert Browne and Henry Barrowe, was another
|
||
|
Cambridge student, John Greenwood. He was graduated in 1581, the year
|
||
|
that Browne removed to Middelburg. Greenwood had become so enamored
|
||
|
with Separatist doctrines, that within five years of his graduation he
|
||
|
was deprived of his benefice, in 1586, and sent to prison. While
|
||
|
there, he was visited by his friend, Henry Barrowe, a young London
|
||
|
lawyer, who, through the chance words of a London preacher, had been
|
||
|
converted from a wild, gay life to one devout and godly. During a
|
||
|
visit to Greenwood, Barrowe was arrested and sent to Lambeth Palace
|
||
|
for examination. Upon refusing to take the oath required by the
|
||
|
bishop, Barrowe was remanded to prison to await further
|
||
|
examination. Later, he damaged himself and his cause by an
|
||
|
unnecessarily bitter denunciation of his enemies and by a too dogmatic
|
||
|
assertion of his own principles. Accordingly, he was sent back to
|
||
|
prison, where, together with Greenwood, he awaited trial until March,
|
||
|
1593. Then, upon the distorted testimony of their writings, both men
|
||
|
were sentenced as seditious fellows, worthy of death. Though twice
|
||
|
reprieved at the seemingly last hour, they were hanged together on
|
||
|
April 6, 1593.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Both Greenwood and Barrowe frequently asserted that they never had
|
||
|
anything to do with Browne. [4] Yet it is probable that it was
|
||
|
Browne's influence which turned Greenwood's puritanical convictions to
|
||
|
Separatist principles. Barrowe had been graduated from Clare Hall,
|
||
|
Cambridge, in 1569-70; Browne, from Corpus Christi in 1572. The two
|
||
|
men, so different in character, probably did not meet in university
|
||
|
days, and certainly not later in London, where one went to a life of
|
||
|
pleasure and the other to teaching and to the study of the
|
||
|
Scriptures. Greenwood, however, had entered Cambridge in 1577-78, and
|
||
|
left it in 1581. Thus he was in college during the two years that
|
||
|
Browne was preaching in and near Cambridge. It is safe to assume that
|
||
|
the young scholar, soon to become a licensed preacher, and overflowing
|
||
|
with the Puritan zeal of his college, might be drawn either through
|
||
|
curiosity or admiration to hear the erratic and almost fanatic
|
||
|
preacher. Later, when Browne's writings were being secretly
|
||
|
distributed in England, both Barrowe and Greenwood had come in contact
|
||
|
with the London congregations to whom Browne had preached. The fact
|
||
|
that many men in England were thinking along the same lines as the
|
||
|
Separatists; that Browne had recanted just as Barrowe and Greenwood
|
||
|
were thrust into prison; and that they both disapproved in some
|
||
|
measure of Browne's teachings, might account for a denial of
|
||
|
discipleship. Browne's influence might even have been unrecognized by
|
||
|
the men themselves. Be that as it may, during their long
|
||
|
imprisonment, both Barrowe and Greenwood, in their teachings, in their
|
||
|
public conferences, and in their writings strove to outline a system
|
||
|
of church government and discipline, which was very similar to and yet
|
||
|
essentially different from Browne's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus it happened that in the last decade of the sixteenth century two
|
||
|
forms of Congregationalism had developed, Brownism and Barrowism.
|
||
|
Neither Browne nor Barrowe felt any need, as did their later
|
||
|
followers, to demonstrate their doctrinal soundness, because in all
|
||
|
matters of creed they "were in full doctrinal sympathy with the
|
||
|
predominantly Calvinistic views of the English Established Church from
|
||
|
which they had come out."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Browne, first of all English writers, set forth the Anabaptist
|
||
|
doctrine that the civil ruler had no control over the spiritual
|
||
|
affairs of the church and that State and Church were separate realms."
|
||
|
[5] In the beginning, Browne's foremost wish was not to establish a
|
||
|
new church system or polity, but to encourage the spiritual life of
|
||
|
the believer. To this end he desired separation from the English
|
||
|
church, which, like all other state churches, included all baptized
|
||
|
persons, not excommunicate, whether faithful or not to their baptismal
|
||
|
or confirmation vows to lead godly lives. [6] Moreover, as Browne did
|
||
|
not believe that the magistrates should have power to coerce men's
|
||
|
consciences, teaching, as he did, that the mingling of church offices
|
||
|
and civil offices was anti-Christian,[7] he was unwilling to wait for
|
||
|
a reformation to be brought about by the changing laws of the
|
||
|
state.[8] He further advocated such equality of power [9] among the
|
||
|
members of the church that in its government a democracy resulted, and
|
||
|
this theory, pushed to a logical conclusion, implied that a democratic
|
||
|
form of civil government was also the best.[f] Browne roughly
|
||
|
draughted a government for the church with pastors, teachers, elders,
|
||
|
deacons, and widows. He insisted, however, that these officers did not
|
||
|
stand between Christ and the ordinary believer, "though they haue the
|
||
|
grace and office of teaching and guiding.... Because eurie one of the
|
||
|
church is made Kinge, and Priest and a Prophet, under Christ, to
|
||
|
vpholde and further the kingdom of God."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browne and Barrowe both made the Bible their guide in all matters of
|
||
|
church life. From its text they deduced the definition of a true
|
||
|
church as, "A company of faithful people gathered by the Word unto
|
||
|
Christ and submitting themselves in all things;" of a Christian, as
|
||
|
one who had made a "willing covenant with God, and thereby did live a
|
||
|
godly and Christian life."[10] This covenanting together of Christians
|
||
|
constituted a church. From their interpretation of the New Testament,
|
||
|
Browne and Barrowe held that this covenanting included repentance for
|
||
|
sin, a profession of faith, and a promise of obedience. Moreover, to
|
||
|
their minds, primitive Christianity had insisted upon a public,
|
||
|
personal narration of each covenanter's regenerative experience. From
|
||
|
sacred writ they derived their church organization also.[ll] Their
|
||
|
pastors were for exhorting or "edifying by all comfortable words and
|
||
|
promises in the Scriptures, to work in our hearts the estimate of our
|
||
|
duties with love and zeal thereunto." Their teachers were for teaching
|
||
|
or "delivering the grounds of Religion and meaning of the Scriptures
|
||
|
and confirming the same." Both officers were to administer baptism and
|
||
|
the Lord's supper, or "the Seals of the Covenant." The elders included
|
||
|
both pastors and teachers and also "Ruling Elders," all of whom were
|
||
|
for "oversight, counsel, and redressing things amiss," but the ruling
|
||
|
elders were to give special attention to the public order and
|
||
|
government of the church. According to both Browne and Barrowe, these
|
||
|
officers were to be the mouthpiece of the church in the admission,
|
||
|
censure, dismissal, or readmission of members. They were to prepare
|
||
|
matters to be brought before the church for action. They were also to
|
||
|
adjust matters, when possible, so as to avoid overburdening the church
|
||
|
or its pastor and teacher with trivial business. In matters spiritual,
|
||
|
they were to unite with the pastor and teacher in keeping watch over
|
||
|
the lives of the people, that they be of good character and godly
|
||
|
reputation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browne taught that the church had power which it shared with its
|
||
|
officers as fellow-Christians, but which lifted it above them and
|
||
|
their office. It lay with the church to elect them. It lay with the
|
||
|
church to censure them. Barrowe also maintained that the church was
|
||
|
"above its institutions, above its officers," [12] and that every
|
||
|
officer was responsible to the church and liable to its censure as
|
||
|
well as indebted to it for his election and office. But he further
|
||
|
maintained that the members of the church should render meek and
|
||
|
submissive, faithful and loving obedience to their chosen
|
||
|
elders. Barrowe thus taught that guidance in religious matters should
|
||
|
be left in the hands of those to whom by election it had been
|
||
|
delegated. The elders were to be men of discernment, able to judge
|
||
|
"between cause and cause, plea and plea," to redress evil, and to see
|
||
|
that both the people and their officers[g] did their full duty in
|
||
|
accordance with the laws of God and the ordinances of the
|
||
|
church. Barrowe had seen the confusion and disintegration of Browne's
|
||
|
church, and he planned by thus introducing the Calvinistic theory of
|
||
|
eldership to avoid the pitfalls into which the Brownists had plunged
|
||
|
while practicing their new-found principle of religious
|
||
|
equality. Barrowe hoped by his system to secure the independence of
|
||
|
the local churches and also to avoid the repellent attitude of a
|
||
|
nation that was as yet unprepared to welcome any trend towards
|
||
|
democracy.[h] Having devised this system of compromise, Barrowe made a
|
||
|
futile attempt to interest Cartwright, but the latter regarded the
|
||
|
reformer as too heretical. Yet Cartwright himself, tired of waiting
|
||
|
for the better day when his desired reforms should be brought about
|
||
|
through the operation of Parliamentary laws, was attempting in
|
||
|
Warwickshire and Northamptonshire to test his system of
|
||
|
Presbyterianism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the list of church officers already enumerated, both reformers
|
||
|
added deacons and widows. The deacons were to attend to the church
|
||
|
finances and all temporal cares, and, in their visiting of the sick
|
||
|
and afflicted, they were to be aided by the widows. The latter office,
|
||
|
however, soon fell into disuse, for it was difficult to find women of
|
||
|
satisfactory character, attainments, and physical ability, since, in
|
||
|
order to avoid scandal or censoriousness, those filling the office had
|
||
|
to be of advanced years.[i]
|
||
|
|
||
|
With respect to the relation of the churches among themselves, Browne
|
||
|
and Barrowe each insisted upon the integral independence and
|
||
|
self-governing powers of the local units. Both approved of the
|
||
|
"sisterly advice" of neighboring churches in matters of mutual
|
||
|
interest. Both held that in matters of great weight, synods, or
|
||
|
councils of all the churches should be summoned; that the delegates to
|
||
|
such bodies should advise and bring the wisdom of their united
|
||
|
experience to questions affecting the welfare of all the churches, and
|
||
|
also, when in consultation upon serious cases, that any one church
|
||
|
should lay before them. Browne insisted that delegates to synods
|
||
|
should be both ministerial and lay, while Barrowe leaned to the
|
||
|
conviction that they should be chosen only from among the church
|
||
|
officers. Both reformers limited the power of synods, maintaining that
|
||
|
they should be consultative and advisory only. [13] Their decisions
|
||
|
were not to be binding upon the churches as were those of the
|
||
|
Presbyterian synods,[j] whose authority both reformers regarded as a
|
||
|
violation of Gospel rule. The church system, outlined by these two
|
||
|
men, became, in time, the organization of the churches of Plymouth,
|
||
|
Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Haven. The character of their
|
||
|
polity fluctuated, as we shall see, leaning sometimes more to
|
||
|
Barrowism and sometimes, or in some respects, emphasizing the greater
|
||
|
democracy which Browne taught. In England, and because of the pressure
|
||
|
of circumstances among English exiles and colonists, Barrowe's
|
||
|
teachings at first gained the stronger hold and kept it for many
|
||
|
years. Moreover, as Barrowe's almost immediate followers embraced
|
||
|
them, there was no objection to the customary union of church and
|
||
|
state. And furthermore, if only the state would uphold this peculiar
|
||
|
polity, it might even insist upon the payment of contributions, which
|
||
|
both Browne and Barrowe had distinctly stated were to be voluntary and
|
||
|
were to be the only support of their churches. Though Barrowism was
|
||
|
more welcomed, eventually--yet not until long after the colonial
|
||
|
period--Brownism triumphed, and it predominates in the
|
||
|
Congregationalism of to-day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The immediate spread of Barrowism was due to the poor Separatists of
|
||
|
London. Doubtless among them were many who in the preceding years had
|
||
|
listened to Browne and had begun to look up to him as their
|
||
|
Luther. While Barrowe and Greenwood were in prison, many of these
|
||
|
Separatists had gone to hear them preach and had studied their
|
||
|
writings. During the autumn of 1592, there had been some relaxation in
|
||
|
the severity exercised toward the prisoners, and Greenwood was allowed
|
||
|
occasionally to be out of jail under bail. He associated himself with
|
||
|
these Separatists, who, according to Dr. Dexter, had organized a
|
||
|
church about five years before, and who at once elected Greenwood to
|
||
|
the office of teacher. Dr. John Brown, writing later than Dr. Dexter,
|
||
|
claims this London church as the parent of English Congregationalism.
|
||
|
To make good the claim, he traces the history of the church by means
|
||
|
of references in Bradford's History, Fox's "Book of Martyrs," and in
|
||
|
recently discovered state papers to its existence as a Separate church
|
||
|
under Elizabeth, when, as early as 1571, its pastor, Richard Fitz, had
|
||
|
died in prison. Dr. Brown believes he can still farther trace its
|
||
|
origin to Queen Mary's reign, when a Mr. Rough, its pastor, suffered
|
||
|
martyrdom, and one Cuthbert Sympson was deacon. [l4] After the death
|
||
|
of Greenwood and Barrowe, this London congregation was sore pressed.
|
||
|
Their pastor, Francis Johnson, having been thrown into prison, they
|
||
|
began to make their way secretly to Amsterdam. There Johnson joined
|
||
|
them in 1597, soon after his release. To this London-Amsterdam church
|
||
|
were gathered Separatist exiles from all parts of England, for
|
||
|
converts were increasing,[k] especially in the rural districts of the
|
||
|
north, notwithstanding the fact that persecution followed hard upon
|
||
|
conversion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The policy of Elizabeth during the earlier years of her reign was one
|
||
|
of forbearance towards inoffensive Catholics and of toleration towards
|
||
|
all Protestants. Caring nothing for religion as such, her aim was to
|
||
|
secure peace and to increase the stability of her realm. This she did
|
||
|
by crushing malcontent Catholics, by balancing the factions of
|
||
|
Protestantism, and by holding in check the extremists, whether
|
||
|
High-Churchmen or the ultra-Puritan followers of Cartwright. She had
|
||
|
forced on the contending factions a sort of armed truce and silenced
|
||
|
the violent antagonism of pulpit against pulpit by licensing
|
||
|
preachers. The Acts of Supremacy and of Uniformity placed all
|
||
|
ecclesiastical jurisdiction, as well as all legislative power, in the
|
||
|
hands of the state. They outlined a system of church doctrine and
|
||
|
discipline from which no variation was legally
|
||
|
permitted. Notwithstanding the enforced outward conformity, the Bible
|
||
|
was left open to the masses to study, and private discussion and
|
||
|
polemic writing were unrestrained. The main principles of the
|
||
|
Reformation were accepted, even while Elizabeth resisted the sweeping
|
||
|
reforms which the strong Calvinistic faction of the Puritan party
|
||
|
would have made in the ceremonial of the English church. This she did
|
||
|
notwithstanding the fact that about the time Thomas Cartwright,
|
||
|
through the influence of the ritualists under Whitgift, had been
|
||
|
driven from Cambridge, Parliament had refused to bind the clergy to
|
||
|
the Three Articles on Supremacy, on the form of Church government, and
|
||
|
on the power of the Church to ordain rites and ceremonies. Parliament
|
||
|
had even suggested a reform of the liturgy by omitting from it those
|
||
|
ceremonies most obnoxious to the Puritan party.[l] That representative
|
||
|
assembly had but reflected the desire of all moderate statesmen, as
|
||
|
well as of the Puritans. But, in the twelve years between Cartwright's
|
||
|
dismissal from Cambridge and Browne's preaching there without a
|
||
|
license, a great change took place, altering the sentiment of the
|
||
|
nation. All but extremists drew back when Cartwright pushed his
|
||
|
Presbyterian notions to the point of asserting that the only power
|
||
|
which the state rightfully held over religion was to see that the
|
||
|
decrees of the churches were executed and their contemners punished,
|
||
|
or when this reformer still further asserted that the power and
|
||
|
authority of the church was derived from the Gospel and consequently
|
||
|
was above Queen or Parliament. Cartwright claimed for his church an
|
||
|
infallibility and control of its members far above the claims of Rome,
|
||
|
and, tired of waiting for a purification of existing conditions by
|
||
|
legislative acts, he had, as has been said, boldly organized, in
|
||
|
accordance with his system, the clergy of Warwickshire and
|
||
|
Northamptonshire. The local churches were treated as self-governing
|
||
|
units, but were controlled by a series of authoritative Classes and
|
||
|
Synods. Having done this, Cartwright called for the establishment of
|
||
|
Presbyterianism as the national church and for the vigorous
|
||
|
suppression of Episcopacy, Separatism, and all variations from his
|
||
|
standard. As he thus struck at the national church, at the Queen's
|
||
|
supremacy, and, seemingly to many Englishmen, at the very roots of
|
||
|
civil government and security, there was a sudden halt in the reform
|
||
|
movement. The impetus which would have probably brought about all the
|
||
|
changes that the great body of Puritans desired was arrested. Richard
|
||
|
Hooker's "Ecclesiastical Polity" swept the ground from under Thomas
|
||
|
Cartwright's "Admonition to Parliament." Hooker's broad and
|
||
|
philosophic reasoning showed that no one system of church-government
|
||
|
was immutable; that all were temporary; and that not upon any man's
|
||
|
interpretation of Scripture, or upon that of any group of men alone,
|
||
|
could the divine ordering of the world, of the church or of the state,
|
||
|
be based. Such order depended upon moral relations, upon social and
|
||
|
political institutions, and changed with times and nations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The death of Mary Queen of Scots crushed the Catholic party, and the
|
||
|
defeat of the Armada left Elizabeth free to turn her attention to the
|
||
|
phases of the Protestant movement in her own realm. While Browne was
|
||
|
preaching in Norwich, the Queen raised Whitgift to the See of
|
||
|
Canterbury. He was the bitter opponent of all nonconformity, and
|
||
|
immediately the persecution both of Separatists and of Puritans became
|
||
|
severe. Elizabeth, sure at last of her throne and of her position as
|
||
|
head of the Protestant cause in Europe, gave her minister a free
|
||
|
hand. She demanded rigid conformity, but wisely forbore to revive many
|
||
|
of the customs which the Puritans had succeeded in rendering
|
||
|
obsolete. Notwithstanding such modifications, the English liturgy had
|
||
|
been so slightly altered that, "Pius the Fifth did see so little
|
||
|
variation in it from the Latin service that had been formerly used in
|
||
|
that Kingdom that he would have ratified it by his authority, if the
|
||
|
Queen would have so received it."[m] Elizabeth now forbade all
|
||
|
preaching, teaching, and catechising in private houses, and refused to
|
||
|
recognize lay or Presbyterian ordination. Ministers who could no
|
||
|
longer accept episcopal ordination, or subscribe to the Thirty-nine
|
||
|
Articles, or approve the Book of Common Prayer and conform to its
|
||
|
liturgy were silenced and deprived of their salaries. In default of
|
||
|
witnesses, charges against them were proved by their own testimony
|
||
|
under oath, whereby they were made to incriminate themselves. The
|
||
|
censorship of the press was made stringent, printing was restricted to
|
||
|
London and to the two universities, and all printers had to be
|
||
|
licensed. Furthermore, all publications, even pamphlets, had to
|
||
|
receive the approval of the Primate or of the Bishop of London. In
|
||
|
addition, the Queen established the Ecclesiastical Commission of
|
||
|
forty-four members, which became a permanent court where all authority
|
||
|
virtually centred in the hands of the archbishops. English law had not
|
||
|
as yet defined the powers and limitations of the Protestant
|
||
|
clergy. Consequently, this Commission assumed almost unlimited powers
|
||
|
and cared little for its own precedents. Its very existence undid a
|
||
|
large part of the work of the Reformation, and the successive
|
||
|
Archbishops of Canterbury, Parker, Whitgift, Bancroft, Abbott, and
|
||
|
Laud, claimed greater and more despotic authority than any papal
|
||
|
primate since the days of Augustine. The Commission passed upon all
|
||
|
opinions or acts which it held to be contrary to the Acts of Supremacy
|
||
|
and Uniformity. It altered or amended the Statutes of Schools and
|
||
|
Colleges; it claimed the right of deprivation of clergy and held them
|
||
|
at its mercy; it passed from decisions upon heresy, schism, or
|
||
|
nonconformity to judgment and sentence upon incest and similar
|
||
|
crimes. It could fine and imprison at will, and employ any measures
|
||
|
for securing information or calling witnesses. The result was that all
|
||
|
nonconformists and all Puritans drew closer together under
|
||
|
trial. Another result was that the Bible was studied more earnestly in
|
||
|
private, and that there was a public eager to read the religious books
|
||
|
and pamphlets published abroad and cautiously circulated in
|
||
|
England. Though the Presbyterians were confined to the nonconformist
|
||
|
clergy and to a comparatively small number among them, they were
|
||
|
rising in importance, and were accorded sympathetic recognition as a
|
||
|
section of the Puritan party. This party, as a whole, continued to
|
||
|
increase its membership. The Separatists also increased, for, as of
|
||
|
old, the blood of the martyrs became the seed of the church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hope that times would mend when James ascended the throne was soon
|
||
|
abandoned. As he had been trained in Scotch Presbyterianism, the
|
||
|
Presbyterians believed that he would grant them some favor, while the
|
||
|
Puritans looked for some conciliatory measures. Eight hundred Puritan
|
||
|
ministers, a tenth of all the clergy, signed the "Millenary Petition,"
|
||
|
asking that the practices which they most abhorred, such as the sign
|
||
|
of the cross in baptism, the use of the surplice, the giving of the
|
||
|
ring at marriage, and the kneeling during the communion service,
|
||
|
should be done away with. The petition was not Presbyterian, but was
|
||
|
strictly Puritan in tone. It asked for no change in the government or
|
||
|
organization of the church. It did ask for a reform in the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical courts, and it demanded provision for the training of
|
||
|
godly ministers. James replied to the petition by promising a
|
||
|
conference of prelates and of Puritan ministers to consider their
|
||
|
demands; but at the conference it was found that he had summpned it
|
||
|
only to air the theological knowledge upon which he so greatly prided
|
||
|
himself. His answer to the petition was that he would have "one
|
||
|
doctrine, one religion, in substance and in ceremony," and of the
|
||
|
remonstrants he added, "I will make them conform or I will harry them
|
||
|
out of the land." The harrying began. The recently organized
|
||
|
Separatist church at Gainsborough-on-Trent endured persecution for
|
||
|
four years, and then emigrated with its pastor, John Smyth, M.A., of
|
||
|
Christ's College, Cambridge. It found refuge in Amsterdam by the side
|
||
|
of the London-Amsterdam church and its pastor, Francis Johnson, who
|
||
|
had been Smyth's tutor in college days. The next year, after more of
|
||
|
the King's harrying, the future colonists of Plymouth, the Separatist
|
||
|
Church of Scrooby, an offshoot of the Gainsborough church, attempted
|
||
|
to flee over seas to Holland. The magistrates would not give them
|
||
|
leave to go, and to emigrate without permission had been counted a
|
||
|
crime since the reign of Richard II. Their first attempt to leave the
|
||
|
country was defeated and their leaders imprisoned. During their second
|
||
|
attempt, after a large number of their men had reached the ship with
|
||
|
many of their household goods, and while their wives and children were
|
||
|
waiting to embark, those on the beach were surprised and arrested, and
|
||
|
their goods confiscated. Public opinion forbade sending helpless women
|
||
|
and children to prison for no other offense than agreeing with and
|
||
|
wishing to join their husbands and fathers. Consequently the
|
||
|
magistrates let their prisoners go, but made no provision for
|
||
|
them. Helpless and destitute, they were taken in and cared for by the
|
||
|
people of the countryside, and sheltered until their men returned. The
|
||
|
latter had suffered shipwreck, because the Dutch captain had attempted
|
||
|
to sail away when he saw the approach of the English officers. When
|
||
|
the church had once more raised sufficient funds for the emigration,
|
||
|
the magistrates gave them a contemptuous permission to depart, "glad
|
||
|
to be rid of them at any price." So, in 1608, they also joined the
|
||
|
English exiles in Amsterdam. The rank injustice and cruelty of their
|
||
|
treatment, together with their patience and forbearance under their
|
||
|
sufferings, drew people's attention to the character and worth of the
|
||
|
pious "pilgrims" and Separatists whom James was constantly driving
|
||
|
forth from England.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Meanwhile, both in England and on the continent, the Separatists held
|
||
|
fast to the principles of their leaders, of which the cardinal ones
|
||
|
were a church wherein membership was not by birthright, but by
|
||
|
"conversion;" over which magistrates or government should have no
|
||
|
control; in which each congregation constituted an independent unit,
|
||
|
coequal with all others; and with which the state should have nothing
|
||
|
more to do than to see that members respected the decrees of the
|
||
|
church and were obedient to its discipline.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the continent, the Separatists elaborated these fundamentals and
|
||
|
developed detailed and systematic expression of them. Such were the
|
||
|
"True Description out of the Word of God of the Visible Church" of the
|
||
|
London-Amsterdam church, put forth in 1589, and in which Barrowe
|
||
|
himself outlined his system; the "True Confession," issued by the same
|
||
|
church about ten years later; "The Points of Difference," some
|
||
|
fourteen in number, in which the London-Amsterdam church set forth
|
||
|
wherein it differed from the English church; and the "Seven Articles,"
|
||
|
signed by John Robinson and William Brewster. This last document the
|
||
|
exiled Scrooby church sent from Leyden to the English Council of State
|
||
|
in 1617, with the hope of convincing King James that if allowed to go
|
||
|
to America under the Virginia patent, and to worship there in their
|
||
|
own fashion, they would be desirable colonists and law-abiding
|
||
|
subjects. The "True Confession"[n] sets forth the nature, powers,
|
||
|
order, and officers of the church. It limits the sacraments to the
|
||
|
members, and baptism to their children. It insists upon the wisdom of
|
||
|
churches seeking advice from one another, and of their use of
|
||
|
certificates of membership so as to guard against the admission of
|
||
|
strangers coming from other churches, and possibly of unworthy
|
||
|
character. In the definition of eldership, the "True Confession"
|
||
|
passes out of the haze in which Barrowe's "True Description" left the
|
||
|
conflicting powers of the eldership, and of the church. It plainly
|
||
|
asserts that the elders have the power of guidance and also of
|
||
|
control, should members attempt to censure them or to interfere in
|
||
|
matters beyond their knowledge. This platform also insists that
|
||
|
magistrates should uphold the church which it defines, because it is
|
||
|
the one true church, and that they should oppose all others as
|
||
|
anti-Christian. [15] In the "Points of Difference," stress is again
|
||
|
laid upon the covenant-nature of the church, upon its voluntary
|
||
|
support, upon the right of election of officers, and upon the
|
||
|
abolishment of "Popish Canons, Courts, Classes, Customs or any human
|
||
|
inventions," including the Popish liturgy, the Book of Common Prayer,
|
||
|
and "all Monuments of Idolatry in garments or in other things, and all
|
||
|
Temples, Chapels, etc." Many of the Puritans desired these same
|
||
|
changes. Many favored a polity giving the local churches some degree
|
||
|
of choice in the election of their officers. If the "Points of
|
||
|
Difference" aimed to lay bare the errors of Episcopacy and of
|
||
|
Presbyterianism as well as to demonstrate the superior merits of the
|
||
|
new aspirant for the status of a national church, the "Seven Articles"
|
||
|
[16] aimed to minimize differences in church usage by omitting mention
|
||
|
of them when possible and by emphasizing agreement. The evident
|
||
|
advance along the line of a more authoritative eldership had developed
|
||
|
out of the experience of the first two English churches in
|
||
|
Amsterdam. John Robinson and his followers had held more closely to
|
||
|
Robert Browne's standard of Congregationalism, for Robinson maintained
|
||
|
that the government of the church should be vested in its membership
|
||
|
rather than in its eldership alone. In order to maintain this
|
||
|
principle in greater purity, Robinson withdrew his fold from their
|
||
|
first resting-place in Amsterdam to Leyden. Richard Clyfton, who had
|
||
|
been pastor of the church in Scrooby, remained in Amsterdam, partly
|
||
|
because he felt too old to migrate again, and partly because he leaned
|
||
|
to Francis Johnson's more aristocratic theories of church
|
||
|
government. These divergent views caused trouble in the Amsterdam
|
||
|
churches, and Robinson wished to be far enough away to be out of the
|
||
|
vortex of doctrinal eddies. For eleven years his people lived a
|
||
|
peaceful and exemplary church life in Leyden, and it was chiefly their
|
||
|
longing to rear their children in an English home and under English
|
||
|
influences that made them anxious to emigrate to America. As the years
|
||
|
passed, Robinson sympathized more with the Barrowistic standards of
|
||
|
other churches and came also to regard more leniently the English
|
||
|
Established Church as one having true religion under corrupt forms and
|
||
|
ceremonies, and accordingly one with which he could hold a limited
|
||
|
fellowship. This was a step in the approachment of Separatist and
|
||
|
Puritan, and Robinson was a most influential writer. Of necessity, his
|
||
|
work was largely controversial, but he wrote from the standpoint of
|
||
|
defense, and rarely departed from a broad and kindly spirit. In the
|
||
|
"Seven Articles" Robinson admits the royal supremacy in so far as to
|
||
|
countenance a passive obedience. His teaching had the greatest
|
||
|
influence in shaping the religious life of the first and second
|
||
|
generation of New Englanders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Separatists who remained in England devoted themselves to the
|
||
|
discussion of particular topics rather than to platforms of faith and
|
||
|
discipline. Many of the writers were men who, like the pastors of two
|
||
|
of the exiled churches, were at first ministers in good standing in
|
||
|
the English church; but, later, had allowed their Puritan tendencies
|
||
|
to outrun the bounds of that party and to become convictions that the
|
||
|
Bible commanded their separation from the Establishment as witnesses
|
||
|
to the corruptions it countenanced. Poring over the Bible story, they
|
||
|
had become enamored with the simplicity of the Gospel age.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the days of Elizabeth, the English nation became more and more a
|
||
|
people of one book, and that book the Bible. As, deeply dyed with
|
||
|
Calvinism, they read over and over its sacred pages, they became a
|
||
|
serious, sombre, purposeful--and almost fanatic people. The faults and
|
||
|
extravagances of the Puritan party and of the later Commonwealth do
|
||
|
not at this time concern us. It is with their purposefulness, their
|
||
|
determination to make the church a home of vigorous and visible
|
||
|
righteousness, and to preserve their ecclesiastical and civil
|
||
|
liberties from the encroachment of Stuart pretensions, that we have to
|
||
|
do. More and more, as has been said, the Puritan was coming to the
|
||
|
conviction that the best way to reform the church would be to
|
||
|
substitute some restrictive policy for her all-embracing membership,
|
||
|
or, at least, to supplement it by such measures of local church
|
||
|
discipline as should practically exclude the unregenerate and the
|
||
|
immoral. Again, the Church of England could be arraigned as a
|
||
|
politico-ecclesiastical institution, and in the pages of the Bible,
|
||
|
King James's theory of the divine right of kings and bishops found no
|
||
|
support. It was obnoxious alike to Separatist and Puritan, and James's
|
||
|
Puritan subjects had the sympathy of more than three fourths of the
|
||
|
squires and burgesses in the king's first Parliament of 1604, while
|
||
|
the Separatists counted some twenty thousand converts in his
|
||
|
realm. The Puritan opposition was a formidable one to provoke. Yet
|
||
|
"the wisest fool in Christendom" jeered at its clergy and scolded its
|
||
|
representatives in Parliament for daring to warn him, in their reply
|
||
|
to his boasted divine right of kings, that
|
||
|
|
||
|
Your majesty would be misinformed if any man should deliver that
|
||
|
the Kings of England have any absolute power in themselves either
|
||
|
to alter religion, or to make any laws concerning the same,
|
||
|
otherwise than as in temporal causes, by consent of Parliament.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was the extravagant claims for himself and his bishops, coupled
|
||
|
with his lawless overriding of justice and his profligate use of the
|
||
|
national wealth, that undermined the king's throne and prepared the
|
||
|
downfall of the House of Stuart. Notwithstanding the remonstrance of
|
||
|
Parliament, James's insistence upon his divine right, by very force of
|
||
|
reiteration, whether his own or that of the clergy who favored
|
||
|
royalty, won a growing recognition from a conservative people. For
|
||
|
his king as the political head of the nation, the Puritan had all the
|
||
|
Englishman's half-idolatrous reverence, until James's own acts
|
||
|
outraged justice and substituted contempt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The self-restraint for which every Separatist, every Puritan, strove,
|
||
|
was characteristic of the great reform party. They asked only for
|
||
|
ecclesiastical betterment, for the reform of the ecclesiastical
|
||
|
courts, for provision for a godly ministry, and for the suppression of
|
||
|
"Popish usages." These requests of the "Millenary Petition" were,
|
||
|
after the Guy Fawkes plot, urged with all the intensity of a people
|
||
|
who, as they looked abroad upon the feeble and warring Protestantism
|
||
|
of Europe, and at home upon the attempt to revive Romanism, believed
|
||
|
themselves the sole hope and savior of the Protestant
|
||
|
cause. Persecution had created a small measure of tolerance throughout
|
||
|
all nonconformist bodies. Fear of the revival of Catholicism, the
|
||
|
renewed attempt to enforce the Three Articles, the dismissal from
|
||
|
their parishes of three hundred Puritan ministers, and the hand and
|
||
|
glove policy of the king and his bishops, welded together the variants
|
||
|
in the Puritan party. The desire for personal righteousness, for
|
||
|
morality in church and state, which had seized upon the masses in the
|
||
|
nation, stood aghast at the profligacy of the king and his courtiers.
|
||
|
Reason seemed to cry aloud for reform, preferably for a reform that
|
||
|
should be free from every trace of the old hypocrisies, but which
|
||
|
should be strong within the old episcopal system which had endured for
|
||
|
centuries and which still kept its hold upon the vast majority of the
|
||
|
people. And to this idea of reform the great Puritan party clung,
|
||
|
until the exactions of the Stuarts, their suppression of both
|
||
|
religious and civil rights, forced upon it a civil war and the
|
||
|
formation of the Commonwealth. As a preliminary training of the men of
|
||
|
the Puritan armies and of the Commonwealth, and for their great
|
||
|
contest, all the years of Bible study, of controversial writing, of
|
||
|
individual suffering, were needed. These brought forth the necessary
|
||
|
moral earnestness, the mental acumen, the enduring strength. These
|
||
|
qualities, though most noticeable in the leaders, were well-nigh
|
||
|
universal traits. Every common soldier felt himself the equal of his
|
||
|
officer as a soldier of God, a defender of the faith, and a necessary
|
||
|
builder of Christ's new kingdom upon earth. To this growing sense of
|
||
|
democracy, to this sense of personal responsibility and
|
||
|
self-sacrifice, the teaching, the writings, and the sufferings of the
|
||
|
oppressed Separatists, as well as those of the persecuted Puritans,
|
||
|
had contributed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When, in 1620, James I permitted the Pilgrims of Leyden to emigrate,
|
||
|
they planted in Plymouth of New England the first American
|
||
|
Congregational church and erected there the first American
|
||
|
commonwealth. The influence of this Separatist church upon New England
|
||
|
religious life belongs to another chapter. Here it is only necessary
|
||
|
to repeat that its members differed not at all in creed, only in
|
||
|
polity, from the English established church out of which they had
|
||
|
originally come. With the English Puritan they were one in faith,
|
||
|
while they differed little from him in theories of church government,
|
||
|
though much in practice. In America, the Plymouth colonists at once
|
||
|
set up the same church polity as in Leyden, one from which, as has
|
||
|
been shown, many of the English Puritans would have borrowed the
|
||
|
features of a converted or covenant membership and of local
|
||
|
self-government, or at least some measure of it. Eight years were to
|
||
|
elapse before the great Puritan exodus began. In those eight years
|
||
|
both parties, through the discipline of time, were to be brought still
|
||
|
nearer to a common standard of church life. When the vanguard of the
|
||
|
Puritans reached the Massachusetts shore, the Plymouth church stood
|
||
|
ready to extend the right hand of fellowship. How it did so, and how
|
||
|
it impressed itself upon the church life in the three colonies of
|
||
|
Massachusetts, New Haven, and Connecticut, is a part of the story of
|
||
|
the earliest period of colonial Congregationalism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] "Our pious Ancestors transported themselves with regard unto
|
||
|
Church Order and Discipline, not with respect to the Fundamentals in
|
||
|
Doctrine."--Richard Mather, _Attestation to the Ratio
|
||
|
Disciplina_, p. 10.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The issue on which the Pilgrims and Puritans alike left sweet fields
|
||
|
and comfortable homes and settled ways of the land of their birth for
|
||
|
this raw wilderness, was primarily an issue of politics rather than of
|
||
|
the substance of religious life."--G. L. Walker, _Some Aspects of
|
||
|
Religious Life in New England_, p. 19.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] "After the 17th century 'Independent' was chiefly used in England,
|
||
|
while 'Congregational' was decidedly preferred in New England, where
|
||
|
the 'consociation' of the churches formed a more important feature of
|
||
|
the system." "Congregational" first appeared in manuscript in 1639, in
|
||
|
print in 1642. "Congregationalist" appeared in 1692, and
|
||
|
"Congregationalism," not until 1716.--J. Murray, _A New English
|
||
|
Dict. on Hist. Principles._
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] Separatism is commonly said to date from the year 1554. About
|
||
|
1564, the other branch of the reform party was nicknamed
|
||
|
"Puritan."--G. L. Walker, _History of the First Church in
|
||
|
Hartford_, p. 6.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] Another noted preacher who left an indelible impression upon
|
||
|
several early New England ministers was William Perkins, who was in
|
||
|
discourse "strenuous, searching, and ultra-Calvinistic." He was a
|
||
|
Cambridge man, filling the positions of Professor of Divinity, Master
|
||
|
of Trinity, and Chancellor of the University.--G. L. Walker, _Some
|
||
|
Aspects of the Religious Life in New England_, p. 14.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] Cartwright in 1574, the year of its publication, translated
|
||
|
Travers's _Ecclesiasticae Disciplinae et Anglicanae Ecclesiae ab
|
||
|
illa Aberrationis, plena e verbo Dei & dilucida Explicatio_, and
|
||
|
made it the basis of a practical attempt to introduce the Presbyterian
|
||
|
system into England. More than five hundred of the clergy seconded his
|
||
|
attempt, subscribing to the principles that (1) there can be only one
|
||
|
right form of church government, but one church order and one form of
|
||
|
church, namely, that described in the Scriptures; (2) that every local
|
||
|
church should have a presbytery of elders to direct its affairs; and
|
||
|
(3) that every church should obey the combined opinion of all the
|
||
|
churches in fellowship with it. In this declaration lay a blow at the
|
||
|
Queen's supremacy.--H. M. Dexter, _Congregationalism as seen in
|
||
|
Lit_. p. 55.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] "Browne's polity was essentially, though unintentionally,
|
||
|
democratic, and that gives it a closer resemblance in some features to
|
||
|
the purely democratic Congregationalism of the present century, than
|
||
|
to the more aristocratic, one might almost say semi-Presbyterianized,
|
||
|
Congregationalism of Barrowe and the founders of New England. His
|
||
|
picture of the covenant relation of men in the church, under the
|
||
|
immediate sovereignty of God, he extended to the state; and it led him
|
||
|
as directly, and probably as unintentionally, to democracy in the one
|
||
|
field as in the other. His theory implied that all governors should
|
||
|
rule by the will of the governed, and made the basis of the state on
|
||
|
its human side essentially a compact."--W. Walker, _Creeds and
|
||
|
Platforms_, pp. 15, 16. See also H. M. Dexter, _Congregationalism
|
||
|
as seen in Lit_., pp. 96-107; 235-39; 351; R. Browne, _Book which
|
||
|
Sheweth, Def_., 51.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Barrowe wrote, "Though there be communion in the Church, yet is
|
||
|
there no equality." This is in strong contrast to Browne's, "Every one
|
||
|
of the church is made King and Priest and Prophet under Christ to
|
||
|
uphold and further the kingdom of God." Barrowe continues, "The Church
|
||
|
of Christ is to obey and submit unto her leaders.... The Church
|
||
|
knoweth how to give reverence unto her leaders." In his _True
|
||
|
Description_ there is a hazy attempt to define how far the
|
||
|
membership of the church may judge its elders. This authority of the
|
||
|
elders was defined more clearly and elaborated by Barrowe's followers
|
||
|
in their _True Confession_, published in Amsterdam in
|
||
|
1596-98.--H. Barrowe, _A True Description; Discovery of False
|
||
|
Churches_, p. 188; _A Plain Refutation of Mr. Gifford_, p. 129
|
||
|
(ed. of 1605).
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] "Traces of this (Barrowe's) innovation on apostolic
|
||
|
Congregationalism have been aptly characterized as a Presbyterian
|
||
|
heart within a Congregational body, and are seen long after the
|
||
|
denomination grew to be a power in New England."--A. E. Dunning,
|
||
|
_Congregationalists in America_, p. 61.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] Barrowe says, "over sixty."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] The first English Presbytery was organized in 1572. Among its
|
||
|
organizers, there was the seeming determination to treat the Episcopal
|
||
|
system as a mere legal appendage.--F. J. Powicke, _Henry
|
||
|
Barrowe_, p. 139.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] At the height of its prosperity this church contained about three
|
||
|
hundred communicants, with representatives from twenty-nine English
|
||
|
counties. Among them was one John Bolton, who had been a member of
|
||
|
Mr. Fitz's church in 1571. At the beginning of James the First's
|
||
|
reign, 1603, Separatist converts numbered 20,000 souls in England.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] "The wish for a reform in the Liturgy, the dislike of
|
||
|
superstitious usages, of the use of the surplice, the sign of the
|
||
|
cross in baptism, the gift of the ring in marriage, the posture of
|
||
|
kneeling at the Lord's Supper, was shared by a large number of the
|
||
|
clergy and laity alike. At the opening of Elizabeth's reign almost all
|
||
|
the higher churchmen but Parker were opposed to them, and a motion for
|
||
|
their abolition in Convocation was lost but by a single
|
||
|
vote."--J. R. Green, _Short History of the English People_,
|
||
|
p. 459.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] John Davenport, in his _Answer to the Letter of Many Ministers
|
||
|
in Old England_, p. 3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] Its full title is "A True Confession of the Faith and Humble
|
||
|
Acknowledgement of the Allegeance which wee his Majestes Subjects
|
||
|
falsely called Brownists, doo hould towards God and yeild his Majestie
|
||
|
and all others that are over us in the Lord."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER II
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE TRANSPLANTING OF CONGREGATIONALISM
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Those who cross the sea change not their affection but their
|
||
|
skies.--Horace.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The rule of absolutism forced the transplanting of a democratic
|
||
|
church. The arrogance of the House of Stuart compelled English
|
||
|
Puritans to seek refuge in America. The exercise of the divine right
|
||
|
of kings and of the divine power of bishops provoked the commonwealths
|
||
|
of New England and the development there of the Congregational church,
|
||
|
as later it brought the Commonwealth of Cromwell, with its tolerance
|
||
|
of Independent and Presbyterian.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the Pilgrims left England, the Puritans had entered upon their
|
||
|
long contest with James over their ecclesiastical and also their
|
||
|
constitutional rights. At his accession, the king had seemed inclined
|
||
|
to tolerate the Catholics. Yet only a short time elapsed before many
|
||
|
Romanists were found upon the proscribed lists. The Guy Fawkes plot
|
||
|
followed. Its scope, its narrow margin of failure, coupled with the
|
||
|
king's previous leniency towards Catholics and his bitter persecution
|
||
|
of nonconformists, created a frenzy of fear among
|
||
|
Protestants. Immediately the Puritans saw in every objectionable
|
||
|
ceremonial of the English church some hidden purpose, some Jesuitical
|
||
|
contrivance for overthrowing Protestantism. And as the ritualistic
|
||
|
clergy made their pulpits resound with the doctrines of the divine
|
||
|
right of kings, the divine right of bishops, and of passive obedience,
|
||
|
and as they thundered at the preachers who opposed or denied these
|
||
|
principles, the high-church party came to be associated more and more
|
||
|
with the unconstitutional policy of the king. And this was so,
|
||
|
notwithstanding the praiseworthy efforts of Archbishop Abbott to
|
||
|
modify the practical working of these royal notions. This archbishop
|
||
|
of Canterbury was a man of great learning and of gentle spirit. His
|
||
|
name stands second among the translators of King James's version,
|
||
|
while as head of the Ecclesiastical Commission his power was great,
|
||
|
his influence far reaching. So earnestly did he strive to moderate the
|
||
|
king's severity toward nonconformists, to bring about a compromise
|
||
|
between the two great church parties, and so simple was the ritual in
|
||
|
his palace at Lambeth, that many people believed the kindly prelate
|
||
|
was more than half a Puritan at heart. He even refused to license the
|
||
|
publication of a sermon that most unduly exalted the king's
|
||
|
prerogative, and he forbade the reading of James's proclamation
|
||
|
permitting games and sports on Sunday. This proclamation was the
|
||
|
famous "Book of Sports," and many Puritan clergymen paid dearly for
|
||
|
refusing to read it to their congregations. Its issue exasperated and
|
||
|
discouraged the reform party, and, from this time, the Puritans began
|
||
|
to lose hope that any moral or religious betterment would be permitted
|
||
|
among the people.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the constitutional imbroglio, James resented the attempt of
|
||
|
Parliament to curb his extravagance by its method of granting him
|
||
|
money on condition that he would make ecclesiastical reforms and grant
|
||
|
the redress of other grievances. When the king grew angry and
|
||
|
attempted to rule without a Parliament, the Puritan party broadened
|
||
|
its purpose and became the champion also of civil liberty. Among his
|
||
|
offenses, James refused to restore to their pulpits three hundred
|
||
|
Puritan ministers whom, in 1605, he silenced for not accepting the
|
||
|
Three Articles, notwithstanding the fact that Parliament itself had
|
||
|
refused to make them binding upon the clergy. The king also refused to
|
||
|
define the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts, and to respect
|
||
|
the limitation of the powers of the High Court of Commission when they
|
||
|
were determined by the judges. And further, James positively refused
|
||
|
to admit that with Parliament alone rested the power to levy imposts
|
||
|
and duties. After wrangling with his first Parliament for seven years
|
||
|
over these and similar questions, the king ruled for the next three
|
||
|
without that representative body. Finding it necessary, in 1614, to
|
||
|
convene his lords, squires, and burgesses, the king was disappointed
|
||
|
to find that the new Parliament was no more pliable to his will than
|
||
|
its predecessor had been, and he shortly dissolved it. The great
|
||
|
leaders of the opposition, such as Coke, Eliot, Pym, Selden and
|
||
|
Hampden, were not all Puritans, but these men, and others of their
|
||
|
kind, joined with the reform party in demanding that the rights of the
|
||
|
people should be respected and the evils of government
|
||
|
redressed. James's whole reign was marked by quarrels with a stubborn
|
||
|
Parliament and by periods of absolute rule that were characterized by
|
||
|
forced loans and other unlawful extortions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon the death of James, in 1625, the nation turned hopefully to the
|
||
|
young prince, who thus far had pleased them in many ways. In contrast
|
||
|
to the ungainly, rickety, garrulous James, Charles was kingly in
|
||
|
appearance, bearing, and demeanor. He was reserved in speech and
|
||
|
manner. So far, the stubbornness which he had inherited from his
|
||
|
father was mistaken for a strong will, and his attitude towards Spain,
|
||
|
after the failure of the Catholic marriage which had been arranged for
|
||
|
him, was regarded as indicating his strong Protestantism. It took but
|
||
|
a short time, however, to reveal his stubbornness, his vanity, pique,
|
||
|
extravagance, and insincerity. Within four years, he had dissolved
|
||
|
Parliament three times, had sent Sir John Eliot to the Tower for
|
||
|
boldly defending the rights of the people, had dismissed the Chief
|
||
|
Justice from office for refusing to recognize as legal taxes laid
|
||
|
without consent of Parliament, had thrown John Hampden into prison for
|
||
|
refusing to pay a forced loan, and, finally, had signed the "Petition
|
||
|
of Rights" [17] in 1628, only to violate it almost as soon as the
|
||
|
contemporary bill for subsidies had been passed. Charles, finding he
|
||
|
could not coerce Parliament, dissolved it, and entered upon his twelve
|
||
|
years of absolute rule, marked by imprisonments, by arbitrary fines,
|
||
|
forced loans, sales of monopolies, and illegal taxes, which raised the
|
||
|
annual revenue from L500,000 to L800,000. [18]
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was during the first years of Charles's misrule--to be specific,
|
||
|
in 1627--that "some friends being together in Lincolnshire fell into
|
||
|
discourse about New England and the planting of the Gospel there."
|
||
|
Among them were, probably, Thomas Dudley (who mentions the discussion
|
||
|
in a letter to the Countess of Lincoln), Atherton Hough, Thomas
|
||
|
Leverett, and possibly also John Cotton and Roger Williams, for all
|
||
|
these men were wont to assemble at Tattersall Castle, the family seat
|
||
|
of Lord Lincoln. The latter was, in religious matters, a staunch
|
||
|
Puritan, and in political, a fearless opponent of forced loans and
|
||
|
illegal measures. Thomas Dudley was his steward and confidential
|
||
|
adviser, and the others were his personal friends and, in politics,
|
||
|
his loyal followers. These men, afterwards prominent in New England,
|
||
|
had watched with interest the fortunes of the Plymouth Colony, and now
|
||
|
concluded that since England lay helpless in the grasp of Charles the
|
||
|
time had come to prepare somewhere in the American wilderness a refuge
|
||
|
and home for oppressed Englishmen and persecuted Puritans. This
|
||
|
little group of men began at once to correspond with others in London
|
||
|
and also in the west of England who were like-minded with
|
||
|
themselves. Men of the west, in and about Dorchester, had for some
|
||
|
four years or more been interested in the New England fisheries
|
||
|
between the Kennebec and Cape Ann. On that promontory they had landed
|
||
|
some fourteen men, hoping to start a permanent settlement. The plan
|
||
|
had failed, the partnership had been dissolved, and a few of the
|
||
|
settlers had removed to Salem, Massachusetts. The Rev. John White,
|
||
|
the Puritan rector of Salem, England, saw a great opportunity. He at
|
||
|
once interested some wealthy merchants to make Salem, in
|
||
|
Massachusetts, the first post in a colonization scheme of great
|
||
|
magnitude, and as leader of an advance party they secured John
|
||
|
Endicott. From the council for New England the company secured a
|
||
|
patent on March 19, 1628, for the lands between the Merrimac and the
|
||
|
Charles rivers. On June 20, 1628, thirteen days after Charles had
|
||
|
signed the "Petition of Rights" that he was so soon to violate, the
|
||
|
advance guard of the colonists set sail for Salem, in the New World,
|
||
|
arriving there early in the following September.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In America, friendly relations were soon established between the
|
||
|
settlers of Salem and Plymouth. On the voyage over, sickness, due to
|
||
|
the unwholesome salt in which some of their provisions had been
|
||
|
packed, broke out among the Salem colonists, and continuing in the
|
||
|
settlement, forced Endicott to send to Plymouth for Dr. Samuel
|
||
|
Fuller, deacon in the church there. He was skilled both in medicine
|
||
|
and in church-lore, for he had also been one of the two deacons in the
|
||
|
church during its Leyden days. He worked among the disabled at Salem,
|
||
|
and, later, among the sick colonists at Boston, paving the way for a
|
||
|
better understanding and closer friendship with the Plymouth
|
||
|
settlers. There had been a tendency to look upon these earlier
|
||
|
colonists as extremists. Their enemies in derision called them
|
||
|
"Brownists." They did in truth cling most firmly to Browne's doctrine
|
||
|
that the civil magistrate had no control over the church of Christ. In
|
||
|
their opinion, the function of the civil power in any union of church
|
||
|
and state was limited to upholding the spiritual power by approving
|
||
|
the church's discipline, since that had for its object the moral
|
||
|
welfare of the people. As Endicott and Fuller talked together of all
|
||
|
that in their hearts they both desired for the church of the future,
|
||
|
they realized that they agreed on many points. The Plymouth church
|
||
|
had been virtually under the sole rule of its elder, William Brewster,
|
||
|
during the greater part of its life in America, for its aged pastor
|
||
|
had died before he could rejoin his flock. Such government had tended
|
||
|
to modify the early insistence upon the principle that the power of
|
||
|
the church was "above that of its officers." This doctrine was
|
||
|
associated in men's minds more with Robert Browne, who had originated
|
||
|
it, than with Henry Barrowe, who had modified it, and it was towards
|
||
|
Barrowism that the larger body of Puritans were drawn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Salem people, in their isolation three thousand miles from the
|
||
|
home-land, felt the necessity of some form of church organization. As
|
||
|
they had fled from the offensive ceremonial of the English Church,
|
||
|
they determined to be free from cross and prayer-book, and from
|
||
|
anything suggestive of offense. In the great matter of membership and
|
||
|
constitution, their new church was to be brought still nearer to the
|
||
|
requirements and simplicity of Gospel standards. More and more
|
||
|
Puritans were coming to prefer the church of "covenant membership" to
|
||
|
the birthright membership of the English Establishment. Many were
|
||
|
urging a limited independence in the organization, management, and
|
||
|
discipline of members of local churches. Some among the Puritans had
|
||
|
adopted the Presbyterian polity, while many preferred that form of
|
||
|
ordination. Such ordination had been accepted as valid for English
|
||
|
clergymen during the earlier part of Elizabeth's reign. It was still
|
||
|
so recognized by all the English clergy for the ministers of the
|
||
|
Reformed churches on the Continent, and with such, English clergymen
|
||
|
of all opinions still continued to hold very friendly intercourse. It
|
||
|
was not until Laud's ascendency that claims for the divine right of
|
||
|
Episcopacy, to the exclusion of other branches of the Christian faith,
|
||
|
were strenuously urged. Thus it happened that after many conferences,
|
||
|
Endicott could write to Governor Bradford in May of 1629, that:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
I acknowledge myself much bound to you for your kind love and care
|
||
|
in sending Mr. Samuel Fuller among us, and rejoice much that I am
|
||
|
by him satisfied touching your judgment of the outward form of
|
||
|
God's worship. It is, as far as I can gather, no other than is
|
||
|
warranted by the evidence of truth, and the same which I have ever
|
||
|
professed and maintained ever since the Lord in mercy revealed
|
||
|
Himself unto me: being far from the common report that hath been
|
||
|
spread of you touching that particular.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Endicott further expresses the wish that they may all "as Christian
|
||
|
brethren be united by a heavenly and unfeigned love;" that as servants
|
||
|
of one Master and of one household they should not be strangers, but
|
||
|
be "marked with one and the same mark, and sealed with one and the
|
||
|
same seal, and have, for the main, one and the same heart guided by
|
||
|
one and the same Spirit of truth," and that they should bend their
|
||
|
hearts and forces to the furthering of the work for which they had
|
||
|
come into the wilderness. Thus, Salem had decided upon the type of
|
||
|
church her people wanted, while she still waited for the ministers who
|
||
|
were coming with the larger number of her colonists, and whom she
|
||
|
believed competent to guide her religious life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Only a few weeks after the sending of Endicott's letter to Governor
|
||
|
Bradford, five vessels arrived, bringing several hundred well-equipped
|
||
|
colonists. They had been sent out by the Governor and Company of
|
||
|
Massachusetts Bay. This corporation had bought out the Salem Company,
|
||
|
and was backed by the most influential Puritans of wealth and social
|
||
|
prominence, by men who had lost all hope of either religious or civil
|
||
|
freedom when Laud had been raised to the bishopric of London and when
|
||
|
Charles persisted in his despotic government. By the elevation of Laud
|
||
|
to the bishopric of London, Charles offended the most puritanically
|
||
|
inclined diocese in England, and the whole Puritan party. In his new
|
||
|
office, Laud quickly succeeded in severing communication between the
|
||
|
Reformed churches on the Continent and those in England. He strictly
|
||
|
prohibited the common people from using the annotated pocket-Bibles
|
||
|
sent out by the Genevan press. He forbade the entrance into office of
|
||
|
nonconformists as lecturers or chaplains. He put an end to feofments,
|
||
|
so that puritanically inclined men of wealth could no longer control
|
||
|
the livings. He excluded suspended ministers from teaching, and also
|
||
|
from the practice of medicine, and even forbade their entering
|
||
|
business life. He required absolute conformity to his own high-church
|
||
|
standards. He insisted upon doing away with all Calvinistic
|
||
|
innovations tending to simplicity of ritual, and upon reviving many
|
||
|
ecclesiastical ceremonies which had fallen into disuse. Hence, English
|
||
|
Puritans saw in America the only hope of the future, and began that
|
||
|
exodus which, during the next ten years, or more, annually sent two
|
||
|
thousand emigrants to the Massachusetts shore to find homes throughout
|
||
|
New England. Of these, the Salem colonists were the first large body
|
||
|
of Puritans to emigrate. Among them were three ministers, Endicott's
|
||
|
former pastor Samuel Skelton, Francis Higginson, and Francis Bright.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Higginson and Skelton learned of the friendship with Plymouth,
|
||
|
and that Endicott had adopted the system of church organization
|
||
|
established in the older settlement, they accepted it as being in
|
||
|
accord with the principles of the Reformed churches on the Continent,
|
||
|
whose pattern they had themselves resolved to follow in organizing the
|
||
|
church at Salem. Not so Francis Bright. He could not agree with the
|
||
|
others, and so withdrew to Charlestown in order not to embarrass the
|
||
|
young church. Higginson and Skelton were each, in turn questioned as
|
||
|
to their conception of a minister's calling. Replying that it was
|
||
|
twofold: a call from within to a conviction that a man was chosen of
|
||
|
God to be His minister, and thereby endowed with proper gifts, and a
|
||
|
call from without by the free choice of a "covenanted church" to be
|
||
|
its pastor, they were accepted as satisfactory candidates for the two
|
||
|
highest offices in the Salem church. Later, upon an appointed day of
|
||
|
prayer and fasting, July 20, 1629, the people by written ballot chose
|
||
|
Francis Skelton to be their pastor and Thomas Higginson their
|
||
|
teacher. When they had accepted their election, "first Mr. Higginson,
|
||
|
with three or four of the gravest members of the church, laid their
|
||
|
hands upon Mr. Skelton, using prayer therewith. This being done, there
|
||
|
was imposition of hands upon Mr. Higginson also." Upon a still later
|
||
|
day of prayer and humiliation, August 6, elders and deacons were
|
||
|
chosen and ordained. Upon this day, the two ministers and many among
|
||
|
the people gave their assent to the Confession and Covenant which the
|
||
|
pastor and teacher had revised. At the second of these two important
|
||
|
meetings, Governor Bradford and delegates from the Plymouth church
|
||
|
were present. "Coming by sea they were hindered by cross-winds that
|
||
|
they could not be there at the beginning of the day; but they came
|
||
|
into the assembly afterward, and gave them the right hand of
|
||
|
fellowship, wishing all prosperity and all blessedness to such good
|
||
|
beginnings." [19] The Salem covenant in its original form was a single
|
||
|
sentence: "We covenant with the Lord and with one another; and doe
|
||
|
bynd ourselves in the presence of God to walk together in all his
|
||
|
wayes, according as he is pleased to reveale him' self unto us in his
|
||
|
Blessed word of truth." [20]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The formation of the church of Salem by covenant practice[a] marked
|
||
|
the beginning of the Congregational polity among the Puritan body;
|
||
|
their local ordination of their minister, the break with English
|
||
|
Episcopacy, though, for a considerable while longer, the colonists
|
||
|
still spoke of themselves as members of the Church of England, for
|
||
|
both the colonial and the home authorities were equally anxious to
|
||
|
avoid the stigma of Separatism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next large body of colonists to leave England was Governor
|
||
|
Winthrop's company, and, upon their arrival, the Boston church quickly
|
||
|
followed the example of Salem. Next, the Dorchester church, afterwards
|
||
|
the church of Windsor, Connecticut, emigrated as a body from Plymouth,
|
||
|
England, where, before embarking, its members seem to have taken some
|
||
|
form of membership pledge,--an unusual proceeding, but operating to
|
||
|
put this church in line with those already organized in Plymouth and
|
||
|
Massachusetts. The Watertown church, whence emigrants were to settle
|
||
|
Wethersfield, Connecticut, also organized with a covenant similar to
|
||
|
that of Salem and Boston. These four oldest congregations set the type
|
||
|
for the thirty-five New England churches that were founded previous to
|
||
|
1640, as well as for the later ones that followed the standard thus
|
||
|
early set up by Plymouth, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. There was
|
||
|
some variation in the form of covenant,[b] and to it a brief
|
||
|
confession of faith, or creed, was early added. There was some
|
||
|
variation also in the interpretation of the laying on of hands in
|
||
|
ordination as to whether it was to be considered, in cases where the
|
||
|
candidate had previously been ordained in England, as ordination or as
|
||
|
confirmation of that previously received.[c] In regard to officers,
|
||
|
the churches at first provided themselves with pastor, ruling elders
|
||
|
(one or two, but generally only one), and deacons. There were
|
||
|
exceptions among them, as at Plymouth, where there was no pastor for
|
||
|
ten years, and in which there had never been a teacher, for John
|
||
|
Robinson had filled both offices. As the first generation of colonists
|
||
|
passed away, partly because of lack of fit candidates, partly because
|
||
|
of the kinship of the two offices of pastor and teacher, and partly
|
||
|
because of the heavy expense in supporting both, the office of teacher
|
||
|
was dropped. The ruling eldership also was gradually discontinued; but
|
||
|
at first the churches generally had, with the exception of widows, the
|
||
|
full complement of officers as appointed by Browne and Barrowe. The
|
||
|
usual order of worship was (1) Prayer. (2) Psalm. (3) Scripture
|
||
|
reading, followed by the pastor's preaching to explain and apply
|
||
|
it. (4) Prophesying or exhortation, the elders calling for speakers,
|
||
|
whether members or guests from other churches. (5) Questions from old
|
||
|
or young, women excepted. (6) Occasional administration of the Lord's
|
||
|
Supper or of Baptism, rites known as the administration of "the Seals
|
||
|
of the Covenant." (7) Psalm. (8) Collection. (9) Dismissal with
|
||
|
blessing. Such were the New England churches, the churches of a
|
||
|
transplanted creed and race. They were Calvinistic in dogma,
|
||
|
democratic in organization, and of extreme simplicity in their order
|
||
|
of worship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] This fundamental principle of Congregationalism belonged to the
|
||
|
Separatists and was one of their distinctive tenets. It was never
|
||
|
adopted by the English Puritans as a body, nor was ordination by a
|
||
|
local church. The Dorchester church had some form of pledge at the
|
||
|
time of its organization. So also, possibly, because influenced by
|
||
|
Dutch example, did Rev. Hugh Peter's church in Rotterdam. But these
|
||
|
were exceptions.--W. Walker, _Hist, of Cong._, p. 192.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] The evolution of the Salem covenant and creed is given in detail
|
||
|
in W. Walker's _Creeds and Platforms_, pp. 99-122.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Windsor Creed of 1647, though not covering the range of Christian
|
||
|
doctrine, contained in simple phrase the essentials of Gospel
|
||
|
redemption from sin through repentance and faith in the atoning work
|
||
|
of Christ and a life of love toward God and our neighbor, through the
|
||
|
strength which comes from him.--W. Walker, _Creeds and
|
||
|
Platforms_, p. 154.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] The evolution of the Salem covenant and creed is given in detail
|
||
|
in W. Walker's _Creeds and Platforms_, pp. 99-122.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Windsor Creed of 1647, though not covering the range of Christian
|
||
|
doctrine, contained in simple phrase the essentials of Gospel
|
||
|
redemption from sin through repentance and faith in the atoning work
|
||
|
of Christ and a life of love toward God and our neighbor, through the
|
||
|
strength which comes from him.--W. Walker, _Creeds and
|
||
|
Platforms_, p. 154.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER III
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHURCH AND STATE IN NEW ENGLAND
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
For God and the Church!
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the great Puritan body in England, and with the great mass of the
|
||
|
English nation, whatever their religious opinions, the colonists of
|
||
|
Plymouth, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Haven held in common one
|
||
|
foremost theory of civil government. Pausing for a brief consideration
|
||
|
of this fundamental and far-reaching theory, which created so many
|
||
|
difficulties in the infant commonwealths, and which confronts us again
|
||
|
and again as we follow their later history, we find that the Pilgrim
|
||
|
Separatist of Plymouth, the strict Puritan of Massachusetts, the voter
|
||
|
in the theocratic commonwealth of New Haven, and the holder of the
|
||
|
liberal franchise in Connecticut, all clung to the proposition that
|
||
|
the State's first duty was the maintenance and support of religion.
|
||
|
Thereby they meant enforced taxation for the support of its
|
||
|
predominant type, conformity to its mode of worship, and in the last
|
||
|
analysis supervision or control of the Church by the State or by the
|
||
|
General Court of each colony. As a corollary to this proposition, the
|
||
|
duty of the churches was to define the creed, to set forth the church
|
||
|
polity, and to determine the bounds of morality within the state. Two
|
||
|
of the colonies held the corollary to be so important that it almost
|
||
|
changed places with the proposition when Massachusetts and New Haven
|
||
|
became rigid theocracies.[a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
With respect to taxation in the four colonies the statement should be
|
||
|
modified, inasmuch as the support of religion was at first voluntary
|
||
|
in all four: in Plymouth until 1657, in Massachusetts from 1630 to
|
||
|
1638, in Connecticut before 1640; yet both New Haven and Connecticut
|
||
|
accepted the suggestion made by the Commissioners of the United
|
||
|
Colonies on September 5, 1644, "that each man should be required to
|
||
|
set down what he would voluntarily give for the support of the gospel,
|
||
|
and that any man who refused should be rated according to his
|
||
|
possessions and compelled to pay" the sum so levied. Since in
|
||
|
religious affairs strict conformity was required by the three Puritan
|
||
|
colonies, and since the liberty accorded to the few early dissenters
|
||
|
in Plymouth was not such as to modify her prevailing polity or
|
||
|
worship, these first few years of voluntary assessment do not nullify
|
||
|
the dominant truth of the preceding statement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the intimate relation of Church and State, the people of these four
|
||
|
New England colonies regarded the magistrates as "Nursing Fathers" of
|
||
|
the Church, [2l] who were to take "special note and care of every
|
||
|
Church and provide and assign allotments of land for the maintenance
|
||
|
of each of them." [22] The State, accepting the same view of
|
||
|
caretaker, carried its supervision still farther and devised a system
|
||
|
for the maintenance of the ministry in accordance with sundry laws
|
||
|
made to insure the people's support, respect, and obedience. The
|
||
|
churches reciprocated. First of all, they provided their members with
|
||
|
the approved and accepted essentials of religious life, and they
|
||
|
further exercised a rigorous supervision over the moral welfare of the
|
||
|
whole community. Secondly, they aided the State through the influence
|
||
|
of their ministers, who, on all important occasions, were expected to
|
||
|
meet with the magistrates to consult and advise upon affairs whether
|
||
|
spiritual or temporal. But the framers of governments were not
|
||
|
satisfied with these measures that aimed to present a strongly
|
||
|
established church, capable of extending a fine moral, ethical, and
|
||
|
religious influence over the colonists, and also to enforce upon the
|
||
|
wayward, the careless, or the indifferent among them its support and
|
||
|
their obedience. If these measures provided for the ordinary welfare
|
||
|
of the community and for the usual relations b between the ministers
|
||
|
and their people, there were still possibilities of factional strife
|
||
|
to guard against, and such warfare in that age might or might not
|
||
|
confine itself within the limits of theological controversy or within
|
||
|
the lines of church organization. Consequently, the better to preserve
|
||
|
the churches from schism or corrupting innovations and the
|
||
|
commonwealth from discord, the supreme control of the churches was
|
||
|
lodged in the General Court of each colony. It could, whenever
|
||
|
necessary to secure harmony, whether ecclesiastical or civil,
|
||
|
legislate with reference to all or any of the churches within its
|
||
|
jurisdiction. Examples of such legislation occur frequently in the
|
||
|
religious history of the colonies, especially of Massachusetts and
|
||
|
Connecticut. Such interdependence of the spiritual and temporal power
|
||
|
practically amounted to a union of Church and State. Indeed, in
|
||
|
Massachusetts and New Haven, to be a voter, a man must first be a
|
||
|
member of a church of approved standing.[b] In more liberal Plymouth
|
||
|
and Connecticut, the franchise, at first, was made to depend only upon
|
||
|
conduct, though it was early found necessary to add a property
|
||
|
qualification in order to cut off undesirable voters.[23] In the
|
||
|
Connecticut colony, it was expressly enacted that church censure
|
||
|
should not debar from civil privilege. When advocating this amount of
|
||
|
separation between church and civil power, Thomas Hooker was not moved
|
||
|
by any such religious principle as influenced the Separatists of
|
||
|
Plymouth. On the contrary, it was his political foresight which made
|
||
|
him urge upon the colonists a more representative government[c] than
|
||
|
would be obtainable from a franchise based upon church-membership
|
||
|
where, as in the colonial churches, admission to such membership was
|
||
|
conditioned upon exacting tests. The great Connecticut leader was far
|
||
|
in advance of the statesmen of his time, for they held that the
|
||
|
religion of a prince or government must be the religion of the people;
|
||
|
that every subject must be by birthright a member of the national
|
||
|
church, to leave which was both heretical and disloyal and should be
|
||
|
punished by political and civil disabilities. This union of Church and
|
||
|
State was the theory of the age,--a principle of statecraft throughout
|
||
|
all of Europe as well as in England. Naturally it emigrated to New
|
||
|
England to be a foundation of civil government and a fortress for that
|
||
|
type of nonconformity which the colonists chose to transplant and make
|
||
|
predominant. The type, as we have seen, was Congregationalism, and the
|
||
|
Congregational church became the established church in each of the
|
||
|
four colonies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This theory of Church and State was the cause at bottom of all the
|
||
|
early theological dissensions which disturbed the peace and threatened
|
||
|
the colony of Massachusetts. Moreover, their settlement offers the
|
||
|
most striking contrast between the fundamental theory of
|
||
|
Congregationalism and the theory of a union between Church and
|
||
|
State. With the power of supervision over the Church lodged in the
|
||
|
General Court, whatever the theory of Congregationalism as to the
|
||
|
independence of the individual churches, in practice the civil
|
||
|
authority disciplined them and their members, and early invaded
|
||
|
ecclesiastical territory. In Salem, Endicott took it upon himself to
|
||
|
expel Ralph Smith for holding extreme Separatist principles, and
|
||
|
shipped the Browns back to England for persisting in the use of the
|
||
|
Book of Common Prayer. He considered both parties equally dangerous to
|
||
|
the welfare of the community, because, according to the new standard
|
||
|
of church-life, both were censurable. Endicott held that to tolerate
|
||
|
any measure of diversity in religious practices was to cultivate the
|
||
|
ferment of civil disorder. Considering the bitterness, narrowness,
|
||
|
intensity, and also the irritating conviction that every one else was
|
||
|
heretical and anti-Christian, with which men of that age clung to
|
||
|
their religious differences, Endicott had some reason for holding this
|
||
|
opinion. The Boston authorities believed in no less drastic measures
|
||
|
to maintain the civil peace and consequent good name of the
|
||
|
colony. John Davenport of New Haven voiced the Massachusetts sentiment
|
||
|
as well as his own in: "Civil government is for the common welfare of
|
||
|
all, as well in the Church as without; which will then be most
|
||
|
certainly effected, when Public Trust and Power of these matters is
|
||
|
committed to such men as are most approved according to God; and these
|
||
|
are Church-members."[24] Consequently, the Massachusetts law of 1631
|
||
|
[25] forbade any but church members to become freemen of the colony,
|
||
|
and to these only was intrusted any share in its government. A similar
|
||
|
law was later formulated for the New Haven colony. John Cotton echoed
|
||
|
the further sentiment of a New England community when, writing of the
|
||
|
relations between the churches and the magistrates, he defined the
|
||
|
church as "subject to the Magistrate in the matters concerning the
|
||
|
civil peace, of which there are four sorts:" (1) with reference to
|
||
|
men's goods, lives, liberty, and lands; (2) with establishment of
|
||
|
religion in doctrine, worship, and government according to the Word of
|
||
|
God, as also the reformation of corruption in any of these; (3) with
|
||
|
certain public spiritual administrations which may help forward the
|
||
|
public good, as fasts and synods; (4) and finally the church must be
|
||
|
subject to the magistrates in patient suffering of unjust persecution,
|
||
|
since for her to take up the sword in her own defense would only
|
||
|
increase the disturbance of the public peace. [26] As a result of such
|
||
|
public sentiment, churches were not to be organized without the
|
||
|
approval of the magistrates, nor were any "persons being members of
|
||
|
any church ... gathered without the approbation of the magistrates and
|
||
|
the greater part of said churches" (churches of the colony) to be
|
||
|
admitted to the freedom of the commonwealth. [27] This law, or its
|
||
|
equivalent, with reference to church organization was found upon the
|
||
|
statute books of all four colonies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a pioneer community and a primitive commonwealth, developing slowly
|
||
|
in accord with the new democratic principles underlying both its
|
||
|
church and secular life, the "maintenance of the peace and welfare of
|
||
|
the churches,"[28] which was intrusted to the care of the General
|
||
|
Court, was frequently equivalent to maintaining the civil peace and
|
||
|
prosperity of the colony. Endicott's deportation of the Browns and the
|
||
|
report of the exclusiveness and exacting tests of membership in the
|
||
|
colonial churches had early led the members of the Massachusetts Bay
|
||
|
Company, resident in England, to fear that the emigrants had departed
|
||
|
from their original intent and purpose. And the colonists began to
|
||
|
feel that they were in danger of falling under the displeasure of
|
||
|
their king and of their Puritan friends at home. Consequently, there
|
||
|
entered into the settling of all later religious differences in the
|
||
|
colony the determination to avoid appeals to the home country, and
|
||
|
also to avoid any report of disturbance or dissatisfaction that might
|
||
|
be prejudicial to her independence, general policy, or commercial
|
||
|
prosperity. The recognition of such danger made many persons
|
||
|
satisfied to submit to government by an exclusive class, comprising in
|
||
|
Massachusetts one tenth of the people and in the New Haven colony one
|
||
|
ninth. These alone had any voice in making the laws. In submitting to
|
||
|
their dictation, the large majority of the people had to submit to a
|
||
|
"government that left no incident, circumstance, or experience of the
|
||
|
life of an individual, personal, domestic, social, or civil, still
|
||
|
less anything that concerned religion, free from the direct or
|
||
|
indirect interposition of public authority." [29] Such inquisitorial
|
||
|
supervision was due to the close alliance of Church and State within
|
||
|
the narrow limits of a theocracy. In more liberal Plymouth and
|
||
|
Connecticut, the "watch and ward" over one's fellows, which the early
|
||
|
colonial church insisted upon, was extended only over church members,
|
||
|
and even over them was less rigorous, less intrusive. Something of
|
||
|
the development of the great authority of the State over the churches
|
||
|
and of its attitude and theirs towards synods may be gleaned from the
|
||
|
earliest pages of Massachusetts ecclesiastical history. The
|
||
|
starting-point of precedent for the elders of the church to be
|
||
|
regarded as advisors only and the General Court as authoritative seems
|
||
|
to have been in a matter of taxation, when, in February, 1632, the
|
||
|
General Court assessed the church in Watertown. The elders advised
|
||
|
resistance; the Court compelled payment. In the following July, the
|
||
|
Boston church inquired of the churches of Plymouth, Salem, Dorchester,
|
||
|
and Watertown, whether a ruling elder could at the same time hold
|
||
|
office as a civil magistrate. A correspondence ensued and the answer
|
||
|
returned was that he could not. Thereupon, Mr. Nowell resigned his
|
||
|
eldership in the Boston church. [30] Winthrop mentions eight[d]
|
||
|
important occasions between 1632 and 1635 when the elders, which term
|
||
|
included pastors, teachers, and ruling elders, were summoned by the
|
||
|
General Court of Massachusetts to give advice upon temporal
|
||
|
affairs. In March of 1635-36 the Court "entreated them (the elders)
|
||
|
together with the brethren of every church within the jurisdiction, to
|
||
|
consult and advise of one uniforme order of discipline in the churches
|
||
|
agreable to Scriptures, and then to consider how far the magistrates
|
||
|
are bound to interpose for the preservation of that uniformity and
|
||
|
peace of the churches." [31] The desire of the Court grew in part out
|
||
|
of the influx of new colonists, who did not like the strict church
|
||
|
discipline, and in part out of the tangle of Church and State during
|
||
|
the Roger Williams controversy. The Court had disciplined Williams as
|
||
|
one, who, having no rights in the corporation, had no ground for
|
||
|
complaint at the hostile reception of his teachings. These the
|
||
|
authorities regarded as harmful to their government and dangerous to
|
||
|
religion. His too warm adherents in the Salem church were, however,
|
||
|
rightful members of the community, and they had been punished for
|
||
|
upholding one whom the General Court, advised by the elders of the
|
||
|
churches, had seen fit to censure. Punished thus, ostensibly, for
|
||
|
contempt of the magistrates by the refusal to them of the land they
|
||
|
claimed as theirs on Marblehead Neck, and feeling that the
|
||
|
independence of their church life and their rightful choice in the
|
||
|
selection of their pastor had really been infringed, the Salem church
|
||
|
sent letters to the elders of all the other churches of the Bay,
|
||
|
asking that the magistrates and deputies be admonished for their
|
||
|
decision as a "heinous sin." The Court came out victorious, by
|
||
|
refusing at its next general session to seat the Salem deputies "until
|
||
|
they should give satisfaction by letter" for holding dangerous
|
||
|
opinions and for writing "letters of defamation," and by proceeding to
|
||
|
banish Roger Williams. Before the session of the Court, the elders of
|
||
|
the Massachusetts churches, jointly and individually, labored with the
|
||
|
Salem people and brought the majority to a conviction of their error
|
||
|
in supporting Roger Williams. [e]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The platform of church discipline which the Court advised in 1635-36
|
||
|
was not forthcoming, and the matter was allowed to rest.[f] In 1637,
|
||
|
with the consent of the General Court, a synod of elders and lay
|
||
|
delegates from all the New England churches was called to harmonize
|
||
|
the discordant factions created by the heated Antinomian
|
||
|
controversy. During the synod, the magistrates were present all the
|
||
|
time as hearers, and even as speakers, but not as members. The
|
||
|
dangerous schism was ended more by the Court's banishment of
|
||
|
Wheelwright and Mrs. Hutchinson, together with their more prominent
|
||
|
followers, than by the work of the synod. However, Governor Winthrop
|
||
|
was so delighted with the conferences of the synod that, in his
|
||
|
enthusiasm, he suggested that it would be fit "to have the like
|
||
|
meeting once a year, or at least the next year, to settle what yet
|
||
|
remained to be agreed, or if but to nourish love."[32] But his
|
||
|
suggestion was voted down, for the Synod of 1637 was considered by
|
||
|
some to be "a perilous deflection from the theory of
|
||
|
Congregationalism."[33] Even the fortnightly meeting of ministers who
|
||
|
resided near each other, and which it had become a custom to call for
|
||
|
friendly conference, was looked at askance by those[g] who feared in
|
||
|
it the germ of some authoritative body that should come to exercise
|
||
|
control over the individual churches. When this custom was endorsed
|
||
|
and permitted in the "Body of Liberties," in 1641, the assurance that
|
||
|
these meetings "were only by way of Brotherly conference and
|
||
|
consultation" was felt to be necessary to appease the
|
||
|
opposition. When, two and four years later, Anabaptist converts and a
|
||
|
flood of Presbyterian literature called for measures of repression,
|
||
|
and the Court summoned councils to consult upon a course of action, it
|
||
|
was most careful in each case to reassert the doctrine of the complete
|
||
|
independence of the individual church. Synods, from the purely
|
||
|
Congregational standpoint, were to be called only upon the initiative
|
||
|
of the churches, and were authoritative bodies, composed of both
|
||
|
ministerial and lay delegates from such churches, and their duty was
|
||
|
to confer and advise upon matters of general interest or upon special
|
||
|
problems. In cases where their decisions were unheeded, they could
|
||
|
enforce their displeasure at the contumacious church only by cutting
|
||
|
it off from fellowship. Consequently, though there was some opposition
|
||
|
to the Court's calling of synods and a resultant general restlessness,
|
||
|
there was none when the Court confined its supervision and commands to
|
||
|
individually schismatic churches or to unruly members. The time had
|
||
|
not yet come for the recognition of what this double system of church
|
||
|
government--government by its members, supervision by the Court
|
||
|
--foreboded. The colonists did not see that within it was the embryo
|
||
|
of an authoritative body exercising some of the powers of the
|
||
|
Presbyterian General Assembly. The supervising body might be composed
|
||
|
of laymen acting in their capacity as members of the General Court,
|
||
|
but the powers they exercised were none the less akin to the very ones
|
||
|
that Congregationalism had declared to be heretical and
|
||
|
anti-Christian. Moreover, the tendency was toward an increase of this
|
||
|
authoritative power every time it was exercised and each time that the
|
||
|
colonists submitted to its dictation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of the two colonies founded after Massachusetts, Connecticut and New
|
||
|
Haven, the latter preserved the complete independence of her original
|
||
|
church until the admission of the shore towns[h] to her jurisdiction,
|
||
|
when she instituted that friendly oversight of the churches which had
|
||
|
begun to prevail elsewhere. Thereafter her General Court kept a
|
||
|
rigorous oversight over the purity of her churches and the conduct of
|
||
|
their members. The General Court of Connecticut early compelled a
|
||
|
recognition of its authority[i] over the religious life of the people
|
||
|
and its right of special legislation.[j] For example, in 1643, the
|
||
|
Court demanded of the Wethersfield church a list of the grievances
|
||
|
which disturbed it. In the next year, when Matthew Allyn petitioned
|
||
|
for an order to the Hartford church, commanding the reconsideration of
|
||
|
its sentence of excommunication against him, the Court "adjudged his
|
||
|
plea an accusation upon the church" which he was bound to prove.
|
||
|
These incidents from early colonial history in some measure illustrate
|
||
|
the practical working of the theory of Church and State. The
|
||
|
conviction that the State should support one form of religion, and
|
||
|
only one, was ever present to the colonial mind. If confirmation of
|
||
|
its worth were needed, one had only to glance at the turmoil of the
|
||
|
Rhode Island colony experimenting with religious liberty and a
|
||
|
complete separation of Church and State. Like all pioneers and
|
||
|
reformers, she had gathered elements hard to control, and would-be
|
||
|
citizens neither peaceable nor reasonable in their interpretation of
|
||
|
the new range of freedom. Watching Rhode Island, the Congregational
|
||
|
men of New England hugged more tightly the conviction that their
|
||
|
method was best, and that any variation from it would work havoc. It
|
||
|
was this theory and this conviction, ever present in their minds, that
|
||
|
underlay all ecclesiastical laws, all special legislation with
|
||
|
reference to churches, to their members, or to public fasts and
|
||
|
thanksgivings. This deep-rooted conviction created hatred toward and
|
||
|
fear of all schismatical doctrines, enmity toward all dissenting
|
||
|
sects, and opposition to any tolerance of them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] "The one prime, all essential, and sufficient qualiiy of a
|
||
|
theocracy ... adopted as the form of an earthly government, was that
|
||
|
the civil power should be guided in its exercise by religion and
|
||
|
religious ordinances."--G. E. Ellis, _Puritan Age in Massachusetts,_
|
||
|
p. 188.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] "Noe man shal be admitted to the freedome of this body politicke,
|
||
|
but such as are members of some of the churches within the lymitts of
|
||
|
the same."--Mass. Col. Rec. i, 87, under date of May 28, 1631.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Church members onely shall be free burgesses and they onely shall
|
||
|
chuse magistrates and officers among themselves to haue the power of
|
||
|
transacting in all publique and ciuill affayres of this
|
||
|
plantatio."--New Haven Col. Rec. i, 15; also ii, 115, 116.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The governments of Massachusetts and New Haven "never absolutely
|
||
|
merged church and state." The franchise depended on church-membership,
|
||
|
but the voter, exercising his right in directing the affairs of the
|
||
|
colony, was speaking, "not as the church but as the civil Court of
|
||
|
Legislation and adjudication."--W. Walker, _History of the
|
||
|
Congregational Churches_, p. 123.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet it was due to this merging and this dependence that on October 25,
|
||
|
1639, there were only sixteen free burgesses or voters out of one
|
||
|
hundred and forty-four planters in the New Haven Colony.--See
|
||
|
N. H. Col. Rec. i, 20.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Theoretically Church and State (in Connecticut) were separated:
|
||
|
practically they were so interwoven that separation would have meant
|
||
|
the severance of soul and body."--C. M. Andrews, _Three River Towns
|
||
|
of Conn_. p. 22.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] To John Cotton's "democracy, I do not conceive that ever God did
|
||
|
ordain, as a fit government for church or commonwealth," and to
|
||
|
Gov. Winthrop's objections to committing matters to the judgment of
|
||
|
the body of the people because "safety lies in the councils of the
|
||
|
best part which is always the least, and of the best part, the wiser
|
||
|
is always the lesser," Hooker replied that "in all matters which
|
||
|
concern the common good, a general council, chosen by all, to transact
|
||
|
the business which concerns all, I conceive under favor, most suitable
|
||
|
to rule and most safe for the relief of the whole."--Hutchinson,
|
||
|
_Hist. of Mass._ i, App. iii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] (1) To adjust a difference between Governor Winthrop and Deputy
|
||
|
Dudley in 1632; (2) about building a fort at Nantasket, February,
|
||
|
1632; (3) in regard to the settlement of the Rev. John Cotton,
|
||
|
September, 1633; (4) in consultation concerning Roger Williams's
|
||
|
denial of the patent, January, 1634; (5) concerning rights of trade at
|
||
|
Kennebec, July, 1634; (6) in regard to the fort on Castle Island,
|
||
|
August, 1634; (7) concerning the rumor in 1635 of the coming of a
|
||
|
Governor-General; and (8) in the case of Mr. Nowell.--_Winthrop_,
|
||
|
i, pp. 89, 99, 112, 122, 136-137, 159-181.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] Roger Williams was the real author of the letters which the Salem
|
||
|
church was required to disclaim.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] Upon a further suggestion from the General Court, John Cotton
|
||
|
prepared a catechism entitled, _Milk for Babes_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Governor Winthrop replied to Dr. Skelton's objections that "no
|
||
|
church or person could have authority over another church."--See
|
||
|
H. M. Dexter, _Ecclesiastical Councils of New England_, p. 31;
|
||
|
_Winthrop_, i. p. 139.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] Guilford, Branford, Milford, Stamford, on the mainland, and
|
||
|
Southold, on Long Island.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] The General Court was head of the churches. "It was more than
|
||
|
Pope, or Pope and College of Cardinals, for it exercised all
|
||
|
authority, civil and ecclesiastical. In matters of discipline, faith,
|
||
|
and practice there was no appeal from its decisions. Except the right
|
||
|
to be protected in their orthodoxy the churches had no privileges
|
||
|
which the Court did not confer, or could not take away."--Bronson's
|
||
|
_Early Gov't. in Conn._ p. 347, in
|
||
|
_N. H. Hist. Soc. Papers_, vol. iii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] On August 18, 1658, the court refused, upon complaint of the
|
||
|
Wethersfield church, to remove Mr. Russell. In March, 1661, after duly
|
||
|
considering the matter, the court allowed Mr. Stow to sever his
|
||
|
connection with the church of Middletown. It concerned itself with
|
||
|
the strife in the Windsor church over an assistant pastor from 1667 to
|
||
|
1680. It allowed the settlement of Woodbury in 1672 because of
|
||
|
dissatisfaction with the Stratford church. It permitted Stratford to
|
||
|
divide in 1669. These are but a few instances both of the authority
|
||
|
of the General Court over individual churches and of that discord
|
||
|
which, finding its strongest expression in the troubles of the
|
||
|
Hartford church, not only rent the churches of Connecticut from 1650
|
||
|
to 1670, but "insinuated itself into all the affairs of the society,
|
||
|
towns, and the whole community." Another illustration of the court's
|
||
|
oversight of the purity of religion was its investigation in 1670 into
|
||
|
the "soundness of the minister at Rye." For these and hosts of similar
|
||
|
examples see index _Conn. Col. Rec._ vols. i, ii, iii, and iv.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE CAMBRIDGE PLATFORM AND THE HALF-WAY COVENANT
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is always right that a man should be able to render a reason
|
||
|
for the faith that is within him.--Sydney Smith.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In each of the New England colonies under consideration, the settlers
|
||
|
organized their church system and established its relation to the
|
||
|
State, expecting that the strong arm of the temporal power would
|
||
|
insure stability and harmony in both religious and civil life. As we
|
||
|
know, they were speedily doomed to disappointment. As we have seen,
|
||
|
they failed to estimate the influences of the new land, where freedom
|
||
|
from the restraint of an older civilization bred new ideas and
|
||
|
estimates of the liberty that should be accorded men. Within the first
|
||
|
decade Massachusetts had great difficulty in impressing religious
|
||
|
uniformity upon her rapidly increasing and heterogeneous
|
||
|
population. She found coercion difficult, costly, dangerous to her
|
||
|
peace, and to her reputation when the oppressed found favorable ears
|
||
|
in England to listen to their woes. Ecclesiastical differences of less
|
||
|
magnitude, contemporary in time and foreshadowing discontent and
|
||
|
opposition to the established order of Church and State, were settled
|
||
|
in more quiet ways. John Davenport, after witnessing the Antinomian
|
||
|
controversy, declined the pressing hospitality of Massachusetts, and
|
||
|
led his New Haven company far enough afield to avoid theological
|
||
|
entanglements or disputed points of church polity. Unimpeded, they
|
||
|
would make their intended experiment in statecraft and build their
|
||
|
strictly scriptural republic. Still earlier Thomas Hooker, Samuel
|
||
|
Stone, and John Warham led the Connecticut colonists into the
|
||
|
wilderness because they foresaw contention, strife, and evil days
|
||
|
before them if they were to be forced to conform to the strict policy
|
||
|
of Massachusetts.[a] They preferred, unhindered, to plant and water
|
||
|
the young vine of a more democratic commonwealth. And even as
|
||
|
Massachusetts met with large troubles of her own, so smaller ones
|
||
|
beset these other colonies in their endeavor to preserve uniformity of
|
||
|
religious faith and practice. Until 1656, outside of Massachusetts,
|
||
|
sectarianism barely lifted its head. Religious contumacy was due to
|
||
|
varying opinions as to what should be the rule of the churches and the
|
||
|
privileges of their members. As the churches held theoretically that
|
||
|
each was a complete, independent, and self-governing unit, their
|
||
|
practice and teaching concerning their powers and duties began to show
|
||
|
considerable variation. Such variation was unsatisfactory, and so
|
||
|
decidedly so that the leaders of opinion in the four colonies early
|
||
|
began to feel the need of some common platform, some authoritative
|
||
|
standard of church government, such as was agreed upon later in the
|
||
|
Cambridge Platform of 1648 and in the Half-Way Covenant, a still later
|
||
|
exposition or modification of certain points in the Platform.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The need for the Platform arose, also, from two other causes: one
|
||
|
purely colonial, and the other Anglo-colonial. The first was, since
|
||
|
everybody had to attend public worship, the presence in the
|
||
|
congregations of outsiders as distinct from church members. These
|
||
|
outsiders demanded broader terms of admission to holy privileges and
|
||
|
comforts. The second cause, Anglo-colonial in nature, arose from the
|
||
|
inter-communion of colonial and English Puritan churches and from the
|
||
|
strength of the politico-ecclesiastical parties in England. Whatever
|
||
|
the outcome there, the consequences to colonial life of the rapidly
|
||
|
approaching climax in England, when, as we now know, King was to give
|
||
|
way to Commonwealth and Presbyterianism find itself subordinate to
|
||
|
Independency, would be tremendous.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the first twenty years of colonial life, great changes had come
|
||
|
over New England. Many men of honest and Christian character--"sober
|
||
|
persons who professed themselves desirous of renewing their baptismal
|
||
|
covenant, and submit unto church discipline, but who were unable to
|
||
|
come up to that experimental account of their own regeneration which
|
||
|
would sufficiently embolden their access to the other sacrament"
|
||
|
(communion) [34]--felt that the early church regulations, possible
|
||
|
only in small communities where each man knew his fellow, had been
|
||
|
outgrown, and that their retention favored the growth of
|
||
|
hypocrisy. The exacting oversight of the churches in their "watch and
|
||
|
ward" over their members was unwelcome, and would not be submitted to
|
||
|
by many strangers who were flocking into the colonies. The
|
||
|
"experimental account" of religion demanded, as of old, a public
|
||
|
declaration or confession of the manner in which conviction of
|
||
|
sinfulness had come to each one; of the desire to put evil aside and
|
||
|
to live in accordance with God's commands as expressed in Scripture
|
||
|
and through the church to which the repentant one promised
|
||
|
obedience. This public confession was a fundamental of
|
||
|
Congregationalism. Other religious bodies have copied it; but at the
|
||
|
birth of Congregationalism, and for centuries afterwards, the bulk of
|
||
|
European churches, like the Protestant Episcopal Church to-day,
|
||
|
regarded "Christian piety more as a habit of life, formed under the
|
||
|
training of childhood, and less as a marked spiritual change in
|
||
|
experience." [35]
|
||
|
|
||
|
It followed that while many of the newcomers in the colonies were
|
||
|
indifferent to religion, by far the larger number were not, and
|
||
|
thought that, as they had been members of the English Established
|
||
|
Church, they ought to be admitted into full membership in the churches
|
||
|
of England's colonies. They felt, moreover, that the religious
|
||
|
training of their children was being neglected because the New England
|
||
|
churches ignored the child whose parents would not, or could not,
|
||
|
submit to their terms of membership. Still more strongly did these
|
||
|
people feel neglected and dissatisfied when, as the years went by,
|
||
|
more and more of them were emigrants who had been acceptable members
|
||
|
of the Puritan churches in England. They continued to be refused
|
||
|
religious privileges because New England Congregationalism doubted the
|
||
|
scriptural validity of letters of dismissal from churches where the
|
||
|
discipline and church order varied from its own. Within the membership
|
||
|
of the New England churches themselves, there was great uncertainty
|
||
|
concerning several church privileges, as, for instance, how far infant
|
||
|
baptism carried with it participation in church sacraments, and
|
||
|
whether adults, baptized in infancy, who had failed to unite with the
|
||
|
church by signing the Covenant, could have their children baptized
|
||
|
into the church. Considerations of church-membership and baptism, for
|
||
|
which the Cambridge Synod of 1648 was summoned, were destined, because
|
||
|
of political events in England, to be thrust aside and to wait another
|
||
|
eight years for their solution in that conference which framed the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant as supplementary to the Cambridge Platform of faith
|
||
|
and discipline.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What has been termed the Anglo-colonial cause for summoning the
|
||
|
Cambridge Synod finds explanation in the frequent questions and
|
||
|
demands which English Independency put to the New England churches
|
||
|
concerning church usage and discipline, and in the intense interest
|
||
|
with which New England waited the outcome of the constitutional
|
||
|
struggle in England between King and Parliament.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the great controversy broke out in England between Presbyterians
|
||
|
and Independents, the fortunes of Massachusetts (who felt every wave
|
||
|
of the struggle) and of New England were in the balance. Presbyterians
|
||
|
in England proclaimed the doctrine of church unity, and of coercion if
|
||
|
necessary, to procure it; the Independents, the doctrine of
|
||
|
toleration. Puritans, inclining to Presbyterianism, were disturbed
|
||
|
over reports from the colonies, and letters of inquiry were sent and
|
||
|
answers returned explaining that, while the internal polity of the New
|
||
|
England churches was not far removed from Presbyterianism, they
|
||
|
differed widely from the Presbyterian standard as to a national church
|
||
|
and as to the power of synods over churches, and that they also held
|
||
|
to a much larger liberty in the right of each church to appoint its
|
||
|
officers and control its own internal affairs. At the opening of the
|
||
|
Long Parliament (1640-1644), many emigrants had returned to England
|
||
|
from the colonies, and, under the leadership of the influential Hugh
|
||
|
Peters, had given such an impetus to English thought that the
|
||
|
Independent party rose to political importance and made popular the
|
||
|
"New England Way."[b] The success of the Independents brought relief
|
||
|
to Massachusetts, yet it was tinctured with apprehension lest
|
||
|
"toleration" should be imposed upon her. The signing of the "League
|
||
|
and Covenant" with England in 1643 by Scotland, the oath of the
|
||
|
Commons to support it, and the pledge "to bring the churches of God in
|
||
|
the three Kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and uniformity in
|
||
|
religion, confession of faith, form of church government and
|
||
|
catechizing" (including punishment of malignants and opponents of
|
||
|
reformation in Church and State), carried menace to the colonies and
|
||
|
to Massachusetts in particular. The supremacy of Scotch or English
|
||
|
Nonconformity meant a severity toward any variation from its
|
||
|
Presbyterianism as great as Laud had exercised.[c]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1643 Parliament convened one hundred and fifty members[d] in the
|
||
|
Westminster Assembly to plan the reform of the Church of
|
||
|
England. Their business was to formulate a Confession which should
|
||
|
dictate to all Englishmen what they should believe and how express it,
|
||
|
and should also define a Church, which, preserving the inherent
|
||
|
English idea of its relation to the State, should bear a close
|
||
|
likeness to the Reformed churches of the Continent and yet approach as
|
||
|
nearly as possible both to the then Church of Scotland and to the
|
||
|
English Church of the time of Elizabeth. The work of this assembly,
|
||
|
known as the Westminster Confession, demonstrated to the New England
|
||
|
colonists the weakness of their church system and the need among them
|
||
|
of religious unity.[e]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many among the colonists doubted the advisability of a church
|
||
|
platform, considering it permissible as a declaration of faith, but of
|
||
|
doubtful value if its articles were to be authoritative as a binding
|
||
|
rule of faith and practice without "adding, altering, or omitting."
|
||
|
Men of this mind waited for controversial writings,[f] to clear up
|
||
|
misconception and misrepresentation in England, but they waited in
|
||
|
vain. Moreover, the Puritan Board of Commissioners for Plantations of
|
||
|
1643 threatened as close an oversight and as rigid control of colonial
|
||
|
affairs from a Presbyterian Parliament as had been feared from the
|
||
|
King. Furthermore, a Presbyterian cabal in Plymouth and Massachusetts,
|
||
|
1644-1646, gathered to it the discontent of large numbers of
|
||
|
unfranchised residents within the latter colony, and under threat of
|
||
|
an appeal to Parliament boldly asked for the ballot and for church
|
||
|
privileges. In view of these developments, nearly all the colonial
|
||
|
churches, though with some hesitation, united in the Synod of
|
||
|
Cambridge, which was originally called for the year 1646.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the calling of the synod Massachusetts took the lead. Several years
|
||
|
before, in 1643, the four colonies of Plymouth, Massachusetts,
|
||
|
Connecticut, and New Haven had united in the New England Confederacy,
|
||
|
or "Confederacy of the United Colonies," for mutual advantage in
|
||
|
resisting the encroachments of the Dutch, French, and Indians, and for
|
||
|
"preserving and propagating the truth and liberties of the gospel." In
|
||
|
the confederacy, Massachusetts and Connecticut soon became the
|
||
|
leaders. Considering how much more strongly the former felt the
|
||
|
pulsations of English political life, and how active were the
|
||
|
Massachusetts divines as expositors of the "New England way of the
|
||
|
churches," the Bay Colony naturally took the initiative in calling the
|
||
|
Cambridge Synod. But mindful of the opposition to her previous
|
||
|
autocratic summons, her General Court framed its call as a "desire"
|
||
|
that ministerial, together with lay delegates, from all the churches
|
||
|
of New England should meet at Cambridge. There, representing the
|
||
|
churches, and in accordance with the earliest teachings of
|
||
|
Congregationalism, they were to meet in synod "for sisterly advice and
|
||
|
counsel." They were to formulate the practice of the churches in
|
||
|
regard to baptism and adult privileges, and to do so "for the
|
||
|
confirming of the weak among ourselves and the stopping of the mouths
|
||
|
of our adversaries abroad." During the two years of unavoidable delay
|
||
|
before the synod met in final session, these topics, which were
|
||
|
expected to be foremost in the conference, were constantly in the
|
||
|
public mind. Through this wide discussion, the long delay brought much
|
||
|
good. It brought also misfortune in the death of Thomas Hooker in
|
||
|
1647, and by it loss of one of the great lights and most liberal minds
|
||
|
in the proposed conference. Nearly all the colonial churches[g] were
|
||
|
represented in the synod. When, during its session, news was received
|
||
|
that Cromwell was supreme in England, its members turned from the
|
||
|
discussion of baptism and church-membership to a consideration of what
|
||
|
should be the constitution of the churches. The supremacy of Cromwell
|
||
|
and of the Independents who filled his armies cleared the political
|
||
|
background. All danger of enforced Presbyterianism was over. The
|
||
|
strength of the Presbyterian malcontents, who had sought to bring
|
||
|
Massachusetts and New England into disrepute in England, was
|
||
|
broken. Since the colonists were free to order their religious life as
|
||
|
they pleased, the Cambridge Synod turned aside from its purposed task
|
||
|
to formulate a larger platform of faith and polity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the Cambridge Synod adjourned, the orthodoxy of the New England
|
||
|
churches could not be impugned. In all matters of faith "for the
|
||
|
substance thereof" they accepted the Westminster Confession of Faith,
|
||
|
but from its measures of government and discipline they differed.[h]
|
||
|
This Cambridge Platform was more important as recognizing the
|
||
|
independence of the churches and the authority of custom among them
|
||
|
than as formulating a creed. It governed the New England churches for
|
||
|
sixty years, or until Massachusetts and Connecticut Congregationalism
|
||
|
came to the parting of the way, whence one was to develop its
|
||
|
associated system of church government, and the other its consociated
|
||
|
system as set forth in the Saybrook Platform, formulated at Saybrook,
|
||
|
Connecticut, in 1708. Meanwhile, the Cambridge Platform[i] gave all
|
||
|
the New England churches a standard by which to regulate their
|
||
|
practice and to resist change.[j]
|
||
|
|
||
|
A study of the Platform yields the following brief summary of its
|
||
|
cardinal points:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
(a) The Congregational church is not "National, Provincial or
|
||
|
Classical,"[k] but is a church of a covenanted brotherhood, wherein
|
||
|
each member makes public acknowledgment of spiritual regeneration and
|
||
|
declares his purpose to submit himself to the ordinances of God and of
|
||
|
his church.[l] A slight concession was made to the liberal church
|
||
|
party and to the popular demand for broader terms of membership in the
|
||
|
provision for those of "the weakest measure of faith," and in the
|
||
|
substitution of a written account of their Christian experience by
|
||
|
those who were ill or timid. This written "experimental account" was
|
||
|
to be read to the church by one of the elders. In the words of the
|
||
|
Platform, "Such charity and tenderness is to be used, as the weakest
|
||
|
Christian if sincere, may not be excluded or discouraged. Severity of
|
||
|
examination is to be avoided."[m]
|
||
|
|
||
|
(b) The officers of the church are elders and deacons, the former
|
||
|
including, as of old, pastors, teachers, and ruling elders. That the
|
||
|
authority within the church had passed from the unrestrained democracy
|
||
|
of the early Plymouth Separatists to a silent democracy before the
|
||
|
command of a speaking aristocracy[n] is witnessed to by the Platform's
|
||
|
declaration that "power of office" is proper to the elders, while
|
||
|
"power of privilege"[o] belongs to the brethren. In other words, the
|
||
|
brethren or membership have a "second" and "indirect power," according
|
||
|
to which they are privileged to elect their elders. Thereafter those
|
||
|
officers possess the "direct power," or authority, to govern the
|
||
|
church as they see fit.[p] In the matter of admission, dismission,
|
||
|
censure, excommunication, or re-admission of members, the brotherhood
|
||
|
of the church may express their opinion by vote.[q] In cases of
|
||
|
censure and excommunication, the Platform specifies that the offender
|
||
|
could be made to suffer only through deprivation of his church rights
|
||
|
and not through any loss of his civil ones.[r] In the discussion of
|
||
|
this point, the more liberal policy of Connecticut and Plymouth
|
||
|
prevailed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(c) In regard to pastors and teachers, the Platform affirms that they
|
||
|
are such only by the right of election and remain such only so long as
|
||
|
they preside over the church by which they were elected.[s]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Their ordination after election, as well as that of the ruling elders
|
||
|
and deacons, is to be by the laying on of hands of the elders of the
|
||
|
church electing them. In default of elders, this ordination is to be
|
||
|
by the hands of brethren whom because of their exemplary lives the
|
||
|
church shall choose to perform the rite.[t]
|
||
|
|
||
|
A new provision was also made, one leaning toward Presbyterianism,
|
||
|
whereby elders of other churches could perform this ceremony, "when
|
||
|
there were no elders and the church so desired."
|
||
|
|
||
|
(d) Church maintenance, amounting to a church tax, was insisted upon
|
||
|
not only from church-members but from all, since "all that are taught
|
||
|
in the word, are to contribute unto him that teacheth." If necessary,
|
||
|
because corrupt men creep into the congregations and church
|
||
|
contributions cannot be collected, the magistrate is to see to it that
|
||
|
the church does not suffer.[u]
|
||
|
|
||
|
(e) The Platform defined the intercommunion of the churches[v] upon
|
||
|
such broad lines as to admit of sympathetic fellowship even when
|
||
|
slight differences existed in local customs. In so important a matter
|
||
|
as when an offending elder was to be removed, consultation with other
|
||
|
churches was commanded before action should be taken against him. The
|
||
|
intercommunion of churches was defined as of various kinds: as for
|
||
|
mutual welfare; for sisterly advice and consultation, in cases of
|
||
|
public offense, where the offending church was unconscious of fault;
|
||
|
for recommendation of members going from one church to another; for
|
||
|
need, relief, or succor of unfortunate churches; and "by way of
|
||
|
propagation," when over-populous churches were to be divided.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(f) Concerning synods,[w] the Platform asserts that they are
|
||
|
"necessary to the well-being of churches for the establishment of
|
||
|
truth and peace therein;" that they are to consist of elders, or
|
||
|
ministerial delegates, and also of lay delegates, or "messengers;"
|
||
|
that their function is to determine controversies over questions of
|
||
|
faith, to debate matters of general interest, to guide and to express
|
||
|
judgment upon churches, "rent by discord or lying under open scandal."
|
||
|
Synods could be called by the churches, and also by the magistrates
|
||
|
through an order to the churches to send their elders and messengers,
|
||
|
but they were not to be permanent bodies. On the contrary, unlike the
|
||
|
synods of the Presbyterian system, they were to be disbanded when the
|
||
|
work of the special session for which they were summoned was
|
||
|
finished. Moreover, they were not "to exercise church censure in the
|
||
|
way of discipline nor any other act of authority or jurisdiction;" yet
|
||
|
their judgments were to be received, "so far as consonant to the word
|
||
|
of God," since they were judged to be an ordinance of God appointed in
|
||
|
his Word.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(g) The Platform's section "Of the Civil Magistrate in matters
|
||
|
Ecclesiastical"[x] maintains that magistrates cannot compel subjects
|
||
|
to become church-members; that they ought not to meddle with the
|
||
|
proper work of officers of the churches, but that they ought to see to
|
||
|
it that godliness is upheld, and the decrees of the church obeyed. To
|
||
|
accomplish these ends, they should exert all the civil authority
|
||
|
intrusted to them, and their foremost duty was to put down blasphemy,
|
||
|
idolatry, and heresy. In any question as to what constituted the last,
|
||
|
the magistrates assisted by the elders were to decide and to determine
|
||
|
the measure of the crime. They were to punish the heretic, not as one
|
||
|
who errs in an intellectual judgment, but as a moral leper and for
|
||
|
whose evil influence the community was responsible to God. The civil
|
||
|
magistrates were also to punish all profaners of the Sabbath, all
|
||
|
contemners of the ministry, all disturbers of public worship, and to
|
||
|
proceed "against schismatic or obstinately corrupt churches."
|
||
|
|
||
|
These seven points summarize the important work of the Cambridge Synod
|
||
|
and the Platform wherein it embodied the church usage and fixed the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical customs of New England. Concerning its own work, the
|
||
|
Synod remarked in conclusion that it "hopes that this will be a proof
|
||
|
to the churches beyond the seas that the New England churches are free
|
||
|
from heresies and from the character of schism," and that "in the
|
||
|
doctrinal part of religion they have agreed entirely with the Reformed
|
||
|
churches of England." [36]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let us in a few sentences review the whole story thus far of colonial
|
||
|
Congregationalism. With the exception of the churches of Plymouth and
|
||
|
Watertown, the colonists had come to America without any definite
|
||
|
religious organization. True, they had in their minds the example of
|
||
|
the Reformed churches on the Continent, and much of theory, and many
|
||
|
convictions as to what ought to be the rule of churches. These
|
||
|
theories and these convictions soon crystallized out. And the
|
||
|
transatlantic crystallization was found to yield results, some of
|
||
|
which were very similar to the modifications which time had wrought in
|
||
|
England upon the rough and embryonic forms of Congregationalism as set
|
||
|
forth by Robert Browne and Henry Barrowe. The characteristics of
|
||
|
Congregationalism during its first quarter of a century upon New
|
||
|
England soil were: the clearly defined independence or self-government
|
||
|
of the local churches; the fellowship of the churches; the development
|
||
|
of large and authoritative powers in the eldership; a more exact
|
||
|
definition of the functions of synods, a definite limitation of their
|
||
|
authority; and, finally, a recognition of the authority of the civil
|
||
|
magistrates in religious affairs generally, and of their control in
|
||
|
special cases arising within individual churches. In the growing power
|
||
|
of the eldership, and in the provision of the Platform which permits
|
||
|
ordination by the hands of elders of other churches, when a church had
|
||
|
no elders and its members so desired, there is a trend toward the
|
||
|
polity of the Presbyterian system. In the Platform's definition of the
|
||
|
power of the magistrates over the religious life of the community,
|
||
|
there is evident the colonists' conviction that, notwithstanding the
|
||
|
vaunted independence of the churches, there ought to be some strong
|
||
|
external authority to uphold them and their discipline; some power to
|
||
|
fall back upon, greater than the censure of a single church or the
|
||
|
combined strength and influence derived from advisory councils and
|
||
|
unauthoritative synods. In Connecticut, this control by the civil
|
||
|
power was to increase side by side with the tendency to rely upon
|
||
|
advisory councils. From this twofold development during a period of
|
||
|
sixty years, there arose the rigid autonomy of the later Saybrook
|
||
|
system of church-government, wherein the civil authority surrendered
|
||
|
to ecclesiastical courts its supreme control of the churches.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Turning from the text of the Cambridge Platform to its application, we
|
||
|
find among the earliest churches "rent by discord," schismatically
|
||
|
corrupt, and to be disciplined according to its provisions, that of
|
||
|
Hartford, Connecticut. From the earliest years of the Connecticut
|
||
|
colony there had been within it a large party, constantly increasing,
|
||
|
who, because they were unhappy and aggrieved at having themselves and
|
||
|
their children shut out of the churches, had advocated admitting all
|
||
|
of moral life to the communion table. The influence of Thomas Hooker
|
||
|
kept the discontent within bounds until his death in 1647, the year
|
||
|
before the Cambridge Synod met. Thereafter, the conservative and
|
||
|
liberal factions in many of the churches came quickly into open
|
||
|
conflict. The Hartford church in particular became rent by dissension
|
||
|
so great that neither the counsel of neighboring churches nor the
|
||
|
commands of the General Court, legislating in the manner prescribed by
|
||
|
the Cambridge instrument, could heal the schism. The trouble in the
|
||
|
Hartford church arose because of a difference between Mr. Stone, the
|
||
|
minister, and Elder Goodwin, who led the minority in their preference
|
||
|
for a candidate to assist their pastor. Before the discovery of
|
||
|
documents relating to the controversy, it was the custom of earlier
|
||
|
historians to refer the dispute to political motives. But this church
|
||
|
feud, and the discussion which it created throughout Connecticut, was
|
||
|
purely religious, and had to do with matters of church privileges and
|
||
|
eventually with rights of baptism.[y] The conflict originated through
|
||
|
Mr. Stone's conception of his ministerial authority, which belonged
|
||
|
rather to the period of his English training and which was concisely
|
||
|
set forth by his oft-quoted definition of the rule of the elders as "a
|
||
|
speaking aristocracy in the face of a silent democracy."[z] Mr. Stone
|
||
|
and Elder Goodwin, the two chief officers in the Hartford church, each
|
||
|
commanded an influential following. Personal and political
|
||
|
affiliations added to the bitterness of party bias in the dispute
|
||
|
which raged over the following three questions: (a) What were the
|
||
|
rights of the minority in the election of a minister whom they were
|
||
|
obliged to support? (b) What was the proper mode of ecclesiastical
|
||
|
redress if these rights were ignored? (c) What were those baptismal
|
||
|
rights and privileges which the Cambridge Platform had not definitely
|
||
|
settled? The discussion of the first two questions precipitated into
|
||
|
the foreground the still unanswered third. The turmoil in the Hartford
|
||
|
church continued for years and was provocative of disturbances
|
||
|
throughout the colony. Accordingly, in May, 1656, a petition was
|
||
|
presented to the General Court by persons unknown, asking for broader
|
||
|
baptismal privileges. Moved by the appeal, the Court appointed a
|
||
|
committee, consisting of the governor, lieutenant-governor and two
|
||
|
deputies, to consult with the elders of the churches and to draw up a
|
||
|
series of questions embodying the grievances which were complained of
|
||
|
throughout the colony as well as in the Hartford church. The Court
|
||
|
further commanded that a copy of these questions be sent to the
|
||
|
General Courts of the other three colonies, that they might consider
|
||
|
them and advise Connecticut as to some method of putting an end to
|
||
|
ecclesiastical disputes. As Connecticut was not the only colony having
|
||
|
trouble of this sort, Massachusetts promptly ordered thirteen of her
|
||
|
elders to meet at Boston during the following summer, and expressed a
|
||
|
desire for the cooperation of the churches of the confederated
|
||
|
colonies. Plymouth did not respond. New Haven rejected the proposed
|
||
|
conference. She feared that it would result in too great changes in
|
||
|
church discipline and, consequently, in her civil order,--changes
|
||
|
which she believed would endanger the peace and purity of her
|
||
|
churches;[aa] yet she sent an exposition, written by John Davenport,
|
||
|
of the questions to be discussed. The Connecticut General Court, glad
|
||
|
of Massachusetts' appreciative sympathy, appointed delegates, advising
|
||
|
them to first take counsel together concerning the questions to be
|
||
|
considered at Boston, and ordered them upon their return to report to
|
||
|
the Court.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two questions which since the summoning of the Cambridge Synod had
|
||
|
been under discussion throughout all New England were the right of
|
||
|
non-covenanting parishioners in the choice of a minister, and the
|
||
|
rights of children of baptized parents, that had not been admitted to
|
||
|
full membership. These were the main topics of discussion in the
|
||
|
Synod, or, more properly, Ministerial Convention, of 1657, which
|
||
|
assembled in Boston, and which decreed the Half-Way Covenant. The
|
||
|
Assembly decided in regard to baptism that persons, who had been
|
||
|
baptized in their infancy, but who, upon arriving at maturity, had not
|
||
|
publicly professed their conversion and united in full membership with
|
||
|
the church, were not fit to receive the Lord's Supper:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet in case they understood the Grounds of Religion and are not
|
||
|
scandalous, and solemnly own the Covenant in their own
|
||
|
persons,[ab] wherein they give themselves and their own children
|
||
|
unto the Lord, and desire baptism for them, we (with due reverence
|
||
|
to any Godly Learned that may dissent) see not sufficient cause to
|
||
|
deny Baptism unto their children. [37]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church care and oversight were to be extended to such children. But in
|
||
|
order to go to communion, or to vote in church affairs, the old
|
||
|
personal, public profession that for so many years had been
|
||
|
indispensable to "signing the covenant" was retained [38] and must
|
||
|
still be given.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This Half-Way Covenant, as it came to be called, enlarged the terms of
|
||
|
baptism and of admission to church privileges as they had been set
|
||
|
forth in the Cambridge Platform. The new measure held within itself a
|
||
|
contradiction to the foundation principle of Congregationalism. A dual
|
||
|
membership was introduced by this attempt to harmonize the Old
|
||
|
Testament promise, that God's covenant was with Abraham and his seed
|
||
|
forever, with the Congregational type of church which the New
|
||
|
Testament was believed to set forth. The former theory must imply some
|
||
|
measure of true faith in the children of baptized parents, whether or
|
||
|
no they had fulfilled their duty by making public profession and by
|
||
|
uniting with the church. This duty was so much a matter of course with
|
||
|
the first colonists, and so deeply ingrained was their loyalty to the
|
||
|
faith and practice which one generation inherited from another, that
|
||
|
it never occurred to them that future descendants of theirs might view
|
||
|
differently these obligations of church membership. But a difficulty
|
||
|
arose later when the adult obligation implied by baptism in infancy
|
||
|
ceased to be met, and when the question had to be settled of how far
|
||
|
the parents' measure of faith carried grace with it. Did the
|
||
|
inheritance of faith, of which baptism was the sign and seal, stop
|
||
|
with the children, or with the grandchildren, or where? To push the
|
||
|
theory of inherited rights would result eventually in destroying the
|
||
|
covenant church, bringing in its stead a national church of mixed
|
||
|
membership; to press the original requirements of the covenant upon an
|
||
|
unwilling people would lessen the membership of the churches, expose
|
||
|
them to hostile attack, and to possible overthrow. The colonists
|
||
|
compromised upon this dual membership of the Half-Way Covenant. As its
|
||
|
full significance did not become apparent for years, the work of the
|
||
|
Synod of 1657 was generally acceptable to the ministry, but it met
|
||
|
with opposition among the older laity. It was welcomed in Connecticut,
|
||
|
where Henry Smith of Wethersfield as early as 1647, Samuel Stone of
|
||
|
Hartford, after 1650, and John Warham of Windsor, had been earnest
|
||
|
advocates of its enlarged terms. As early as in his draft of the
|
||
|
Cambridge Platform, Ralph Partridge of Duxbury in Plymouth colony had
|
||
|
incorporated similar changes, and even then they had been seconded by
|
||
|
Richard Mather.[ac] They had been omitted from the final draft of that
|
||
|
Platform because of the opposition of a small but influential group
|
||
|
led by the Rev. Charles Chauncey. As early as 1650, it had become
|
||
|
evident that public opinion was favorable to such a change, and that
|
||
|
some church would soon begin to put in practice a theory which was
|
||
|
held by so many leading divines. Though the Half-Way Covenant was
|
||
|
strenuously opposed by the New Haven colony as a whole, Peter Prudden,
|
||
|
its second ablest minister, had, as early as 1651, avowed his earnest
|
||
|
support of such a measure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Half-Way Covenant was presented to the Connecticut General Court,
|
||
|
August, 1657. Orders were at once given that copies of it should be
|
||
|
distributed to all the churches with a request for a statement of any
|
||
|
exceptions that any of them might have to it. None are known to have
|
||
|
been returned. This was not due to any great unanimity of sentiment
|
||
|
among the churches, for in Connecticut, as elsewhere, many of the
|
||
|
older church-members were not so liberally inclined as their
|
||
|
ministers, and were loth to follow their lead in this new
|
||
|
departure. But when controversy broke out again in the Hartford
|
||
|
church, in 1666, because of the baptism of some children, it was found
|
||
|
that in the interval of eleven years those who favored the Half-Way
|
||
|
covenant had increased in numbers in the church,[ad] and were rapidly
|
||
|
gaining throughout the colony, especially in its northern half. By the
|
||
|
absorption of the New Haven Colony, its southern boundary in 1664 had
|
||
|
become the shore of Long Island Sound.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though public opinion favored the Half-Way Covenant, the practice of
|
||
|
the churches was controlled by their exclusive membership, and, unless
|
||
|
a majority thereof approved the new way, there was nothing to compel
|
||
|
the church to broaden its baptismal privileges.[ae] This difference
|
||
|
between public opinion and church practice, between the congregations
|
||
|
and the coterie of church members, was provocative of clashing
|
||
|
interests and of factional strife. For several years these factional
|
||
|
differences were held in check and made subordinate to the urgent
|
||
|
political situation which the restoration of the Stuarts had
|
||
|
precipitated, and which demanded harmonious action among the
|
||
|
colonists. A royal charter had to be obtained, and when obtained, it
|
||
|
gave Connecticut dominion over the New Haven colony. The lower colony
|
||
|
had to be reconciled to its loss of independence, in so much as the
|
||
|
governing party, with its influential following of conservatives,
|
||
|
objected to the consolidation. The liberals, a much larger party
|
||
|
numerically, preferred to come under the authority of Connecticut and
|
||
|
to enjoy her less restrictive church policy and her broader political
|
||
|
life. Matters were finally adjusted, and delegates from the old New
|
||
|
Haven colony first took their seats as members of the General Court of
|
||
|
Connecticut at the spring session of 1665. Thereafter, in Connecticut
|
||
|
history, especially its religious history, the strain of liberalism
|
||
|
most often follows the old lines of the Connecticut colony, while that
|
||
|
of conservatism is more often met with as reflecting the opinions of
|
||
|
those within the former boundaries of that of New Haven.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was in the year following the union of the two colonies that the
|
||
|
quarrel in the Hartford church broke out afresh. The fall preceding
|
||
|
the consolidation of the colonies, an appeal was made to the
|
||
|
Connecticut General Court which helped to swell the dissatisfaction in
|
||
|
the Hartford church and to bring it to the bursting point. In
|
||
|
October, 1664, William Pitkin, by birth a member of the English
|
||
|
Established Church[af] and a man much esteemed in the colony, as
|
||
|
shown, politically, by his office of attorney,[39] and socially by his
|
||
|
marriage with Elder Goodwin's daughter, petitioned the General Court
|
||
|
in behalf of himself and six associates that it--
|
||
|
|
||
|
would take into serious consideration our present state in this
|
||
|
respect that wee are thus as sheep scattered haveing no shepheard,
|
||
|
and compare it with what wee conceive you can not but know both
|
||
|
God and our King would have it different from what it now is. And
|
||
|
take some speedy and effectual course of redress herein, And put
|
||
|
us in full and free capacity of injoying those forementioned
|
||
|
Advantages which to us as members of Christ's visible Church doe
|
||
|
of right belong. By establishing some wholesome Law in this
|
||
|
Corporation by vertue whereof wee may both clame and receive of
|
||
|
such officers as are, or shall be by Law set over us in the Church
|
||
|
or churches where wee have our abode or residence those
|
||
|
forementioned privileges and advantages.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Further wee humbly request that for the future no Law in this
|
||
|
corporation may be of any force to make us pay or contribute to
|
||
|
the maintenance of any Minister or officer in the Church that will
|
||
|
neglect or refuse to baptize our Children, and to take charge of
|
||
|
us as of such members of the Church as are under his or their
|
||
|
charge and care--
|
||
|
|
||
|
_Signed_--
|
||
|
Admitted freeman
|
||
|
Oct. 9th, 1662, Hartford, Wm. Pitkin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Admitted freeman
|
||
|
May 21, 1657, Windsor, Michael Humphrey.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Admitted freeman
|
||
|
May 18, 1654, Hartford, John Stedman.
|
||
|
Windsor, James Eno.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Admitted freeman
|
||
|
May 20, 1658, -- Robart Reeve.
|
||
|
Windsor, John Morse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Admitted freeman
|
||
|
May 20, 1658, Windsor, Jonas Westover. [40]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Eno and Humphrey had been complained of because their insistence upon
|
||
|
what they considered their rights had caused disturbance in the
|
||
|
Windsor church. Now, with the other petitioners, they based their
|
||
|
appeal in part upon the King's Letter to the Bay Colony of June 26th,
|
||
|
1662, wherein Charles commanded that "all persons of good and honest
|
||
|
lives and conversation be admitted to the sacrament of the Lord's
|
||
|
supper, according to the said book of common prayer, and their
|
||
|
children to baptism."
|
||
|
|
||
|
This petition of Pitkin and his associates was the first notable
|
||
|
expression of dissatisfaction with the Congregationalism of
|
||
|
Connecticut. Several Episcopal writers have quoted it as the first
|
||
|
appeal of Churchmen in Connecticut. In itself, it forbids such
|
||
|
construction. The petitioners had come from England and from the
|
||
|
church of the Commonwealth. They were asking either for toleration in
|
||
|
the spirit of the Half-Way Covenant or for some special legislation in
|
||
|
their behalf. Further, they were demanding religious care and baptism
|
||
|
for their children from a clergy who, from the point of view of any
|
||
|
strict Episcopalian, had no right to officiate; and, again, it was
|
||
|
nearly ten years before the first Church-of-England men found their
|
||
|
way to Stratford.[41]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Court made reply to Pitkin's petition by sending to all the
|
||
|
churches a request that they consider--
|
||
|
|
||
|
whither it be not their duty to entertaine all such persons, who
|
||
|
are of honest and godly conuersation, hauing a competency of
|
||
|
knowledge in the principles of religion, and shall desire to joyne
|
||
|
with them in church fellowship, by an explicitt couenant, and that
|
||
|
they haue their children baptized, and that all the children of
|
||
|
the church be accepted and acco'td reall members of the church and
|
||
|
that the church exercise a due Christian care and watch ouer them;
|
||
|
and that when they are grown up, being examined by the officer in
|
||
|
the presence of the church, it appeares in the judgment of
|
||
|
charity, they are duly qualified to participate in the great
|
||
|
ordinance of the Lord's Supper, by their being able to examine and
|
||
|
discerne the Lord's body, such persons be admitted to full
|
||
|
comunion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Court desires y't the seuerall officers of y'e respectiue
|
||
|
churches, would be pleased to consider whither it be the duty of
|
||
|
the Court to order churches to practice according to the premises,
|
||
|
if they doe not practice without such an order.[42]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The issue was now fairly before the churches of the colony. The
|
||
|
delegates of the people had expressed the opinion of the majority. The
|
||
|
Court had invited the expression of any dissent that might exist, yet,
|
||
|
despite the invitation, it had issued almost an order to the churches
|
||
|
to practice the Half-Way Covenant, and with large interpretation,
|
||
|
applying it, not only to the baptism of children who had been born of
|
||
|
parents baptized in the colonial church, but also to those whose
|
||
|
parents had been baptized in the English communion, at least during
|
||
|
the Commonwealth.[ag] Pitkin at once proceeded in behalf of himself
|
||
|
and several of his companions to apply for "communion with the church
|
||
|
of Hartford in all the ordinances of Christ." [43] This the church
|
||
|
refused, and wrought its factions up to white heat over the baptism of
|
||
|
some child or children of non-communicants. The storm broke. Other
|
||
|
churches felt its effects. Windsor church was rent by faction,
|
||
|
Stratford was in turmoil over the Half-Way Covenant, and other
|
||
|
churches were divided.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some means had to be found to put an end to the increasing
|
||
|
disorder. Accordingly the Court in October, 1666, commanded the
|
||
|
presence of all the preaching elders and ministers within the colony
|
||
|
at a synod to find "some way or means to bring those ecclesiastical
|
||
|
matters that are in difference in the severall Plantations to an
|
||
|
issue." The Court felt obliged to change the name of the appointed
|
||
|
meeting from "synod" to "assembly" to avoid the jealousy of the
|
||
|
churches. They were afraid that the civil power would overstep its
|
||
|
authority, and by calling a synod, composed of elders only, establish
|
||
|
a precedent for the exclusion of lay delegates from such bodies.
|
||
|
Before this "assembly" could meet, it was shorn of influence through
|
||
|
the politics of the conservative Hartford faction, who succeeded in
|
||
|
passing a bill at the session of the Commissioners of the United
|
||
|
Colonies, which read:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
That in matters of common concern of faith or order necessitating
|
||
|
a Synod, it should be a Synod composed of messengers from all the
|
||
|
colonies. [44]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Accordingly, Connecticut's next step was to invite Massachusetts to
|
||
|
join in a synod to debate seventeen questions of which several had
|
||
|
been submitted to the Synod of 1657, and had remained
|
||
|
unanswered. Among them were the questions of the right to vote in the
|
||
|
choice of minister; of minority rights; and where to appeal in cases
|
||
|
of censure believed to be unmerited.[ah]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Massachusetts courteously replied that the questions would be
|
||
|
considered if submitted in writing; but she was at heart so
|
||
|
indifferent that negotiations for a colonial synod lapsed, and
|
||
|
Connecticut was left to adjust the differences in her
|
||
|
churches. Consequently, in May, 1668, the Court,--
|
||
|
|
||
|
for promoting and establishing peace in the churches and
|
||
|
plantations because of various apprehensions in matters of
|
||
|
discipline respecting membership and baptism,--
|
||
|
|
||
|
appointed a committee of influential men in the colony to search out
|
||
|
the rules for discipline and see how far persons of "various
|
||
|
apprehensions" could walk together in church fellowship. This
|
||
|
committee reported at the October session, and the Court, after
|
||
|
accepting their decision, formally declared the Congregational church
|
||
|
established and its older customs approved, asserting that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whereas the Congregationall churches in these partes for the
|
||
|
generall of their profession and practice have hitherto been
|
||
|
approued, we can doe no less than still approue and countenance
|
||
|
the same to be without disturbance until a better light in an
|
||
|
orderly way doth appeare; but yet foreasmuch as sundry persons of
|
||
|
worth for prudence and piety amongst us are otherwise perswaded
|
||
|
(whose welfare and peaceable satisfaction we desire to
|
||
|
accommodate) This Court doth declare that all such persons being
|
||
|
also approued to lawe as orthodox and sound in the fundamentals of
|
||
|
Christian religion may haue allowance of their perswasion and
|
||
|
profession in church wayes or assemblies without disturbance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The liberal church party had won the privileges for which they had
|
||
|
contended, but the conservatives were not beaten, for it was upon
|
||
|
their conception of church government that the Court set its seal of
|
||
|
approval. The Court had been tolerant, and the churches must be also.
|
||
|
Upon such terms, the old order was to continue "until a better light
|
||
|
should appear." The tolerance toward changing conditions, thus
|
||
|
expressed, was further emphasized by the Court's command to the
|
||
|
churches to accept into full membership certain worthy people who
|
||
|
could not bring themselves to agree fully with all the old order had
|
||
|
demanded. The second part of the enactment just quoted was, strictly
|
||
|
speaking, Connecticut's first toleration act; yet it must be realized
|
||
|
that now, as later, the degree of toleration admitted no release from
|
||
|
the support of an unacceptable ministry or from fines for neglect of
|
||
|
its ministrations. Tolerance was here extended not to dissenters, but
|
||
|
only to varying shades of opinions within a common faith and fold.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the spirit of such legislation, the Court advised the Hartford
|
||
|
church to "walk apart." The advice was accepted, the church divided,
|
||
|
and the members who went out reorganized as the Second Church of
|
||
|
Hartford. Other discordant churches quickly followed this example. The
|
||
|
Second Church of Hartford immediately put forth a declaration,
|
||
|
asserting that its Congregationalism was that of the old original New
|
||
|
England type. The force of public opinion was so great, however, that
|
||
|
despite its declaration, the Second Church began at once to accept the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant. "The only result of their profession was to give a
|
||
|
momentary name to the struggle as between Congregationalist and
|
||
|
Presbyterian." [45] It was no effective opposition to the onward
|
||
|
development in Connecticut of the new order. When the churches found
|
||
|
that neither the old nor the new way was to be insisted upon, the
|
||
|
violence of faction ceased. The dual membership was accepted. For a
|
||
|
while, its line of cleavage away from the old system, with its local
|
||
|
church "as a covenanted brotherhood of souls renewed by the experience
|
||
|
of God's grace," was not realized, any more than that the new system
|
||
|
was merging the older type of church "into the parish where all
|
||
|
persons of good moral character, living within the parochial bounds,
|
||
|
were to have, as in England and Scotland, the privilege of baptism for
|
||
|
their households and of access to the Lord's table."[46] Another move
|
||
|
in this direction was taken when the splitting off of churches, and
|
||
|
the forming of more than one within the original parish bounds,
|
||
|
necessitated a further departure from the principles of
|
||
|
Congregationalism, and when the sequestration of lands for the benefit
|
||
|
of clergy became a feature of the new order.[47] In this formation of
|
||
|
new churches, the oldest parish was always the First Society.[ai]
|
||
|
Those formed later did not destroy it or affect its antecedent
|
||
|
agreements.[48] Only sixty-six years had passed (1603-1669) since the
|
||
|
publication of the "Points of Difference" between the Separatists, the
|
||
|
London-Amsterdam exiles, and the Church of England, wherein insistence
|
||
|
had been laid upon the principles of a covenanted church, of its
|
||
|
voluntary support, and of the unrighteousness of churches possessing
|
||
|
either lands or revenue. The pendulum had swung from the broad
|
||
|
democracy and large liberty of Brownism through Barrowism, past the
|
||
|
Cambridge Platform (almost the centre of its arc), and on through the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant to the beginning of a parish system. It had still
|
||
|
farther to swing before it reached the end of the arc, marked by the
|
||
|
Saybrook Platform, and before it began its slower return movement, to
|
||
|
rest at last in the Congregationalism of the past seventy years.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] Among the causes assigned for the removal of the Connecticut
|
||
|
colonists were the discontent at Watertown over the high-handed
|
||
|
silencing by the Boston authorities of Pastor Phillips and Teacher
|
||
|
Brown for daring to assert that the "churches of Rome were true
|
||
|
churches;" the early attempt of the authorities to impose a general
|
||
|
tax; the continued opposition to Ludlow; their desire to oppose the
|
||
|
Dutch seizure of the fertile valley of the Connecticut; their want of
|
||
|
space in the Bay Colony; and the "strong bent of their spirits to
|
||
|
remove thither," i.e. to Connecticut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] The _New England Way_ discarded the liturgy; refused to
|
||
|
accept the sacrament or join in prayer after such an "anti-Christian
|
||
|
form;" limited communion to church members approved by New England
|
||
|
standards, or coming with credentials from churches similarly
|
||
|
approved; limited the ministerial office, outside the pastor's own
|
||
|
church, to prayer and conference, denying all authority; and assumed
|
||
|
as the right of each church the power of elections, admissions,
|
||
|
dismissals, censures, and excommunications. The result, in that day of
|
||
|
intense championship of religious polity and custom, was to create
|
||
|
disturbance and discord among the English Independent churches. The
|
||
|
correspondence between the divines of New England and old England was
|
||
|
in part to avoid the "breaking up of churches."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] J. R. Green, _Short Hist. of the English People_,
|
||
|
534-538. The great popular signing of the Covenant in Scotland was in
|
||
|
1638.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] The original intention, in 1642, in regard to the composition of
|
||
|
the Westminster Assembly was to have noted divines from abroad. It was
|
||
|
proposed to invite Rev. John Cotton, Thomas Hooker, and John Davenport
|
||
|
from New England. Rev. Thomas Hooker thought the subject was not one
|
||
|
of sufficient ecclesiastical importance for so long and difficult a
|
||
|
journey, while the Rev. John Davenport could not be spared because of
|
||
|
the absence of other church officers from New Haven.--H. M. Dexter,
|
||
|
_Congr. as seen_, etc., p. 653.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Congregationalists or Independents in the sittings of the Assembly
|
||
|
pleaded for liberty of conscience to all sects, "provided that they
|
||
|
did not trouble the public peace." (Later, Congregationalists
|
||
|
differentiated themselves from the Independents by adding to the
|
||
|
principle of the independence of the local church the principle of the
|
||
|
local sisterhood of the churches.) In the Assembly, averaging sixty or
|
||
|
eighty members, Congregationalism was represented by but five
|
||
|
influential divines and a few of lesser importance. There were also
|
||
|
among the members some thirty laymen. The Assembly held eleven hundred
|
||
|
and sixty-three sittings, continuing for a period of five years and
|
||
|
six months. During these years the Civil War was fought; the King
|
||
|
executed; the Commonwealth established with its modified state-church,
|
||
|
Presbyterian in character. Intolerance was held in check by the power
|
||
|
of Cromwell and of the army, for the Independents had made early and
|
||
|
successful efforts to win the soldiery to their standard.--Philip
|
||
|
Schaff, _Creeds of Christendom_, 727-820.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] W. Walker, _Creeds and Platforms_, p. 136, note 2.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] The _New England Way_ defended its changes from English
|
||
|
custom under three heads: (1) That things, inexpedient but not utterly
|
||
|
unlawful in England, became under changed conditions sinful in New
|
||
|
England. (2) Things tolerated in England, because unremovable, were
|
||
|
shameful in the new land where they were removable. (3) Many things,
|
||
|
upon mature deliberation and tried by Scripture, were found to be
|
||
|
sinful. But: "We profess unfeignedly we separate from the
|
||
|
corruptions, which we conceive to be left in your Churches, and from
|
||
|
such Ordinances administered therein as we feare are not of God but of
|
||
|
men; and for yourselves, we are so farre from separating as visible
|
||
|
Christians as that you are under God in our hearts (if the Lord would
|
||
|
suffer it) to live and die together; and we look at sundrie of you as
|
||
|
men of that eminent growth in Christianitie, that if there be any
|
||
|
visible Christians under heaven, amongst you are the men, which for
|
||
|
these many years have been written in your forehead ('Holiness to the
|
||
|
Lord'): and this is not to the disparagement of ourselves or our
|
||
|
practice, for we believe that the Church moves on from age to age, its
|
||
|
defects giving way to increasing purity from reformation to
|
||
|
reformation."--J. Davenport, _The Epistle Returned, or the Answer to
|
||
|
the Letter of Many Ministers_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A number of treatises upon church government and usage were printed in
|
||
|
the memorable year 1643, several of which had previously circulated in
|
||
|
manuscript. In 1637 was received the _Letter of Many Ministers in
|
||
|
Old England, requesting the Judgment of their Reverend Brethren in New
|
||
|
England and concerning Nine Positions_. It was answered by John
|
||
|
Davenport in 1639. _A Reply and Answer_ was also a part of this
|
||
|
correspondence, which was first published in 1643, as was also Richard
|
||
|
Mather's _Church Government and Church Covenant Discussed_, the
|
||
|
latter being a reply to _Two and Thirty Questions_ sent from
|
||
|
England. By these, together with J. Cotton's _Keyes_ and other
|
||
|
writings, and by Thomas Hooker's great work _Survey of the Summe of
|
||
|
Church Discipline_ (approved by the Synod of 1643), every aspect of
|
||
|
church polity and usage was covered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Hingham church preferred the Presbyterian way. Concord was absent,
|
||
|
lacking a fit representative. Boston and Salem at first refused to
|
||
|
attend, questioning the General Court's right to summon a synod and
|
||
|
fearing lest such a summons should involve the obedience of all the
|
||
|
represented churches to the decisions of the conference. The
|
||
|
modification of the summons to the "desire" of the court, and the
|
||
|
entreaty of their leaders, finally overcame the opposition in these
|
||
|
churches. In fact, delegates to the Court, representing at least
|
||
|
thirty or forty churches, had hesitated to accept the original summons
|
||
|
of the Court when reported as a bill for calling the synod. Although
|
||
|
the Court "made no question of their lawful power by the word of God
|
||
|
to assemble the churches, or their messengers upon occasion of
|
||
|
counsell, or anything which may concern the practice of the churches,"
|
||
|
it decided to modify the phrasing of the order.--H. M. Dexter,
|
||
|
_Congr. as seen_, p. 436. _Magnalia_, ii,
|
||
|
209. _Mass. Col. Rec._ ii, 154-156, also iii, 70-73.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] "This Synod having perused with much gladness of heart the
|
||
|
confession of faith published by the late reverend assembly in
|
||
|
England, do judge it to be very holy, orthodox and judicious, in all
|
||
|
matters of faith, and do hereby freely and fully consent thereto for
|
||
|
the substance thereof. Only in those things which have respect to
|
||
|
church-government and discipline, we refer ourselves to the Platform
|
||
|
of Church-discipline, agreed upon by this present assembly."--Preface
|
||
|
to the Cambridge Platform, quoted in W. Walker, _Creeds and
|
||
|
Platforms_, p. 195.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] In many parts the wording of the Platform is almost identical with
|
||
|
passages from the foremost ecclesiastical treatises of the period,
|
||
|
and, naturally, since John Cotton, Richard Mather, and Ralph Partridge
|
||
|
were each requested to draft a "Scriptural Model of Church
|
||
|
Government." The Platform conformed most closely to that of Richard
|
||
|
Mather. The draft by Ralph Partridge of Plymouth still
|
||
|
exists. Obviously, the Separatist clergyman did not emphasize so
|
||
|
strongly the rule of the eldership which New England church life in
|
||
|
general had developed. Otherwise his plan did not differ essentially
|
||
|
from that of Mather.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] "Even now, after a lapse of more than two hundred years the
|
||
|
Platform (notwithstanding its errors here and there in the application
|
||
|
of proof texts, and its one great error in regard to the power of the
|
||
|
civil magistrate in matters of religion) is the most authentic
|
||
|
exposition of the Congregational church as given in the
|
||
|
scriptures."--Leonard Bacon, in _Contributions to the Ecclesiastical
|
||
|
History of Connecticut_, ed. of 1865, p. 15.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] Cambridge Platform, chap. ii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] _Ibid._ chap. ii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] Cambridge Platform, chap. iii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] The definition of the rule of the elders, given by the Rev. Samuel
|
||
|
Stone of Hartford, was "A speaking aristocracy in the face of a silent
|
||
|
democracy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[o] Cambridge Platform, chaps, iv-x.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[p] "We do believe that Christ hath ordained that there should be a
|
||
|
Presbytery or Eldership and that in every Church, whose work is to
|
||
|
teach and rule the Church by the Word and laws of Christ and unto whom
|
||
|
so teaching and ruling, all the people ought to be obedient and submit
|
||
|
themselves. And therefore a Government merely Popular or
|
||
|
Democratieal... is far from the practice of these Churches and we
|
||
|
believe far from the mind of Christ." However, the brethren should not
|
||
|
be wholly excluded from its government or its liberty to choose its
|
||
|
officers, admit members and censure offenders.--R. Mather, _Church
|
||
|
Government and Church Covenant Discussed,_ pp. 47-50.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Gospel alloweth no Church authority or rule (properly so called)
|
||
|
to the Brethren but reserveth that wholly to the Elders; and yet
|
||
|
preventeth tyrannee, and oligarchy, and exorbitancy of the Elders by
|
||
|
the large and firm establishment of the liberties of the
|
||
|
Brethren."--J. Cotton, _The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven,_
|
||
|
p. 12.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In regard to Christ, the head, the government of the Church, is
|
||
|
sovereign and Monarchicall: In regard to the rule of the Presbytery,
|
||
|
it is stewardly and Aristocraticall: In regard to the people's power
|
||
|
in elections and censures, it is Democraticall."--_The Keys,_
|
||
|
p. 36; see also _Church-Government and Church Covenant,_
|
||
|
pp. 51-58.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[q] Cambridge Platform, chap, x.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[r] _Ibid._ chap. xiv.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[s] Cambridge Platform, chap. ix.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[t] _Ibid_. chap. ix.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[u] _Ibid_. chap. xi.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[v] _Ibid_. chap. xv.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[w] Cambridge Platform, chap. xvi.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[x] Cambridge Platform, chap. xvii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
According to Hooker's _Survey_ the magistrates had the right to
|
||
|
summon synods because they have the right to command the faculties of
|
||
|
their subjects to deliberate concerning the good of the
|
||
|
State.--_Survey_, pt. iv, p. 54 _et seq_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[y] "However the controversy of the Connecticut River churches was
|
||
|
embittered by political interests, it was essentially nothing else
|
||
|
than the fermentation of that leaven of Presbyterianism which came
|
||
|
over with the later Puritan emigration, and which the Cambridge
|
||
|
Platform, with all its explicitness in asserting the rules given by
|
||
|
the Scriptures, had not effectually purged."--L. Bacon, in
|
||
|
_Contrib. to Eccl. Hist. of Conn_., p. 17.
|
||
|
|
||
|
See also H. M. Dexter, _Congr. as seen in Lit_., pp. 468-69.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of the twenty-one contemporaneous documents, by various authors, none
|
||
|
mention baptism as in any way an issue in debate. "Dr. Trumbull
|
||
|
probably touches the real root of the affair when he speaks of the
|
||
|
controversy as one concerning the 'rights of the brotherhood,' and the
|
||
|
conviction, entertained by Mr. Goodwin, that these rights had been
|
||
|
disregarded." The question of baptism ran parallel with the question
|
||
|
under debate, incidentally mixed itself with and outlived it to be the
|
||
|
cause of a later quarrel that should split the church.--G. L. Walker,
|
||
|
_First Church in Hartford_, p. 154.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[z] Mr. Stone admitted: "(1) I acknowledge yt it is a liberty of ye
|
||
|
church to declare their apprehensions by vote about ye fitness of a
|
||
|
p'son for office upon his tryall.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(2) "I look at it as a received truth yt an officer may in some cases
|
||
|
lawfully hinder ye church from putting forth at this or yt time an act
|
||
|
of her liberty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(3) "I acknowledge ye I hindered ye church fro declaring their
|
||
|
apprehensions by vote (upon ye day in question) concerning
|
||
|
Mr. Wigglesworth's fitness for office in ye church of
|
||
|
Hartford."--_Conn. Historical Society Papers_, ii. 51-125.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[aa] In the New Haven letter, she wrote, "We hear the petitioners, or
|
||
|
others closing with them, are very confident they shall obtain great
|
||
|
alterations both in civil government and church discipline, and that
|
||
|
some of them have procured and hired one as their agent, to maintain
|
||
|
in writing (as it is conceived) that parishes in England, consenting
|
||
|
to and continuing their meetings to worship God, are true churches,
|
||
|
and such persons coming over thither, (without holding forth any work
|
||
|
of faith) have all right to church privileges."--_New Haven
|
||
|
Col. Records_, iii, 186.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ab] That is, they assent to the main truths of the Gospel and promise
|
||
|
obedience to the church they desire to join.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ac] Among Massachusetts clergymen, Thomas Allen of Charlestown, 1642,
|
||
|
Thomas Shepherd, Cambridge, 1649, John Norton, Ipswich, 1653, held
|
||
|
that the baptismal privileges should be widened, and John Cotton
|
||
|
himself was slowly drifting toward this opinion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Windsor church was the first in Connecticut to practice the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant, January 31, 1657-58, to March 19, 1664-65, when the
|
||
|
pastor, having doubts as to its validity, discontinued the practice
|
||
|
until 1668, when it was again resumed.--Stiles, _Ancient
|
||
|
Windsor_, p. 172.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ad] Stone held his party on the ground that over a matter of internal
|
||
|
discipline a synod had no control, and that he could exercise
|
||
|
Congregational discipline upon any seceders. The immediate result was
|
||
|
the removal of the discontented to Boston or to Hadley; where,
|
||
|
however, they could not be admitted to another church until Stone had
|
||
|
released them from his. This he refused to do. Thus, he showed the
|
||
|
power of a minister, when backed by a majority, to inflict virtual
|
||
|
excommunication. This could be done even though his authority was open
|
||
|
to question.--J. A. Doyle, _Puritan Colonies_, ii, p. 77.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ae] Meanwhile the Massachusetts Synod (purely local) of 1662 stood
|
||
|
seven to one in favor of the Half-Way Covenant practice, and had
|
||
|
reaffirmed the fellowship of the churches according to the synodical
|
||
|
terms of the Cambridge Platform, as against a more authoritative
|
||
|
system of consociation, proposed by Thomas Shepherd of Cambridge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[af] It must be remembered that the "Church of England meant the
|
||
|
aggregate of English Christians, whether in the upshot of the
|
||
|
movements which were going on (1630-1660), their polity should turn
|
||
|
out to be Episcopal or Presbyterian, or something different from
|
||
|
either."--Palfrey, _Comprehensive Hist. of New England_, i,
|
||
|
p. 111. J. R. Green, _Short Hist. of the Eng. People_, p. 544.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In England, Pitkin had been a member of the church of the
|
||
|
Commonwealth, and in all probability was not an Episcopalian or
|
||
|
Church-of-England man in the usual sense.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ag] Such an order could only produce further disturbance. Stratford
|
||
|
and Norwalk protested. As a rule the order was most unwelcome in the
|
||
|
recently acquired New Haven colony. Mr. Pierson of Branford, with
|
||
|
some of the conservative church people of Guilford and New Haven, went
|
||
|
to New Jersey to escape its consequences.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ah] Among the questions, still unanswered, which had been submitted
|
||
|
in 1657 were: (9) "Whether it doth belong to the body of a town,
|
||
|
collectively taken, jointly, to call him to be their minister whom the
|
||
|
church shall choose to be their officer." (13) "Whether the church,
|
||
|
her invitation and election of an officer, or preaching elder,
|
||
|
necessitates the whole congregation to sit down satisfied, as bound to
|
||
|
accept him as their minister though invited and settled without the
|
||
|
town's consent." (ll) "Unto whom shall such persons repair who are
|
||
|
grieved by any church process or censure, or whether they must
|
||
|
acquiesce in the churches under which they belong."--Trumbull,
|
||
|
_Hist. of Conn. i_, 302-3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ai] In New England Congregationalism, the church and the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical society were separate and distinct bodies. The church
|
||
|
kept the records of births, deaths, marriage, baptism, and membership,
|
||
|
and, outside these, confined itself to spiritual matters; the society
|
||
|
dealt with all temporal affairs such as the care and control of all
|
||
|
church property, the payment of ministers' salaries, and also their
|
||
|
calling, settlement, and dismissal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
|
||
|
A PERIOD OF TRANSITION
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alas for piety, alas for the ancient faith!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though Massachusetts had been indifferent and had left Connecticut to
|
||
|
work out, unaided, her religious problem, the two colonies were by no
|
||
|
means unfriendly, and in each there was a large conservative party
|
||
|
mutually sympathetic in their church interests. The drift of the
|
||
|
liberal party in each colony was apart. The homogeneity of the
|
||
|
Connecticut people put off for a long while the embroilments, civil
|
||
|
and religious, to which Massachusetts was frequently exposed through
|
||
|
her attempts to restrain, restrict, and force into an inflexible mould
|
||
|
her population, which was steadily becoming more numerous and
|
||
|
cosmopolite. The English government received frequent complaints about
|
||
|
the Bay Colony, and, as a result, Connecticut, by contrast of her
|
||
|
"dutiful conduct" with that of "unruly Massachusetts," gained greater
|
||
|
freedom to pursue her own domestic policy with its affairs of Church
|
||
|
and State. Many of its details were unknown, or ignored, by the
|
||
|
English government. The period when the four colonies had been united
|
||
|
upon all measures of common welfare, whether temporal or spiritual,
|
||
|
had passed. There were now three colonies. One of these, much weaker
|
||
|
than the others, was destined within comparatively few years to be
|
||
|
absorbed by Massachusetts as New Haven had been by
|
||
|
Connecticut. Meanwhile, Massachusetts and Connecticut were developing
|
||
|
along characteristic lines and had each its individual problems to
|
||
|
pursue. While in ecclesiastical affairs the conservative factions in
|
||
|
the two colonies had much in common and continued to have for a long
|
||
|
time, the Reforming Synod of 1679-80, held in Boston, was the last in
|
||
|
which all the New England churches had any vital interest, because a
|
||
|
period of transition was setting in. This period of transition was
|
||
|
marked by an expansion of settlements with its accompanying spirit of
|
||
|
land-grabbing, and by a lowering of tone in the community, as material
|
||
|
interests superseded the spiritual ones of the earlier generations,
|
||
|
and as the Indian and colonial wars spread abroad a spirit of
|
||
|
license. In the religious life of the colonists, this transition made
|
||
|
itself felt not alone in the character of its devotees, but in the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical system itself, as it changed from the polity and
|
||
|
practice embodied in the Cambridge Platform to that of a later day,
|
||
|
and to the almost Presbyterian government expressed in the Saybrook
|
||
|
Platform of 1708. The transition in Massachusetts, in both secular
|
||
|
and religious development, varied greatly from that in
|
||
|
Connecticut. Hence, from the time of the Keforming Synod, the history
|
||
|
of Connecticut is almost entirely the story of its own career,
|
||
|
touching only at points the historical development of the other New
|
||
|
England colonies. On the religious side, it is the story of the
|
||
|
evolution of Connecticut's peculiar Congregationalism. The Reforming
|
||
|
Synod of 1679-80 had been called by the Massachusetts General Court
|
||
|
because, in the words of that old historian, Thomas Prince:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
A little after 1660, there began to appear Decay, And this
|
||
|
increased to 1670, when it grew very visible and threatening, and
|
||
|
was generally complained of and bewailed bitterly by the pious
|
||
|
among them (the colonists): and yet more to 1680, when but few of
|
||
|
the first Generation remained. [49]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The reasons of this falling away from the standards of the first
|
||
|
generation were many. In the first place, the colonists had become
|
||
|
mere colonials. Upon the Stuart restoration, the strongest ties which
|
||
|
bound them to the pulsing life of the mother country, the religious
|
||
|
ones, were severed. The colonists ceased to be the vanguard of a great
|
||
|
religious movement, the possible haven of a new political
|
||
|
state. Though they received many refugees from Stuart conformity, the
|
||
|
religious ties which bound them to the English nonconformists were
|
||
|
weakened, and still more so when both the once powerful wings of the
|
||
|
Puritan party, Presbyterian and Independent, were alike in danger of
|
||
|
extinction. Shortly after the Revolution of 1688, when, under the
|
||
|
larger tolerance of William and Mary, the Presbyterians and
|
||
|
Independents strove to increase their strength by a union based upon
|
||
|
the "Heads of Agreement," English and colonial nonconformity moved for
|
||
|
a brief time nearer, and then still farther apart. The "Heads of
|
||
|
Agreement"[a] was a compromise so framed as to admit of acceptance by
|
||
|
the Presbyterian who recognized that he must, once for all, give up
|
||
|
his hope of a national church, and by the Independent anxiously
|
||
|
seeking some bond of authority to hold together his weak and scattered
|
||
|
churches. After this compromise, the religious life of the colonies
|
||
|
ceased to be of vital importance to any large section of the English
|
||
|
people. After the Restoration the colonial agents became preeminently
|
||
|
interested in secular affairs, in political privileges, and commercial
|
||
|
advantages. The reaction was felt in the colonies by generations who
|
||
|
lacked the heroic impulses of their fathers, their constant incentive,
|
||
|
and their high standards. Moreover, the education of the second and
|
||
|
third generation could not be like that of the first. The percentage
|
||
|
of university men was less. New Harvard could not supply the place of
|
||
|
old Cambridge. If life was easier, it was more material.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Against such conditions as these, the Reforming Synod made little
|
||
|
headway.[b] It set forth in thirteen questions the offenses of the day
|
||
|
and in the answer to each suggested remedies. To these questions and
|
||
|
answers the synod added a confession of faith. This last was a
|
||
|
reaffirmation of the Westminster Confession of Faith as amended and
|
||
|
approved by Parliament, or that found in the Savoy Declaration.[c] In
|
||
|
respect to church government, the Reforming Synod confirmed the
|
||
|
"substance of the Platform of Discipline agreed upon by the messengers
|
||
|
of these Churches at Cambridge, Anno Domini, 1648," [50] desiring the
|
||
|
churches to "continue steadfast in the _Order of the Gospel_
|
||
|
according to what is therein declared from the Word of God." Cotton
|
||
|
Mather in the "Magnalia," [5l] writing twenty years later, gives four
|
||
|
points of departure from the Cambridge polity by the Reforming
|
||
|
Synod. First, occasional officiations of ministers outside their own
|
||
|
churches were authorized; secondly, there was a movement to revive the
|
||
|
authority and office of ruling elder and other officers; thirdly,
|
||
|
"plebeian ordination," or lay ordination, ordination by the hands of
|
||
|
the brethren of the church in the absence of superior officers, was no
|
||
|
longer allowed;[d] and fourthly, there was a variation from the
|
||
|
"personal and public confession" in favor of a private examination by
|
||
|
the pastor of candidates for church-membership, though the earlier
|
||
|
custom was still regarded as "lawful, expedient and useful." With
|
||
|
reference to the office of ruling elder, it had been done away with in
|
||
|
many churches, partly because of lack of suitable men to fill the
|
||
|
office, partly because of the mistakes of incompetents, and partly
|
||
|
because of a growing doubt as to the Scriptural sanction for such an
|
||
|
office. In many churches the office of teacher had also been
|
||
|
abolished, the pastor inheriting all the authority formerly lodged in
|
||
|
the eldership, and as he retained his power of veto, it came about
|
||
|
that the churches were largely in the power of one man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Plymouth and Connecticut colonies strongly approved the work of this
|
||
|
local Massachusetts synod. As a result of the interest excited by its
|
||
|
suggestions to increase church discipline, for laws to encourage
|
||
|
morality and Christian instruction, and for renewed zeal on the part
|
||
|
of individuals in godly living, a goodly number of converts were
|
||
|
immediately added to the churches throughout all the colonies. Of
|
||
|
these, the larger number were admitted on the Half-Way Covenant. But
|
||
|
times had changed, and the churches could not keep pace. The attempts
|
||
|
to enforce religion were fruitless,[e] and only go to show that
|
||
|
political interests, that wars,[f] with their accompanying excitement
|
||
|
and license, and that engrossing civil affairs had torn men's minds
|
||
|
from the old interests in religious controversies and in religious
|
||
|
customs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Church itself had deteriorated as the towns in their civil
|
||
|
capacity had undertaken the support of the minister and to collect his
|
||
|
rates. Even earlier began, also, the gradual change by which the
|
||
|
election of the minister passed from the small group of church
|
||
|
communicants, or full membership, to the larger body of the Society,
|
||
|
and finally to the town. This change was partly brought about through
|
||
|
the increasing acceptance of the Half-Way Covenant with its attendant
|
||
|
results. In some localities, "owning the Covenant" and presenting
|
||
|
one's children for baptism came to be considered not as a necessary
|
||
|
fulfilling of inherited duties (because of inherited baptismal
|
||
|
privileges) and the consequent recognition of moral obligations, but
|
||
|
as meritorious acts, having of themselves power to benefit the
|
||
|
participants. Further, the rite of baptism, confined at first to
|
||
|
children one at least of whose parents had been baptized, was later
|
||
|
permitted to any for whom a satisfactory person--any one not
|
||
|
flagrantly immoral--could be found to promise that the child should
|
||
|
have religious training. Still another factor in the lowering of
|
||
|
religious life was Stoddardeanism, or the teaching of the Rev. Solomon
|
||
|
Stoddard of Northampton, Massachusetts, a most powerful preacher and
|
||
|
for many years the most influential minister throughout the
|
||
|
Connecticut valley. As early as 1679, he began to teach that baptized
|
||
|
persons, who had owned the covenant, should be admitted to the Lord's
|
||
|
Supper, so that the rite itself might exercise in them a regenerating
|
||
|
grace. In its origin, this teaching was probably intended as a protest
|
||
|
against a morbid, introspective, and weakening self-examination on the
|
||
|
part of many who doubted their fitness to go to communion. But as a
|
||
|
result of the interworking of this teaching and of the practice of the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant, church membership came in time to include almost
|
||
|
any one not openly vicious, and willing to give intellectual, or
|
||
|
nominal, assent to church doctrines and also to a few church
|
||
|
regulations. With the change, the large body of townsmen became the
|
||
|
electors of the minister. Cotton Mather in the "Ratio Disciplina" [52]
|
||
|
illustrates these changing conditions when he tells us that the
|
||
|
communicants felt that the right to elect the minister was invested in
|
||
|
them as the real church of Christ, and that, in order to avoid strife
|
||
|
or the defeat of their candidate by the majority of the town, they
|
||
|
would customarily propose a choice between two nominees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Carelessness of the churches in admitting members had had its
|
||
|
counterpart in the carelessness of the towns in admitting
|
||
|
inhabitants. Very early, as early as 1658, the Connecticut General
|
||
|
Court had been obliged to call them to order. The March session of
|
||
|
1658-59 had limited the franchise to all inhabitants of twenty-one
|
||
|
years of age or over who were householders (that is, married men), and
|
||
|
who had thirty pounds estate, or who had borne office. This was
|
||
|
shortly changed to "thirty pounds of proper _personal_ estate,"
|
||
|
or who had borne office. The ratable estate in the colony averaged
|
||
|
sixty pounds per inhabitant at this time. Up to March, 1658-59, the
|
||
|
towns had admitted inhabitants by a majority vote. These admitted
|
||
|
inhabitants, armed with a certificate of good character from their
|
||
|
town, presented themselves before the General Court as candidates for
|
||
|
the freeman's franchise, and were admitted or not as the Court saw
|
||
|
fit. Disfranchisement was the penalty for any scandalous behavior on
|
||
|
the part of the successful candidate. One reason for the new and
|
||
|
restrictive legislation was that from 1657 to 1660, from some cause
|
||
|
unknown, large numbers of undesirable colonists flocked into the
|
||
|
Connecticut towns, and thus it happened that, as the Church broadened
|
||
|
her idea of membership, the State had need to limit its conception of
|
||
|
democracy. Consequently, it narrowed the franchise by adding to the
|
||
|
original requirements a large property qualification, and continued to
|
||
|
demand the certificates of good character. Moreover, the candidates
|
||
|
were further required to present their credentials in October, and
|
||
|
they were not to be passed upon until the next session of the Court in
|
||
|
the following April. This two-fold change in the religious and
|
||
|
political life of the colony gave greater flexibility and greater
|
||
|
security, for "with church and state practically intertwined, the
|
||
|
theory of the one had been too narrow and of the other too broad."
|
||
|
[53] After the change in the franchise, records of the towns show that
|
||
|
there was less disorder in admitting inhabitants and more care taken
|
||
|
as to their personal character.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the townsmen became the electors of the minister, and when the new
|
||
|
latitude in membership had been accepted by the churches, there soon
|
||
|
appeared a growing slackness of discipline and also an increase of
|
||
|
authority in the hands of the ministers and their subordinate
|
||
|
deaconry. This excess of authority in the hands of one man tended to
|
||
|
one-man rule and to frequent friction between the minister and his
|
||
|
people. As a result councils might be called against councils in the
|
||
|
attempt to settle questions or disputes between pastors and
|
||
|
people. Consequently, among conservatives, there came to be the
|
||
|
feeling that there ought to be some authoritative body to supervise
|
||
|
the churches,--one to which both pastor and people could appeal
|
||
|
disputed points.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In Massachusetts, the Connecticut colonists saw a strenuous attempt to
|
||
|
establish such an authority. Between 1690 and 1705, the Massachusetts
|
||
|
clergy had revived the early custom of fortnightly meetings of
|
||
|
neighboring ministers. The new associations were purely voluntary
|
||
|
ones for mutual assistance, for debate upon matters of common
|
||
|
interest, or for consultation over special difficulties, whether
|
||
|
pertaining to churches or to their individual members, which might be
|
||
|
brought before them. These associations grew in favor, and later
|
||
|
became a permanent feature of New England Congregationalism. Because
|
||
|
they were received with so much, favor at the time of their revival,
|
||
|
the conservative Massachusetts clergy attempted in the "Proposals of
|
||
|
1705" to increase the ministerial and synodical power within the
|
||
|
churches, and to bring about a reformation in manners and morals by
|
||
|
giving to these associations very large and authoritative powers. The
|
||
|
Proposals provided that all ministers should be joined in Associations
|
||
|
for mutual help and advice; for licensing candidates for the ministry;
|
||
|
for providing for pastorless churches; for a general oversight of
|
||
|
religion, and for the examination of charges brought against their own
|
||
|
members. Standing Councils, composed of delegates from the
|
||
|
Associations and also of a proper number of delegates (apparently
|
||
|
laymen) to represent the membership of the churches, were to be
|
||
|
established. These were to control all church matters throughout the
|
||
|
colony that were "proper for the consideration of an ecclesiastical
|
||
|
council," and obedience to their judgments was to be enforced under
|
||
|
penalty of forfeiture of church-fellowship. The Proposals were
|
||
|
approved by the majority of the Massachusetts clergy; but the liberal
|
||
|
party within the churches would not accede to their demands, and the
|
||
|
General Court would not sanction the Proposals in the face of such
|
||
|
opposition. Consequently, the essential feature of the Proposals, the
|
||
|
Standing Councils, was never adopted. But the attempt to establish
|
||
|
them invigorated the Associations, and the licensing of candidates was
|
||
|
arranged for.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many people in Connecticut approved the tenor of the Proposals and
|
||
|
desired a similar system. Moreover, there never was a time when the
|
||
|
General Court was so ready to delegate to an ecclesiastical body the
|
||
|
control of the churches. The trustees of the young college, Yale, the
|
||
|
most representative gathering of clergymen in the colony, were anxious
|
||
|
to have the Court establish some system of ecclesiastical government
|
||
|
stronger than that existing among the churches, and to have it send
|
||
|
out some approved confession of faith and discipline. Consequently,
|
||
|
when, in 1708, Guerdon Saltonstall,[g] the popular ex-minister of New
|
||
|
London, was raised to the governor's chair, the time seemed ripe for a
|
||
|
move to satisfy the widespread demand. In response to it, the May
|
||
|
session of the General Court--
|
||
|
|
||
|
from their own observation and the complaints of many others,
|
||
|
being made sensible of the defects of the discipline of the
|
||
|
churches of this government, arising from want of a more explicit
|
||
|
asserting of the rules given for that in the holy scriptures [saw
|
||
|
fit] to order and require the ministers of the several churches in
|
||
|
the several counties of this government to meet together at their
|
||
|
respective countie towns, _with such messengers as the churches
|
||
|
to which they belong_ shall see cause to send with them on the
|
||
|
last day of June next, there to consider and agree upon those
|
||
|
methods and rules for the management of ecclesiastical discipline
|
||
|
which shall be judged agreable and conformable to the word of God,
|
||
|
and shall at the same meeting appoint two or more of their number
|
||
|
to meet together at Saybrook... where they shall compare the
|
||
|
results of the ministers of the several counties, and out of which
|
||
|
and from them to draw a form of ecclesiastical discipline, which
|
||
|
by two or more persons delegated by them shall be offered this
|
||
|
Court ... and be confirmed by them. [54]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The bill was passed by the Upper House of the legislature and sent to
|
||
|
a conference from the Lower, May 22, 1708. It became a law May 22. In
|
||
|
the interim the words in italics were inserted in order to eliminate
|
||
|
any possible loss of liberty to the churches and to protect them from
|
||
|
a system of government, planned by ministers only, and enforced by the
|
||
|
General Court. [55]
|
||
|
|
||
|
No records of the preliminary meeting have come down to us, but the
|
||
|
Preface of the Saybrook Platform reports such a meeting and that their
|
||
|
delegates met at Saybrook, September 9, 1708. At this second
|
||
|
convention, twelve ministers, of whom eight were trustees of Yale, and
|
||
|
four messengers were present. Their work, known as the Saybrook
|
||
|
Platform, declares in its Preface that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
we agree that the confession of faith owned & consented unto by
|
||
|
the Elders and messengers of the Chhs assembled at Boston in New
|
||
|
England, May 12, 1680 being the Second Session of that Synod be
|
||
|
Recommended to the Honbl. the Gen. Assembly of this Colony at the
|
||
|
next Session for their Publick testimony thereto as the faith of
|
||
|
the Chhs of this Colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We agree also that the Heads of Agreement assented to by the
|
||
|
vnited Ministers formerly Called Presbyterian & Congregationall be
|
||
|
observed by the Chhs throout this Colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The work of the synod, including also a series of authoritative
|
||
|
"Articles," was laid before the October session of the Court and
|
||
|
received its approval, the Court declaring its "great approbation of
|
||
|
such a happy agreement" and ordaining "that all churches within this
|
||
|
government that are or shall be thus united in doctrine, worship and
|
||
|
discipline, be and for the future shall be owned and acknowledged
|
||
|
established by law." [58]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The period of transition was over. Connecticut had passed from the
|
||
|
individual consecration and democratic organization of the Cambridge
|
||
|
Platform to the comprehensive membership of a parish system and to the
|
||
|
authoritative councils, or ecclesiastical courts, provided for by the
|
||
|
Saybrook Articles. A consideration of them as the main points of the
|
||
|
Platform is next in order.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] The "Heads of Agreement" was destined to have more influence in
|
||
|
America than in England.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] The order of the Massachusetts Court was "for the revisall of the
|
||
|
discipline agreed upon by the churches, 1647, and what else may
|
||
|
appeare necessary for the preventing schism, haeresies, prophaneness,
|
||
|
and the establishment of the churches in one faith and order of the
|
||
|
gospell." There was no questioning of the Court's right to
|
||
|
_summon_ this synod, as there had been in 1646-48.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] The Savoy Declaration of October, 1658, was put forth by the
|
||
|
English leaders of the Independent, or Congregational, churches as a
|
||
|
confession of faith, and in its thirty articles contained a
|
||
|
declaration of church order. The formulated principles of church order
|
||
|
were suggested by the Cambridge Platform but were neither so clear nor
|
||
|
so fully stated as in the New England document. The Westminster
|
||
|
Confession, the Savoy Declaration, and the later Heads of Agreement,
|
||
|
were destined to have more influence in New England than in England,
|
||
|
where the effect was transient. The Reforming Synod preferred the
|
||
|
Savoy Declaration to the Westminster Confession because the terms of
|
||
|
the former were more strictly Congregational, and also because they
|
||
|
wished to hold a confession in common with their trans-Atlantic
|
||
|
brethren. The Massachusetts synod changed here and there a word in
|
||
|
order to emphasize the church-membership of children as a right
|
||
|
derived through the Half-Way Covenant, and also to state explicitly
|
||
|
the right of the civil authority to interfere in questions of
|
||
|
doctrine.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] In 1660 the lay ordination of the Rev. Thomas Buckingham of
|
||
|
Saybrook, Conn., was strongly opposed by a council of churches, but it
|
||
|
was reluctantly yielded to the insistent church.--J. B. Felt,
|
||
|
_Eccl. History_, ii, 207.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] "Whereas this Court [the General Court of Connecticut] in the
|
||
|
calamitous times of '75 and '76 were moved to make some laws for the
|
||
|
suppression of some provoaking evils which were feared to be growing
|
||
|
up amongst us: viz.--prophanation of the Sabbath; neglect of
|
||
|
catechizing children and servants and famaly prayer; young persons
|
||
|
shaking off the government of parents or masters; boarders and inmates
|
||
|
neglecting the worship of God in famalyes where they reside; tipling &
|
||
|
drinkeing; uncleanness; oppression in workmen and traders; which laws
|
||
|
have little prevailed. It is therefore ordered by this Court that the
|
||
|
selectmen constables and grand-jury men in their several plantations
|
||
|
shall have a special care in their respective places to promote the
|
||
|
due and full attendance of these aforementioned orders of this Court."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] King Philip's War, 1675-76; the usurpation of Andros; King
|
||
|
William's War, 1689-97, with its expedition against Quebec; Queen
|
||
|
Anne's War, 1702-13.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Governor Saltonstall "was more inclined to synods and formularies
|
||
|
than any other minister of that day in the New England colonies." His
|
||
|
influence over the clergy was almost absolute. "The Saybrook Platform
|
||
|
was stamped with his seal and was for the most part an embodiment of
|
||
|
his views."--Hollister, _Hist. of Conn._ vol. ii, p. 585.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Government within a Government.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Saybrook Platform subdivides into a Confession of Faith, the Heads
|
||
|
of Agreement, and the Fifteen Articles.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Confession of Faith is merely a recommendation of the Savoy
|
||
|
Confession as reaffirmed by the Synod of Boston or the Reforming Synod
|
||
|
of 1680.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Heads of Agreement are but a repetition of the articles that,
|
||
|
under the same title, were passed in London, in 1691, by fourteen
|
||
|
delegates from the Presbyterian and English Congregational
|
||
|
churches. Both parties to the Agreement had hoped thereby to establish
|
||
|
more firmly their churches and to give them the strength and dignity
|
||
|
of a strongly united body. The Heads of Agreement were drafted by
|
||
|
three men, Increase Mather, the Massachusetts colonial agent to
|
||
|
England, Matthew Mead, a Congregationalist, and John Hone, a
|
||
|
Presbyterian, who in his earlier years and by training was a
|
||
|
Congregationalist. Naturally, between the influence of the framers
|
||
|
and the necessity for including the two religious bodies, this
|
||
|
platform inclined towards Congregationalism, but equal necessity led
|
||
|
it away from the freedom of the Cambridge Platform, after which it was
|
||
|
patterned.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the Heads of Agreement, the composition of the church is defined
|
||
|
according to Congregational standards, as is also the election of its
|
||
|
officers. The definition of the powers of the church is not strictly
|
||
|
Congregational, because initiative action and governing powers are
|
||
|
intrusted to the eldership, while, to the brethren, there is given
|
||
|
only the privilege of assenting to such measures as the elders may
|
||
|
place before them. The membership in the church, as defined, is
|
||
|
semi-Congregational; i. e., in order to become members, persons must
|
||
|
be "grounded in the Fundamental Doctrines of religion" and lead moral
|
||
|
lives, but they are eligible to communion only after the declaration
|
||
|
of their desire "to walk together according to Gospel Rule."
|
||
|
Concerning this declaration the statement is made that "different
|
||
|
degrees of _Expliciteness_ shall in no way hinder such Churches
|
||
|
from owning each other as _Instituted Churches_." Furthermore,
|
||
|
no one should be pressed to declare the time and manner of his
|
||
|
conversion as proof of his fitness to be received as a communicant.
|
||
|
Such an account would, however, be welcome. With reference to
|
||
|
parochial bounds, introduced into the primitive Congregationalism of
|
||
|
New England, but always existing in the English Presbyterian system,
|
||
|
the Heads of Agreement declare them to be "not of Divine Right" but--
|
||
|
|
||
|
for common Edification that church members should live near one
|
||
|
another, nor ought they to forsake their church for another
|
||
|
without its consent and recommendation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In respect to the ministry, the Heads of Agreement affirm that it
|
||
|
should be learned and competent and approved; that ordinarily, pastors
|
||
|
should be considered as ministers only while they continue in office
|
||
|
over the church that elected them to its ministry; that ordinarily, in
|
||
|
their choosing and calling, advice should be sought from neighboring
|
||
|
churches, and that they should be ordained with the aid of neighboring
|
||
|
pastors. In the matter of installation into a new office of an elder,
|
||
|
previously ordained, churches are to exercise the right of individual
|
||
|
judgment and of preference as to reordination. This same right of
|
||
|
preference is to be exercised in deciding whether or not a church
|
||
|
should support a ruling elder. The Heads of Agreement assert that in
|
||
|
the intercommunion of churches there is to be no subordination among
|
||
|
them, and that there ought to be frequent friendly consultations
|
||
|
between their "_Officers_." There are to be "Occasional Meetings
|
||
|
of Ministers" of several churches to consult and advise upon "weighty
|
||
|
and difficult cases," and to whose judgments, "particular Churches,
|
||
|
their respective _Elders_ and _Members_, ought to have a
|
||
|
reverential regard, and not dissent therefrom, without _apparent_
|
||
|
grounds from the word of God." The Heads of Agreement command churches
|
||
|
to yield obedience and support to the civil authority and to be ready
|
||
|
at all times to give the magistrates an account of their affairs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Heads of Agreement were the most liberal part of the Saybrook
|
||
|
Platform, and were not considered sufficiently
|
||
|
authoritative. Accordingly,--
|
||
|
|
||
|
for the Better Regulation of the Administration of Chh Discipline
|
||
|
in Relation to all Cases Ecclesiastical both in Particular Chhs
|
||
|
and In Councils to the full Determining and Executing of the Rules
|
||
|
in all such cases,[57]--
|
||
|
|
||
|
were added certain resolutions, known as the "Fifteen Articles." They
|
||
|
are in reality the Platform, for all that goes before them is but a
|
||
|
reaffirmation of principles already accepted, and the new thing in the
|
||
|
document, the advance in ecclesiasticism, is the increased authority
|
||
|
permitted and, later, enforced by these Fifteen Articles.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Articles affirm that power and discipline in connection with all
|
||
|
cases of scandal that may arise within a church, ought, the brethren
|
||
|
consenting, to be lodged with the elder or elders; and that in all
|
||
|
difficult cases, the pastor should take advice of the elders of the
|
||
|
neighboring churches before proceeding to censure or pass judgment. In
|
||
|
order to facilitate both discipline and mutual oversight, the Articles
|
||
|
provide that elders and pastors are to be joined in Associations,
|
||
|
meeting at least twice a year, to consult together upon questions of
|
||
|
ministerial duty and upon matters of mutual benefit to their
|
||
|
churches. From these Associations, delegates were to be chosen
|
||
|
annually to meet in one General Association, holding its session in
|
||
|
the spring, at the time of the general elections. The Associations
|
||
|
were to look after pastorless churches and to recommend candidates for
|
||
|
the ministry. Up to this time a man's bachelor of arts degree had been
|
||
|
considered sufficient guarantee that he would make a capable
|
||
|
minister. Henceforth, there could no longer be complaint that "there
|
||
|
was no uniform method of introducing candidates to the ministry nor
|
||
|
sufficient opportunity for churches to confer together in order to
|
||
|
their seeing and acting harmoniously." [58] In order that there should
|
||
|
be no more confusion arising from calling councils against councils
|
||
|
with their often conflicting judgments, the Articles formed
|
||
|
Consociations, or unions of churches within certain limits, usually
|
||
|
those of a county. These Consociations were to assist upon all great
|
||
|
or important ecclesiastical occasions. They were to preside over all
|
||
|
ordinations or installations; they were to decide upon the dismissal
|
||
|
of members, and upon all difficulties arising within any church within
|
||
|
their district. If necessary, Consociations could be joined in
|
||
|
council. Their decisions were to have the force of a judgment or
|
||
|
sentence _only_ when they were "approved by the major part of the
|
||
|
elders present and by such a number of the messengers"--one or two
|
||
|
from each church--as should constitute a majority vote. A church could
|
||
|
call upon its Consociation for advice before sentencing an offender,
|
||
|
but the offender could not appeal to the Consociation without the
|
||
|
consent of his church. By these last provisions, authority and power
|
||
|
tended still more to concentrate in the hands of the elders. The
|
||
|
Fifteen Articles, though they did not make the judgments of the
|
||
|
Consociations decisive, urged upon individual churches a reverent
|
||
|
regard for them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The attitude of the churches towards these Fifteen Articles varied,
|
||
|
and it was already known in the Synod that such would be the case.
|
||
|
Some churches would find them more palatable than others. Many were
|
||
|
already converts to the Rev. Solomon Stoddard's insistent teaching
|
||
|
that "a National Synod is the highest ecclesiastical authority upon
|
||
|
earth," [59] that every man must stand to the judgment of a National
|
||
|
Synod. Even five years before the convening of the Synod at Saybrook,
|
||
|
there had issued from a meeting of the Yale trustees,[a] "altogether
|
||
|
the most representative ecclesiastical gathering in the colony," a
|
||
|
circular letter which urged the Connecticut ministers to agree on some
|
||
|
unifying confession of creed, and that such be recommended by the
|
||
|
General Court to the consideration of the people. The immediate answer
|
||
|
to the letter, if any, is unknown. Trumbull says that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
the proposal was universally acceptable, and the churches and the
|
||
|
ministers of the several counties met in a consociated council and
|
||
|
gave their assent to the Westminster and Savoy Confessions of
|
||
|
Faith. [60]
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seems that they also "drew up certain rules of ecclesiastical
|
||
|
discipline as preparatory to a General Synod which they still had in
|
||
|
contemplation,"[61] but took no further step to obtain the approval of
|
||
|
the Court. This first definite move toward the Saybrook system bore
|
||
|
fruit when the Fifteen Articles were added to the Platform. Their
|
||
|
authoritative tone was to satisfy those within the churches who
|
||
|
preferred Presbyterian classes and synods, while their interpretation
|
||
|
could be modified to please the adherents of a purer Congregationalism
|
||
|
by reading them in the light of the Heads of Agreement which preceded
|
||
|
them. Of their possible purport two great authorities upon
|
||
|
Congregationalism speak as follows. Dr. Bacon writes:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
The "Articles" by whomsoever penned, were obviously a compromise
|
||
|
between the Presbyterian interest and the Congregational; and like
|
||
|
most compromises, they were (I do not say by design) of doubtful
|
||
|
interpretation. Interpreted by a Presbyterian, they might seem to
|
||
|
subject the Churches completely to the authoritative government of
|
||
|
classes or presbyteries under the name of consociations.
|
||
|
Interpreted by a Congregationalist, they might seem to provide for
|
||
|
nothing more than a stated Council, in which neighboring Churches,
|
||
|
voluntarily confederate, could consult together, and the proper
|
||
|
function of which should be not to speak imperatively, but, when
|
||
|
regularly called, to "hold forth light" in cases of difficulty or
|
||
|
perplexity.[62]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dr. Dexter sums them up in the following words:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taken by themselves, the fifteen articles were stringent enough to
|
||
|
satisfy the most ardent High Churchmen among the
|
||
|
Congregationalists of that day; taken, however, in connection with
|
||
|
the London document previously adopted, and by the spirit of
|
||
|
which--apparently--they were always to be construed, their
|
||
|
stringency became matter of differing judgment, so that what on
|
||
|
the whole was their intent has never been settled to this
|
||
|
day. [63]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In accordance with the system of government outlined in the Platform,
|
||
|
the churches of the colony were at once formed into five Associations
|
||
|
and five Consociations, one each in New Haven, New London, and
|
||
|
Fairfield counties, and two in Hartford. In later years, new bodies
|
||
|
were organized, as the other four Connecticut counties were set off
|
||
|
from these original ones. The churches of the New Haven county
|
||
|
Consociation, long cleaving to the purest Congregationalism, refused
|
||
|
to adopt the Platform until they had recorded their liberal
|
||
|
construction of it. Fairfield went to the other extreme, and put on
|
||
|
record their acceptance of the Consociations as church
|
||
|
courts. Hartford and New London accepted the Platform as a whole, as
|
||
|
it came from the synod, leaving to time the decision as to its loose
|
||
|
or strict construction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A legislative act was necessary to make the Platform the legal
|
||
|
constitution of the Congregational Establishment. Such an act
|
||
|
immediately followed the presentation of the report by the committee,
|
||
|
whom the Saybrook convention, in accordance with the Court's previous
|
||
|
command, sent to the Assembly. Having examined the Platform, the
|
||
|
Legislature declared its strong approval of such a happy agreement,
|
||
|
and in October, 1708, enacted that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
all the Churches within this government that are, and shall be
|
||
|
thus united in doctrine, worship and discipline, be, and for the
|
||
|
future shall be, owned and acknowledged, established by law:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Provided always that nothing herein shall be intended or construed
|
||
|
to hinder or prevent any society or church that is or shall be
|
||
|
allowed by the laws of this government, who soberly differ or
|
||
|
dissent from the united churches hereby established, from
|
||
|
exercising worship and discipline in their own way, and according
|
||
|
to their conscience. [64]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The purport of this proviso was to safeguard churches which had been
|
||
|
approved according to the standards formerly set up by the Court, and
|
||
|
also to prevent the Act of Establishment from seeming to contradict a
|
||
|
"Toleration Act for sober dissenters" from the colony church that had
|
||
|
been passed at the preceding May session. Out of this proviso grew a
|
||
|
misunderstanding in the Norwich church, which happens also to furnish
|
||
|
a typical illustration of the difficulties sometimes encountered in
|
||
|
trying to collect a minister's salary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Mr. Woodward, pastor of the Norwich church, read the act
|
||
|
establishing the Saybrook Platform, he omitted the proviso. The
|
||
|
Norwich deputies, who had been present at the passage of the act,
|
||
|
immediately informed the people of the provision which the Court had
|
||
|
made for the continuance of those churches of which it had previously
|
||
|
approved and which might be reluctant to adopt the stricter terms of
|
||
|
the new system, at least until their value had been demonstrated. For
|
||
|
this behavior, the deputies were censured by the pastor and by the
|
||
|
majority of the church, who sided with him. Thereupon, the minority
|
||
|
withdrew and for three months worshiped apart. Then the breach was
|
||
|
healed, though seeds of discord remained. By 1714, six years later,
|
||
|
they had germinated and had attained such development that it was very
|
||
|
difficult to collect the minister's salary. In Norwich, as elsewhere,
|
||
|
there had formerly been a custom of collecting the ministerial rates
|
||
|
together with those of the county. This custom had arisen because of
|
||
|
difficulty in collecting the former, and in 1708 [65] this practice
|
||
|
was legalized, provided that in each case the minister made formal
|
||
|
application to have his rates thus collected. In the year 1714 and the
|
||
|
following year the General Court was obliged to issue a special order
|
||
|
commanding the town of Norwich to fulfill its agreement with their
|
||
|
minister and to pay his salary in full. The second year, the Court
|
||
|
added the injunction that the money should be collected by the
|
||
|
constables. But at the session following the order, the Norwich
|
||
|
deputies informed the Court that, owing to differences existing among
|
||
|
their townsmen, they had not seen fit to urge its commands upon their
|
||
|
people. Upon learning that Mr. Woodward's family were actually
|
||
|
suffering, the Court appointed a date, and ordered the Norwich
|
||
|
constables to produce at the time set a receipt, signed by Mr.
|
||
|
Woodward, and showing that his salary had been paid in full. If the
|
||
|
receipt was not forthcoming at the appointed time, the secretary of
|
||
|
the colony was empowered to issue, upon application, a warrant to
|
||
|
distrain all or any unpaid portion of the minister's salary from the
|
||
|
constables, and, also, any additional costs. This legislation seems to
|
||
|
have had due effect, though feeling ran so high that, in the following
|
||
|
year, it was decided to divide the church. When the two parishes were
|
||
|
formed, Mr. Woodward retired, and the life of the divided church was
|
||
|
continued under new ministers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the adoption of the Saybrook Platform, the Connecticut churches
|
||
|
were for many years preeminently Presbyterian in character. The terms
|
||
|
Congregational and Presbyterian were often used interchangeably. As
|
||
|
late as 1799, the Hartford North Association, speaking of the
|
||
|
Connecticut churches, declared them "to contain the essentials of the
|
||
|
Church of Scotland or Presbyterian Church in America." The General
|
||
|
Association in 1805 affirmed that "The Saybrook Platform is the
|
||
|
constitution of the Presbyterian Church in Connecticut."[b] Whether
|
||
|
called by the one name or the other, Presbyterianized
|
||
|
Congregationalism was the firmly established state religion, for under
|
||
|
the Saybrook system the local independence of the churches was largely
|
||
|
sacrificed. The system further exalted the eldership and the pastoral
|
||
|
power. It replaced the sympathetic help and advisory assistance of
|
||
|
neighboring churches by organized associations and by the authority of
|
||
|
councils.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the new system the ecclesiastical machinery which, at first,
|
||
|
brought peace and order, soon developed into a barren autonomy and
|
||
|
gave rise to rigid formalism in religion, with its consequent baneful
|
||
|
results upon the spiritual and moral character of the people. The
|
||
|
Established Church had attained the height of its security and power,
|
||
|
with exclusive privileges conferred by the legislature. That body had
|
||
|
turned over to the "government within a government" the whole control
|
||
|
of the church and of the religious life of the colony, and had endowed
|
||
|
it with ecclesiastical councils which rapidly developed into
|
||
|
ecclesiastical courts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There was no formal coercive power; but the public provision for the
|
||
|
minister's support, and the withdrawal of it from recalcitrant members
|
||
|
formed a coercive power of no mean efficiency." [66]
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] The charter for the college, together with an annual grant of
|
||
|
three hundred dollars, was granted in 1701. None but ministers were to
|
||
|
be trustees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] The Hartford North Association in 1799 gave "information to all
|
||
|
whom it may concern that the Constitution of the Churches in the State
|
||
|
of Connecticut, founded on the common usage and confession of faith,
|
||
|
Heads of Agreement, Articles of discipline adopted at the earliest
|
||
|
period of the settlement of the State, is not Congregational, but
|
||
|
contains the essentials of the Church of Scotland, or Presbyterian
|
||
|
Church in America, particularly, as it gives a decisive power to
|
||
|
Ecclesiastical Councils and a Consociation consisting of Ministers and
|
||
|
Messengers, or lay representatives, from the churches, is possessed of
|
||
|
substantially the same authority as a Presbytery." The fifteen
|
||
|
ministers at this meeting of the Hartford North Association declared
|
||
|
that there were in the state not more than ten or twelve
|
||
|
Congregational churches, and that the majority were not, and never had
|
||
|
been, constituted according to the Cambridge Platform, though they
|
||
|
might, "loosely and vaguely, though improperly," be "termed
|
||
|
Congregational Churches."--See MS. Records. Also G. L. Walker,
|
||
|
_First Church in Hartford_, p. 358.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM AND THE TOLERATION ACT
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
They keep the word of promise to our ear and break it to our
|
||
|
hope.--_Macbeth,_ Act V, Sc. viii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Connecticut General Court incorporated in the act establishing the
|
||
|
Saybrook Platform the proviso--
|
||
|
|
||
|
that nothing herein shall be intended or construed to hinder or
|
||
|
prevent any Society or Church that is or shall he allowed by the
|
||
|
laws of this government, who soberly differ or dissent from the
|
||
|
United Churches hereby established from exercising worship and
|
||
|
discipline in their own way, according to their conscience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here then was the measure of such religious toleration as could be
|
||
|
expected. It appears a liberal measure. It was liberal in that day and
|
||
|
generation, when men's minds were so firmly possessed by the belief
|
||
|
that civil order was closely dependent upon religious uniformity. The
|
||
|
exact purport of the proviso, however, can best be gauged by
|
||
|
considering it in connection with a legislative act that immediately
|
||
|
preceded it, and by studying the conditions which prompted or enforced
|
||
|
this earlier legislation, known as the Toleration Act of 1708.[a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
As conditions were at its passage, the proviso applied only to certain
|
||
|
Congregational churches that, preferring the polity of the Cambridge
|
||
|
Platform, were determined to adhere to it. In earlier years, these
|
||
|
churches, with their exacting test of regenerative experience, had
|
||
|
constituted the majority. In later years, the Half-Way Covenant
|
||
|
practice and Stoddardeanism had shifted the relative position of
|
||
|
church parties. Now, the proviso represented that liberal-minded
|
||
|
party within the church who would extend tolerance to the minority who
|
||
|
still clung to the outgrown convictions and principles of an earlier
|
||
|
age. This tolerance was extended from a two-fold motive: for the
|
||
|
reason just assigned, and because the government hoped, by permitting
|
||
|
a liberal interpretation of the Saybrook Articles, to win over these
|
||
|
tolerated Congregational churches. It trusted that the anticipated
|
||
|
benefits, proceeding from the new order of church government, would
|
||
|
further convince them of the superior advantages derivable from the
|
||
|
Presbyterian or more authoritative rendering of the Saybrook
|
||
|
instrument, and that through such a policy, the ready acceptance of
|
||
|
the Saybrook Platform by all the churches in the colony would be
|
||
|
secured. Furthermore, it would not do for the colony to make an
|
||
|
important law, following the great English precedent of 1689 which had
|
||
|
granted toleration to dissenters, and then, within six months, frame a
|
||
|
constitution for its Established Church, so rigid that no room could
|
||
|
be found in the colony for any fundamental differences in faith or
|
||
|
practice. Consequently, the proviso was made to include both tolerated
|
||
|
Congregationalists and any dissenters who might in the future be
|
||
|
permitted to organize their own churches, or, in the words of the
|
||
|
Court, "any Society or Church that is or shall be allowed by the laws
|
||
|
of this government." Thus the proviso was practically forced into the
|
||
|
October legislation of the General Court by the passing of the
|
||
|
Toleration Act at its spring session, notwithstanding the fact that
|
||
|
its inclusion was in accord with the sentiment of the liberal party.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toleration Act and proviso notwithstanding, no rival church was
|
||
|
desired at this time in Connecticut. No rival creed was
|
||
|
recognized. True, there were a few handfuls of dissenters scattered
|
||
|
through the colony, but Congregationalism, with a strong tincture of
|
||
|
Presbyterianism, was almost the unanimous choice of the people. It was
|
||
|
largely outside pressure that had forced the passage of the Toleration
|
||
|
Act, even if it accounts for itself as a loyal following of the
|
||
|
English precedent of 1689. Although it had always been understood that
|
||
|
the colonies should make no laws repugnant to the organic or to the
|
||
|
common law of England, Connecticut was determined to protect as much
|
||
|
as possible her own approved church, to keep it free from the
|
||
|
contamination not only of infidels and heretics, but also from
|
||
|
Church-of-England dissenters and from all others. Accordingly she
|
||
|
placed side by side upon her statute book a Toleration Act with a
|
||
|
proviso in favor of her Established Church, and a Church platform with
|
||
|
a proviso for "sober dissenters" therefrom.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The circumstances which led up to and enforced the passage of the
|
||
|
Toleration Act were many and varied. The motives were complex.
|
||
|
Considerations religious, political, social, and economic entered into
|
||
|
the problem which met the Connecticut legislators when they found
|
||
|
their colony falling into disfavor with the King. This problem,
|
||
|
resolved into its simplest terms, consisted in securing continued
|
||
|
exemption from external interference. If Connecticut could retain the
|
||
|
King's approval, she could prevent the intrigues of her enemies at the
|
||
|
English court and could control the situation in the colony, whatever
|
||
|
its aspects, secular or religious. And with reference to the latter,
|
||
|
she would still be able to exalt her Establishment and to keep
|
||
|
dissenters, however they might increase in kinds or numbers, in a
|
||
|
properly subordinated position.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In order to obtain a grasp of the situation within the colony at the
|
||
|
time when its government concluded that the passing of the Toleration
|
||
|
Act would be politic, it is necessary to examine the status of the
|
||
|
dissenters there. Of these there were four classes, the Quakers or
|
||
|
Society of Friends, the Episcopalians, the Baptists, and the
|
||
|
Rogerines. Of these, the Quakers and the Episcopalians were the first
|
||
|
to make the Connecticut government forcibly realize that, if she
|
||
|
interfered with what they believed to be their rights, there would
|
||
|
probably have to be a settlement with the home government. But as the
|
||
|
efforts of these sects to interest the English government in their
|
||
|
behalf run parallel with and mix themselves up with other complaints
|
||
|
against Connecticut, it will make the history of the times clearer if
|
||
|
the early story of the Baptists and Rogerines is first told.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Baptists early appeared in New England, but it was not until 1665
|
||
|
that Massachusetts permitted their organization into churches, and not
|
||
|
until 1700, only eight years before the Saybrook Platform, that Cotton
|
||
|
Mather wrote of them, "We are willing to acknowledge for our brethren
|
||
|
as many of them as are willing to be acknowledged." In her dislike of
|
||
|
them, Massachusetts had the full sympathy of Connecticut. And it was
|
||
|
with great dissatisfaction that the authorities of the latter colony
|
||
|
saw these dissenters, early in the eighteenth century, crossing the
|
||
|
Rhode Island boundary to settle within her territory. Accordingly, in
|
||
|
1704, the General Court of Connecticut refused them permission to
|
||
|
incorporate in church estate. When in the following year, in spite of
|
||
|
the legislature's refusal, they organized a church at Groton under
|
||
|
Valentine Wightman,[b] the Assembly proceeded to inflict the full
|
||
|
penalties of the law. While the Baptists had cheerfully paid all
|
||
|
secular taxes, they had made themselves liable to fines and
|
||
|
imprisonments by their refusal, on the ground of conscience, to pay
|
||
|
the ecclesiastical ones, and, as they continued to refuse, fines and
|
||
|
imprisonment and even flogging became their portion. Governor
|
||
|
Saltonstall, mild in his personal attitude toward the three other
|
||
|
groups of dissenters, thoroughly disapproved of the Baptists, seeming
|
||
|
to fear their growing influence in New England and their increasing
|
||
|
importance in the mother country. He believed in a policy of
|
||
|
restriction and oppression toward the mere handful of them that had
|
||
|
settled within his jurisdiction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Apart from the main body of the Baptists, there were in Connecticut a
|
||
|
number of Seventh-day Baptists and Rogerine Baptists or Rogerine
|
||
|
Quakers. There were a very few of them,--not more than a dozen in
|
||
|
1680.[c] Setting aside the earliest persecution of the Quakers, these
|
||
|
Rogerines were the first dissenters to fall under the displeasure of
|
||
|
the Connecticut authorities. They were the first to be systematically
|
||
|
fined, whipped, and imprisoned for conducting themselves contrary to
|
||
|
the laws for the support and honor of the Connecticut
|
||
|
Establishment. For this reason, though they were weak in numbers and
|
||
|
often an exasperating set of fanatics, they deserve a hearing. Their
|
||
|
persecution began about 1677, while these people were chiefly resident
|
||
|
in New London and the Seventh-day men were mostly members of the
|
||
|
Rogers family. Later, the Rogerines spread to Norwich and Lebanon and
|
||
|
their immediate vicinity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This sect of Rogerines arose from the intercourse through trade of two
|
||
|
brothers, John and James Rogers of New London, with the Sabbatarians
|
||
|
or Seventh-day Baptists of Rhode Island. These brothers were baptized
|
||
|
in 1674 and 1675, and their parents in the following year. All were
|
||
|
received as members of the Seventh-day church at Newport. This did not
|
||
|
trouble the Connecticut authorities, who appear not to have interfered
|
||
|
with the converts until they committed a flagrant offense and put
|
||
|
public dishonor upon the colony church; as in 1677, when elders of the
|
||
|
Rhode Island church arrived in New London to baptize the wife of
|
||
|
Joseph Rogers, another brother of the first two converts. The elders
|
||
|
selected for their baptismal ceremony a quiet spot about two miles
|
||
|
from the town. This did not suit John Rogers, who insisted that the
|
||
|
town was the only proper place, and led the little procession into
|
||
|
it. Mr. Hiscox, one of the elders, was seized while preaching and
|
||
|
carried before the magistrates, but was soon released. Deprived of
|
||
|
their leader, the Sabbatarians withdrew to another place, and John
|
||
|
Rogers, arrogating to himself the office of elder, performed the
|
||
|
baptismal service. From this time forth he began to draw disciples to
|
||
|
himself. When he pushed his personal opinions too far, the Newport
|
||
|
church attempted to discipline both him and his following, but, this
|
||
|
attempt failing, the Rogerines became henceforth a distinct sect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Rogerines, though strictly orthodox in the fundamental articles of
|
||
|
the Christian faith, were opposed by the Connecticut magistrates as
|
||
|
teachers of doctrines tending to undermine religion, as a persistently
|
||
|
rebellious sect, and as notorious breakers of the peace. In faith and
|
||
|
practice, these Rogerines bore some resemblance to the Baptists and
|
||
|
also to the Quakers. Hence, they were often called Rogerine-Baptists
|
||
|
or Rogerine-Quakers. Like the earlier Baptists and the Quakers, they
|
||
|
believed it wrong to take an oath. They differed from the
|
||
|
Congregationalists chiefly in their form of administering baptism and
|
||
|
the Lord's supper and in their opposition to any paid ministry. Rogers
|
||
|
also claimed that there were certain tests of personal regeneration
|
||
|
which the Congregationalists denied. John Bolles, one of the later
|
||
|
leaders of the sect, declared the Congregational Sunday to be "a great
|
||
|
Idol in this Country, and all the Religion built on the Holiness of
|
||
|
the pretended Sabbath is Hypocrisy and further that it is contrary to
|
||
|
Scripture, for Christians to exercise Authority over one another in
|
||
|
matters of Religion." [67] Rogers, with less dignity and more
|
||
|
pugnaciousness, called the authorities "the scarlet beast" and the
|
||
|
Establishment a "harlot," hurling scriptural texts with rankling,
|
||
|
exasperating abusiveness in his determination to prove her customs
|
||
|
evil and anti-Christian. Not content with such railing, the Rogerines
|
||
|
determined to show no respect to their adversaries' opinions and
|
||
|
worship. Thus, while maintaining that there should be no _public_
|
||
|
worship, Rogers, after his separation from the Seventh-day Baptists,
|
||
|
perversely chose Sunday as the day most convenient for the Rogerines
|
||
|
to hold their meetings. They not only exhorted and testified in the
|
||
|
streets, but forced their way into the churches, pestering the
|
||
|
ministers to argue disputed points. They offended in another way,
|
||
|
for, according to the colony law, they profaned the Sabbath by
|
||
|
working, claiming that, as all days were holy, all were alike good for
|
||
|
work. Fines and imprisonment began in 1677. They were continued in the
|
||
|
hope, held by the authorities, that they could suppress the Rogerines
|
||
|
by exactions which should melt away their estates. Sometimes these
|
||
|
penalties were unjust, as when John Rogers could rightly claim that he
|
||
|
was sentenced without benefit of jury, and, at another, that the
|
||
|
authorities had seized his son's cattle to settle the father's fines.
|
||
|
John Bolles pleaded against the injustice of forcing men "to pay Money
|
||
|
for his (the minister's) preaching when they did not hear him and
|
||
|
professed it was against their Consciences." [68] But such a plea was
|
||
|
many, many years in advance of his time. The Rogerines, important, in
|
||
|
their own estimate, as called of God, and angered by opposition,
|
||
|
seized upon every scriptural passage that bade them exhort and
|
||
|
testify, feeling it their duty to do so both in season and out. Had
|
||
|
they been willing to give up this practice in public, they would
|
||
|
probably have been left in comparative peace, for Governor Saltonstall
|
||
|
wrote to Rogers offering him protection for his followers if they
|
||
|
would consent to give up "testifying" and would hold their services
|
||
|
quietly and privately. Rogers refused upon the ground that he had a
|
||
|
right to use the colony churches for his preaching, since he and his
|
||
|
people were obliged to contribute to their maintenance. This was
|
||
|
logical, but not acceptable to the Connecticut magistrates, who
|
||
|
continued to cool the enthusiasm of the Rogerines by occasional heavy
|
||
|
penalties, and to look upon them as a set of fanatics, doomed to
|
||
|
self-extinction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The attitude of the Connecticut authorities at this time toward the
|
||
|
Quakers, or Society of Friends, was quite different from that assumed
|
||
|
toward the Baptists and Rogerines. A retrospect of their history in
|
||
|
the colony shows them to have been the earliest dissenters, and also
|
||
|
the ones to whom concessions, though only temporary, were first
|
||
|
made. Previous to the Restoration, the Quakers were the only
|
||
|
dissenters with whom Connecticut had to deal. They appeared in
|
||
|
Massachusetts in 1655, and in the following year New Haven colony
|
||
|
found no laws could be too severe for the "cursed sect of the
|
||
|
Quakers." The General Court of Connecticut seconded the efforts of
|
||
|
both New Haven and Massachusetts to exclude the obnoxious and
|
||
|
determined sect, but it soon decided that its fears had been greatly
|
||
|
exaggerated, and that mild laws and town legislation were
|
||
|
sufficient. Accordingly, town officers were instructed to prevent
|
||
|
Quakers settling in the colony, to forbid their books and writings,
|
||
|
and to break up their meetings. It was forbidden, however, to lay upon
|
||
|
them a fine of more than ten pounds or, under any circumstances, the
|
||
|
death penalty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While New Haven whipped, branded, and transported Quakers,[d]
|
||
|
Connecticut mildly enforced her laws against them, [69] and how mildly
|
||
|
the following incidents will show. In 1658, John Rous and John
|
||
|
Copeland, traveling preachers, reached Hartford. They were allowed to
|
||
|
hold a discussion in the presence of the governor and magistrates upon
|
||
|
"God is a Spirit." At its close, they were courteously informed that
|
||
|
the laws of the colony forbade their remaining in it, and were
|
||
|
requested to continue without further delay their journey into Rhode
|
||
|
Island. This request was heeded, but while on their way, to quote
|
||
|
Rous, "The Lord gave us no small dominion." It would seem as if the
|
||
|
wise Quaker had taken the benefit of the law which forbade his
|
||
|
remaining "more than fifteen days in a town," and, also, of the
|
||
|
friendly curiosity of the people along his route. Rous further
|
||
|
testified in behalf of Connecticut that "Among all the colonies found
|
||
|
we not like moderation as this; most of the magistrates being more
|
||
|
noble than those of the others." [70] A short time after Rous's visit,
|
||
|
two Quakers, who persisted in holding services, were arrested and
|
||
|
banished.[e] Still later, two women who attempted to conduct services
|
||
|
in Hartford met with similar treatment, of whom their historian
|
||
|
records: "Except that some extra apparel which they took with them was
|
||
|
sold by the jaoler to pay his fee, no act of persecution befell them
|
||
|
at Hartford." [71] As late as 1676, when the Congregationalists and
|
||
|
the constables of New London, with great violence, broke up a Friends'
|
||
|
meeting, held by William Edmundson, he tells us that "the sober people
|
||
|
were offended at them," [72] and that on the following Sunday, at "New
|
||
|
Hartford" (Hartford), after the regular morning service, he was
|
||
|
allowed to speak unhindered. The same afternoon, when he attempted to
|
||
|
speak in another meeting-house, the officers, urged on by the
|
||
|
minister, "haled me," he writes, "out of the worship-house, and hurt
|
||
|
my arm so that it bled." When he asked them if they thought that was
|
||
|
the right treatment of a man faint from fasting all day, they, with
|
||
|
excuses for the conduct of the minister and the magistrates, hurried
|
||
|
him to an inn. There the people were allowed to listen to his
|
||
|
discourse, and, the next morning, he was bidden to go freely on his
|
||
|
way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Most of the Connecticut Quakers were in the border towns. Few, if any,
|
||
|
organized societies were formed in Connecticut until about the time of
|
||
|
the Revolution. Their scattered converts were ministered to by
|
||
|
traveling preachers, and, where possible, members would cross the
|
||
|
boundaries to attend the Quarterly or Monthly Meetings in neighboring
|
||
|
Rhode Island, or possibly Massachusetts, or on Long Island. These
|
||
|
dissenters had quickly perceived the strength of union, and as early
|
||
|
as 1661 the Rhode Island Yearly Meeting had been established, with its
|
||
|
system of subordinate Quarterly and Monthly Meetings. Soon after,
|
||
|
Yearly Meetings at Philadelphia brought reports from the southern and
|
||
|
middle colonies. Those at Flushing, Long Island, collected news of
|
||
|
converts from New York as far east as the Connecticut River, while the
|
||
|
Yearly Meeting at Newport, Rhode Island, heard from all members east
|
||
|
of that river. The custom of exchanging yearly letters, giving the
|
||
|
gist of these three annual meetings, was soon instituted. After the
|
||
|
establishment of the London Yearly Meeting, the frequent exchange of
|
||
|
letters with the colonial Quakers, begun in 1662, was reinforced by
|
||
|
the exchange of English and American preachers. By similar means, the
|
||
|
whole Society the world over was bound closely together. Their common
|
||
|
interests were guarded, and every infraction of their liberties
|
||
|
known. If in any of the colonies, as in Connecticut, they were
|
||
|
oppressed for their refusal to pay ecclesiastical taxes and to bear
|
||
|
arms, the facts were known in England. Secular taxes they cheerfully
|
||
|
met, but others were against their conscience. They were excellent
|
||
|
citizens, and they were everywhere friendly with the Indians. Because
|
||
|
of this friendship, and because the Connecticut colony desired the
|
||
|
good offices of the Rhode Island authorities during the dangerous King
|
||
|
Philip's War, the General Court had decided to show favor to the few
|
||
|
Quakers who were then within the colony. Accordingly, in 1675, a bill
|
||
|
was passed temporarily releasing the Quakers from fines for absence
|
||
|
from public worship, provided "that they did not gather into
|
||
|
assemblies within the colony or make any disturbance." How long this
|
||
|
law was operative is uncertain, but probably until about 1702. It, is
|
||
|
omitted in the revision of the laws of that year, and Gough, in his
|
||
|
"History of the People called Quakers," says that the persecuting
|
||
|
spirit died away, but was renewed by Connecticut in 1702.[f] We know
|
||
|
some of the causes that probably led to its revival, such as the
|
||
|
extravagances of the Rogerines, the increase of the Baptists, and the
|
||
|
general feeling that the Congregational churches were inherently weak
|
||
|
among themselves before this threatening increase of external
|
||
|
foes. Moreover, in this same year, there began a very definite
|
||
|
propaganda in behalf of an American episcopate. The attempt to revive
|
||
|
persecution against the Quakers was unfortunate. They believed in
|
||
|
liberty of conscience as a natural, inalienable right, and its
|
||
|
practical exercise they meant to have. Their leaders were constant in
|
||
|
their loyal addresses and dignified petitions to the throne. The great
|
||
|
English Toleration Act had befriended them, and the Act of 1693 had,
|
||
|
by substituting affirmation for oath, allowed them to take full
|
||
|
advantage of the toleration measure. Such religious liberty as they
|
||
|
enjoyed in England, they meant to possess in England's colonies; and
|
||
|
when Connecticut, in 1702, again put on the thumb-screws of
|
||
|
persecution, these dissenters at once sent a protest across the seas.
|
||
|
Their great leader, William Penn, was again in favor at court and with
|
||
|
the Queen, who, in Privy Council, October 11, 1705, favorably heard
|
||
|
their petition and promptly annulled the Connecticut law of 1657
|
||
|
against "Heretics, Infidels and Quakers," declaring it void and
|
||
|
repealed. "The repealing of this Act put a final period to the
|
||
|
persecuting of Quakers in New England." [73] To be more exact, it put
|
||
|
an end to persecution, but not to occasional fines or to legalized
|
||
|
taxes which the Quakers still considered unjust. But as Connecticut
|
||
|
had many serious problems on her hands at this time, she thought it
|
||
|
prudent to follow the lead of the Crown, and repealed the law of 1657,
|
||
|
in so far as it applied to the Quakers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The year that the Quakers scored this victory, the Episcopalians
|
||
|
lodged with the home government a serious complaint of the intolerance
|
||
|
that Connecticut showed towards members of the Church of England. They
|
||
|
complained that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
they have made a law that no Christians who are not of their
|
||
|
community, shall meet to worship God, or have a minister without
|
||
|
lycence from their Assembly; which law even extends to the Church
|
||
|
of England, as well as other professions tolerated in
|
||
|
England. [74]
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was not the first time that such a complaint had been carried to
|
||
|
England. As early as 1665 [g] it had been made, within a year after
|
||
|
Connecticut had satisfied the Commissioners of Charles II, sending
|
||
|
them home convinced that the Church of England services would be
|
||
|
allowed in the colony as soon as there were settlers who desired
|
||
|
them."[h] As there were no Episcopalians in the colony then, nor for
|
||
|
nearly thirty years afterwards, and as Connecticut was in high favor
|
||
|
with the Stuarts, little heed was paid to the complaint at the time,
|
||
|
nor until long years afterwards, when it was coupled with graver
|
||
|
offenses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Back of the personal affront to the sovereign in the persecution or
|
||
|
oppression of members of the Church of England, there were graver
|
||
|
causes of offense such as the Crown regarded as mistakes, or even
|
||
|
misdemeanors. For many years Connecticut had been virtually an
|
||
|
independent and sovereign state within her own borders. Her charter
|
||
|
was a most liberal one. She had sought approval for it from the
|
||
|
sovereigns, William and Mary, and, while she had been unable to obtain
|
||
|
for it the crown's expressed approval, she had secured from the best
|
||
|
legal talent a judgment declaring it still valid. She continued to be
|
||
|
practically exempt from external interference with her domestic policy
|
||
|
for a number of years after the Revolution of 1688, yet from that time
|
||
|
on there was always at the English court a party, at first largely
|
||
|
influenced by Sir Edmund Andros and his following, who were either
|
||
|
jealous of Connecticut's charter or envious of her prosperity. They
|
||
|
were always scheming and ready to prejudice the king against his
|
||
|
colony, or to antagonize the Board of Trade.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Within her own borders, Connecticut was peaceful, prosperous, and
|
||
|
contented. For the most part, she was free from the harassing danger
|
||
|
of Indian war. She readily contributed her share for the common
|
||
|
defense of the colonies, and sent her loyal quotas to fight for
|
||
|
England's territorial claims. For many years, Connecticut was shrewd
|
||
|
enough to steer clear of the disastrous inflation of paper currency
|
||
|
which overtook her sister colonies. Many strangers were attracted by
|
||
|
her prosperity, so that, notwithstanding frequent emigrations of her
|
||
|
people, she trebled her population about once in twenty years all
|
||
|
through the first century of her existence.[i] With this increasing
|
||
|
population came, in the latter part of the seventeenth century,
|
||
|
members of the Church of England, who settled in Stratford and in the
|
||
|
towns adjacent to New York.[j] They quickly found that their previous
|
||
|
impressions were erroneous, and that Connecticut would not tolerate
|
||
|
their religious services. Consequently, a report of the religious
|
||
|
condition in Connecticut was made in England, in 1702, at about the
|
||
|
time the Quakers complained of renewed persecution and at a time when
|
||
|
the enemies of the colony were extremely active in charging her with
|
||
|
misconduct.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A report of Connecticut's ecclesiastical constitution and of her
|
||
|
oppression of dissenters was made to the Bishop of London by John
|
||
|
Talbot, who, with George Keith, had traveled through Connecticut on
|
||
|
his way from New York to Boston. These men were missionary priests of
|
||
|
the Church of England. In New London, Governor Saltonstall, then the
|
||
|
minister of that town, knowing that there were a few Church-of-England
|
||
|
men in the place, had met the travelers, "civilly entertained them at
|
||
|
his house," and "invited them to preach in his church." [75] The
|
||
|
Governor might not, the magistrates certainly did not, feel so kindly
|
||
|
disposed toward Talbot a year or so later, when it was found that,
|
||
|
upon his return to New York, he had written home to his superiors in
|
||
|
England, earnestly advocating an American episcopate. True, he urged
|
||
|
that the American bishop should have ecclesiastical powers only, and
|
||
|
that those ecclesiastico-civil in character, such as the probating of
|
||
|
wills, granting of marriage licenses, and the presentation of livings,
|
||
|
should remain in the hands of the colonial governors. But the
|
||
|
Connecticut authorities were not forgetful of Laud's purpose in 1638
|
||
|
to appoint a bishop over New England, and its frustration by the
|
||
|
political unrest at home. They recalled that the revival of such a
|
||
|
project had floated as a rumor about those royal commissioners of 1664
|
||
|
to whom they had given such satisfactory, if evasive,
|
||
|
answers. Moreover, an Order in Council of 1685, of which there is
|
||
|
external evidence, though the order itself is not recorded, had vested
|
||
|
ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the colonies in the Bishop of
|
||
|
London. [76] Connecticut knew also that four years later, in 1689 (the
|
||
|
year that Episcopacy erected King's Chapel, Boston, with its royal
|
||
|
endowment of L100 per year), the first commissary had been dispatched
|
||
|
to Virginia to superintend the churches there. The Crown, as yet, had
|
||
|
deemed it unwise to thrust an episcopate upon its dissenting colonies,
|
||
|
and, except for a short time before Queen Anne's death, it was to take
|
||
|
no interest in the plans for the American episcopate until some forty
|
||
|
years later, when the King thought to discern in it some political
|
||
|
advantage. But early in 1700, when complaints were lodged against
|
||
|
Connecticut, there was a strong party within the English Church itself
|
||
|
who were most anxious to see the episcopal bond between the mother
|
||
|
country and her colonies strengthened. For this purpose, they had sent
|
||
|
to America, in 1695, the Reverend Thomas Bray to report upon the
|
||
|
conditions and churchly sentiment within the colonies. His report was
|
||
|
published under the title, "A Memorial representing the State of
|
||
|
Religion in the Continent of North America." It was an appeal for
|
||
|
episcopal oversight, and resulted in the formation in England, in
|
||
|
1701, of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
|
||
|
Parts. To this organization belonged all the English bishops with all
|
||
|
their influential following. The Society regularly maintained
|
||
|
missionary churches and missionary priests throughout the colonies.
|
||
|
Candidates for this priesthood were required to submit to a thorough
|
||
|
examination as to their fitness. Before sailing, they were required to
|
||
|
report to the Bishop of London as their Diocesan and to the Archbishop
|
||
|
of Canterbury as their Metropolitan. They were required to send full
|
||
|
semi-annual reports of their work and to include in them any other
|
||
|
information that promised to be of interest or advantage to the
|
||
|
Society. John Talbot and George Keith were two of these missionaries.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Talbot's appeal for the American episcopate was seconded in 1705 by
|
||
|
fourteen clergymen from the middle colonies who convened at
|
||
|
Burlington, N. J., to frame a petition to the English archbishop and
|
||
|
bishops. In it they set forth the necessity in America of a bishop to
|
||
|
ordain and to supply other ecclesiastical needs. The petitioners
|
||
|
added that a bishop was also necessary to counteract "the
|
||
|
inconveniences which the church labors under by the influence which
|
||
|
seditious men's counsels have upon the public administration and the
|
||
|
opposition which they make to the good inclinations of well-affected
|
||
|
persons." [77] In this appeal for a bishop stress was laid upon the
|
||
|
cost and dangers of a trip to England for ordination, [78] and also to
|
||
|
the frequent loss of converts from the independent ministry because of
|
||
|
the lack of ordination privileges in America. These references, and
|
||
|
also that to the "counsel of seditious men," could not be agreeable to
|
||
|
large numbers of dissenting colonists. They would not be viewed with
|
||
|
favor in Connecticut, where, by 1705, Episcopalians had become so
|
||
|
numerous that a wealthy New Yorker, Colonel Heathcote by name, and a
|
||
|
man thoroughly acquainted with his New England neighbor, undertook to
|
||
|
look after the Church-of-England men as unfortunate brethren of a
|
||
|
common faith. He appealed to the English Society for the
|
||
|
Propagating[k] of the Gospel in Foreign Parts to extend its missions
|
||
|
into Connecticut. He asked that Rector Muirson be stationed at Rye,
|
||
|
New York. Colonel Heathcote's idea was:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
to first plant the church securely in Westchester on the border of
|
||
|
Connecticut; and secondly, from that point to act upon
|
||
|
Connecticut, which was wholly Puritan and withal not a little
|
||
|
bigoted and uncharitable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naturally, whatever of tolerance the Connecticut people might have
|
||
|
shown two traveling preachers would turn to opposition when they saw
|
||
|
the deliberate and well-organized attempt of this proselyting church,
|
||
|
this old enemy of their forefathers, to invade their colony and
|
||
|
undermine their own Establishment. Consequently, when, in company with
|
||
|
Mr. Muirson, Colonel Heathcote began itinerating through southwestern
|
||
|
Connecticut, ministers and magistrates frequently opposed and
|
||
|
threatened them. The people occasionally welcomed them. They did not
|
||
|
object to hear and to criticise the strangers, and were sometimes
|
||
|
willing to have their good neighbors, if they chanced to be
|
||
|
Church-of-England men, enjoy the ministrations of these passing
|
||
|
visitors. In some places, however, the civil officers went so far as
|
||
|
to go about among the people, even from house to house, to dissuade
|
||
|
them from attending Mr. Muirson's services,[l] and, at Fairfield, the
|
||
|
meeting-house was closed lest it should be "defiled by idolatrous
|
||
|
worship and superstitious ceremonies." [79] The Episcopalians
|
||
|
themselves later acknowledged that, until 1709, they suffered little
|
||
|
persecution beyond "that of the tongue." [m] When they were not
|
||
|
permitted to organize churches, and were forced to pay taxes for the
|
||
|
support of Congregationalism, they complained bitterly to their
|
||
|
friends in England, and such oppression was listed among the many
|
||
|
other misdemeanors, which, at this time, were cited against the former
|
||
|
"dutiful colony of Connecticut."
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the schemes that Connecticut's enemies sought to carry out,
|
||
|
both for their own advancement, and as a proposed punishment for an
|
||
|
unruly colony, was a consolidation of the New England provinces under
|
||
|
a royal governor. This consolidation was approached when Governor
|
||
|
Fletcher of New York was appointed military chief of Connecticut. His
|
||
|
attempt, in 1693, to enforce his military authority over Connecticut
|
||
|
troops engaged in protecting the northern frontier, resulted in his
|
||
|
failure, and in his angry report to the home authorities of
|
||
|
Connecticut's insubordination and disloyalty. The colony at great
|
||
|
expense sent Major Fitz-John Winthrop to England to answer these
|
||
|
charges. He was successful in proving that Connecticut had not
|
||
|
exceeded her charter rights in her determination to appoint her own
|
||
|
military officers; that, in the wars, she had faithfully contributed
|
||
|
her share to the common defense; and moreover, that it was essential
|
||
|
that she should have the immediate control of her own troops to quell
|
||
|
internal disorder, should it arise, or to repel the sudden approach of
|
||
|
an enemy upon her exposed borders. Major Winthrop also succeeded in
|
||
|
having the colony's military obligations defined as the furnishing to
|
||
|
the common defense of a number of her militia, proportionate to her
|
||
|
population and to be under their own officers, and in war time a
|
||
|
further draft of a hundred and twenty men to be under the direct
|
||
|
control of the governor of New York. Notwithstanding the splendid
|
||
|
success of Winthrop's mission, this same charge of insubordination was
|
||
|
repeated in a long and later list of grievances against the colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The consolidation scheme was revived by the appointment of Governor
|
||
|
Bellomont over New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and
|
||
|
as military head of Rhode Island and Connecticut; but the governor
|
||
|
never tried to enforce his authority in Connecticut. In 1701 and 1706,
|
||
|
bills aiming at this proposed consolidation were introduced into
|
||
|
Parliament. That of 1701 failed of consideration from "shortness of
|
||
|
time and multiplicity of issues." In 1704 an attempt was made to
|
||
|
secure the appointment of a royal governor over Connecticut through an
|
||
|
Order in Council, but that body preferred to leave the matter to
|
||
|
Parliament,--hence the bill of 1706 favoring consolidation which
|
||
|
failed of passage in the Lords. It failed largely because of the
|
||
|
energy and eloquence of Sir Henry Ashurst, the Connecticut agent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sir Henry also succeeded in getting a copy of the various charges
|
||
|
against the colony, which were thought to justify annulling her
|
||
|
charter, and in obtaining a grant of time to submit them to the
|
||
|
Connecticut General Court for a reply. The colony found that it was
|
||
|
charged with encouraging violations of the Navigation Laws; with
|
||
|
holding in contempt the Courts of Admiralty; with failing to furnish
|
||
|
troops and to place them under officers of the Crown; with executing
|
||
|
capital punishment without any authority in her charter; with
|
||
|
encouraging manufactures, contrary to the known wishes of the Crown;
|
||
|
with irregular and unjust court proceedings; with treating
|
||
|
contumaciously the royal commissioners sent to settle the Mohegan land
|
||
|
controversy; with injustice to the Quakers; with forbidding services
|
||
|
of the Church of England; and with disallowing appeals to
|
||
|
England. These were the more important complaints. In behalf of the
|
||
|
colony, Sir Henry appeared before the Privy Council, and in able
|
||
|
argument showed that many of the charges were without foundation; that
|
||
|
some of the colony's acts which were complained of as unlawful were
|
||
|
well within her charter privileges; and that the decisions of her
|
||
|
courts, far from being illegal, had, in nearly every case, when
|
||
|
brought to the attention of the English government, been approved by
|
||
|
it. Further than this, the Connecticut agent obtained a stay in the
|
||
|
proceedings of the Mohegan case,[n] though it was soon reopened and
|
||
|
seriously menaced the colony until the settlement in her favor in
|
||
|
1743. In the famous Liveen or Hallam case, Connecticut opposed an
|
||
|
appeal to the Crown, because such an appeal would give the Privy
|
||
|
Council the right to interpret the charter and pass upon the colony
|
||
|
laws.[o] Though Sir Henry Ashurst had succeeded in having many of the
|
||
|
charges dropped, the danger had been so great to the colony that he
|
||
|
privately advised the government to conciliate the Crown by protesting
|
||
|
its immediate readiness to fulfill all military obligations, and, as a
|
||
|
further proof of loyalty, to repeal at once the old law of 1657
|
||
|
against heretics which Queen Anne had just annulled (October 11, 1705)
|
||
|
at the request of the Quakers. The General Court, as we have seen,
|
||
|
followed his advice, and repealed the law in so far as it concerned
|
||
|
Quakers. But this was not enough to satisfy other dissenters in the
|
||
|
colony. The Rev. John Talbot had arrived in England in 1706 to plead
|
||
|
in person [80] for an American bishop, and Colonel Heathcote in 1707
|
||
|
wrote [81] with respect to the Episcopalians in Connecticut that it
|
||
|
would be absolutely necessary to procure an order from the Queen
|
||
|
freeing the Church of England people from the established rates, or
|
||
|
they would always be so poor as to be dependent upon the Society for
|
||
|
Propagating the Gospel. He further asked the repeal of the law
|
||
|
whereby the Connecticut magistrates "refuse liberty of conscience to
|
||
|
those of the established (English) church." Colonel Heathcote adds
|
||
|
that it would not be much more than had been granted to the Quakers,
|
||
|
and that it "would be of the greatest service to the Church than can
|
||
|
at first sight be imagined."
|
||
|
|
||
|
So great was the importunity of the Connecticut Episcopalians, that,
|
||
|
in 1708, Governor Saltonstall wrote to England to disarm their
|
||
|
complaints against the colony. It looked as if religious discontent
|
||
|
might become a dangerous thing. Royal disfavor certainly would be. It
|
||
|
might be better to condone the lack of religious uniformity among a
|
||
|
few scattered dissenters, differing among themselves, and to endure
|
||
|
it,--obnoxious as it was,--than to suffer the loss of the Connecticut
|
||
|
charter. Moreover, this tendency to the spread of nonconformity might
|
||
|
be controlled by judicious legislation. Furthermore, it would be
|
||
|
politic to have upon the colony lawbook some relief for dissenters
|
||
|
from its Establishment similar to the English statutes relieving
|
||
|
nonconformists there from adherence to the Church of England. Hence
|
||
|
the Toleration Act, and, of necessity, the proviso in the act of the
|
||
|
following session of the General Court whereby it approved the
|
||
|
Saybrook Platform.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Toleration Act was of no benefit to Rogerine or Quaker, who by
|
||
|
their principles were forbidden to take the oath of allegiance that it
|
||
|
demanded. It was of little practical advantage to Baptist or
|
||
|
Episcopalian, but it was a move in the right direction. According to
|
||
|
its terms, dissenters, before the county courts, could qualify for
|
||
|
organization into distinct religious bodies by taking the oath of
|
||
|
fidelity to the crown, by denying transubstantiation and by declaring
|
||
|
their sober dissent from Congregationalism. They could have such
|
||
|
liberty, provided that it in no way worked to the detriment of the
|
||
|
church established in the colony,--that is, the law did not exclude
|
||
|
any dissenter "from paying any such (established) minister or town
|
||
|
dues as are or shall hereafter be due from him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At best, such toleration would provide a rigorous test of a
|
||
|
dissenter's sincerity. He would have nothing of worldly advantage to
|
||
|
gain and much to lose as a "come-outer" from the Establishment.
|
||
|
Social prestige would remain almost entirely within the state
|
||
|
church. It would be to a man's pecuniary advantage to stay within its
|
||
|
fold. Without it, he would be doubly taxed; by the State for the
|
||
|
support of Congregationalism, by his conscience to maintain the church
|
||
|
it approved. If he lapsed in duty toward his own, he would easily
|
||
|
become a marked man among his few co-religionists. If he failed to
|
||
|
attend regularly the church of his choice, the ancient law of the
|
||
|
colony would hale him before the judge for neglect of public worship,
|
||
|
and fine him for the benefit of a form of religion which he viewed
|
||
|
with aversion as unscriptural, if not also anti-Christian. In a new
|
||
|
and thinly settled country where life was hard and money scarce, this
|
||
|
double taxation was of itself almost prohibitive of dissent. And yet
|
||
|
this Toleration Act, notwithstanding its meagre terms, and which,
|
||
|
considered in the light of the twentieth century, implies one of the
|
||
|
worst forms of tyranny, was a measure of undreamed-of and dangerous
|
||
|
liberality if looked at from the point of view of the sixteenth
|
||
|
century, or even from that of many princes of the eighteenth. The very
|
||
|
summer following the passage of this act saw London crowded with
|
||
|
refugees from the religious tyranny of the Palatinate, whose Elector
|
||
|
was determined to force the people, after over a hundred and thirty
|
||
|
years of Protestantism, back to Rome because he was himself a
|
||
|
Romanist, and IMPERII RELIGIO RELIGIO POPULI. The Connecticut
|
||
|
law-makers had a good deal of faith in this same principle, though
|
||
|
they never had resorted, and did not wish to do so, to extreme
|
||
|
penalties to secure religious uniformity. The solidarity of the people
|
||
|
and the geographical position of the colony had contributed largely to
|
||
|
a uniform church life. Far from the usual ports of entry, the early
|
||
|
dissenters had for the most part passed her by. But at the beginning
|
||
|
of the eighteenth century, watching the signs of the times elsewhere,
|
||
|
and aware of the cosmopolitan element creeping into her population,
|
||
|
the Connecticut authorities were ready to admit that soon it might be
|
||
|
necessary to modify somewhat the old dictum that the religion of the
|
||
|
government must be the religion of all its people. England had seen
|
||
|
fit to make such modification, and her test of roughly twenty years
|
||
|
had shown conclusively that religious toleration and civil disorders
|
||
|
were not synonymous, as had formerly been believed. The Connecticut
|
||
|
colony had no particular desire to follow in England's steps. If it
|
||
|
had, after-history would have associated it in men's minds less with
|
||
|
the Puritanical narrowness of New England and more with such tolerance
|
||
|
as was shown in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Rhode Island. Tolerance,
|
||
|
Connecticut thought, might work well under a government like that of
|
||
|
England, but her leaders were not convinced that it would be
|
||
|
altogether wise for their own land. They, therefore, had preferred to
|
||
|
postpone as long as they could the possible evil day. Now that
|
||
|
toleration could no longer be delayed, they had admitted it most
|
||
|
guardedly, and at once had proceeded to strengthen their own church
|
||
|
foundations by the establishment of the Saybrook system of
|
||
|
ecclesiastical government.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] "For the ease of such as soberly dissent from the way of worship
|
||
|
and ministrie established by the ancient laws of this government, and
|
||
|
still continuing, that if any such persons shall at the countie court
|
||
|
of the countie they belong to, qualifie themselves according to an act
|
||
|
made in the first year of the late King William and Queen Mary,
|
||
|
granting libertie of worshipping God in a way separate from that which
|
||
|
is by law established, they shall enjoy the same libertie and
|
||
|
privilege in any place in this colonie without let, or hindrance or
|
||
|
molestation whatsoever. Provided always that nothing herein shall be
|
||
|
construed to the prejudice of the rights and privileges of the
|
||
|
churches as by law established or to the _excluding any person from
|
||
|
paying any such minister or town dues as are or shall hereafter be due
|
||
|
from him_." (The italics are mine. M. L. G.)
|
||
|
_Conn. Col. Rec_. v, 50.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Failure to comply with the law was punished by a heavy fine, and in
|
||
|
default thereof, by heavy bail or by imprisonment until the time for
|
||
|
trial.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] Later in 1707, Mr. Wightman and Mr. John Bulkley,
|
||
|
Congregationalist minister of Colchester, by permission of the
|
||
|
authorities, who were troubled by the rumor that the Baptists and
|
||
|
Seventh-day Baptists were about to begin proselytizing in earnest in
|
||
|
Connecticut, entered into a public debate as to the merits of their
|
||
|
respective religious beliefs. Not much came of it to the
|
||
|
Congregationalists, who had expected to see Mr. Wightman's arguments
|
||
|
annihilated, while the Baptists had a fine opportunity to publish
|
||
|
broadcast their views. Such a discussion was steadily forbidden Browne
|
||
|
and Barrowe in 1590. A century had developed sufficient toleration to
|
||
|
make interesting, as well as permissible, a public discussion of
|
||
|
divergent beliefs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] The report to the Commission of Trade and Foreign Plantations made
|
||
|
in 1680 gave:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"26 Answ. Our people in this colony are some strict Congregational
|
||
|
men, others more large Congregational men, and some moderate
|
||
|
Presbyterians, and take the Congregational men of both sorts, they are
|
||
|
the greatest part of the people in the colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There are 4 or 5 Seven-day men, in our Colony, and about so many
|
||
|
Quakers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"17 Answ. (1) Great care is taken for the instruction of ye people in
|
||
|
ye X'tian religion, by ministers catechising of them and preaching to
|
||
|
them twice every Sabbath daye and sometimes on lecture dayes; and so
|
||
|
by masters of famalayes instructing and catechising the children and
|
||
|
servants being so required by law. In our corporation there are
|
||
|
twenty-six towns and twenty-one churches. There is in every town in
|
||
|
the colony a settled minister except in two towns newly begun."--This
|
||
|
was equivalent to one minister to 460 persons, or to about 90
|
||
|
families.--_Conn. Col. Rec._ iii, 300. Trumbull's _Hist. of
|
||
|
Conn._ i, 397.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] Humphrey Norton in the New Haven colony was whipped severely,
|
||
|
burnt in the hand with the letter "H" for heretic, and banished for
|
||
|
being a Quaker. The next year, for testifying against the treatment of
|
||
|
Norton, William Bond, Mary Dyer, and Mary Whetherstead were
|
||
|
apprehended by the same authorities, and forcibly carried back to
|
||
|
Rhode Island.--H. Rogers, _Mary Dyer_, p. 36. For the Quaker Laws
|
||
|
of both colonies see Note 69.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] The notorious William Ledra of later Massachusetts fame was one of
|
||
|
these.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] This year a law was passed requiring every person to carefully
|
||
|
apply himself on the Lord's day to the duties of religion. See _New
|
||
|
Haven Hist. Soc. Papers_, ii, 399.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] "Articles of Misdemeanor vs. Connecticut, July, 1665. "They deny
|
||
|
to the inhabitants the exercise of the religion of the church of
|
||
|
England; arbitrarily fining those who refuse to come to their
|
||
|
congregational assemblies."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Law Book of Conn, printed 1670. "It is ordered that when the ministry
|
||
|
of the word is established according to the Gospel, throughout this
|
||
|
Colony, every person shall duly resort and attend thereunto
|
||
|
respectively upon the Lord's day, upon public fast days and days of
|
||
|
thanksgiving as are generally kept by appointment of authority; and
|
||
|
any person ... without necessary cause, withdrawing himself from the
|
||
|
public ministry of the word, he shall forfeit for his absence from
|
||
|
every such meeting five shillings."--_Conn. Col. Rec_. iii, 294.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] They reported that the colony would "not hinder any from enjoying
|
||
|
the sacraments and using the common prayer book, provided that they
|
||
|
hinder not the maintenance of the public minister."--Hutchinson,
|
||
|
_Hist, of Mass._, p. 412.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dr. Beardsley suggests that influential citizens may have assured them
|
||
|
that the laws would be modified to accommodate
|
||
|
Episcopalians.--E. E. Beardsley, _Hist. of the Episcopal Church_,
|
||
|
i, p. 116.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] Population in 1656, 800; 1665, 9000; 1670-80, 10,000-14,000; 1689,
|
||
|
17,000-20,000; 1730, approximately, 50,000; 1756, 130,000; 1761,
|
||
|
145,000; 1776, 200,000; 1780, 237,946--F. B. Dexter, Estimates of the
|
||
|
Population of the American Colonies, in _American Antiquarian
|
||
|
Society Proceedings_, 2d series, vol. 5.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] Up to 1680, there was only one Episcopal clergyman in New England,
|
||
|
Father Jordan, of Portsmouth, N. H. There was an Episcopal clergyman
|
||
|
at the fort in New York, and outside of Virginia and Maryland only two
|
||
|
others in North America. There were a few Episcopal families in
|
||
|
Stratford in 1690.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] Or "Propagation,"--as it is most frequently called.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] Mr. Muirson's report after his first visit to Stratford was that
|
||
|
he had had "a very numerous congregation both forenoon and afternoon."
|
||
|
He continues, "I baptized about twenty-four persons the same
|
||
|
day.... "The Independents threatened me and all who were instrumental
|
||
|
in bringing me thither, with prison and hard usage. They are very much
|
||
|
incensed to see the Church (Rome's sister, as they ignorantly call
|
||
|
her) is likely to gain ground among 'em, and use all stratagem they
|
||
|
can invent to defeat my enterprise,"--_Church Doc. Conn._, i,
|
||
|
p. 17.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colonel Heathcote wrote, "The Ministers are very uneasy at our coming
|
||
|
amongst them, and abundance of pains were taken to persuade and
|
||
|
terrify the people from hearing Mr. Muirson, but it availed
|
||
|
nothing;"--not even the threat to jail the rector for holding services
|
||
|
contrary to the colony law which the magistrates had read to him at
|
||
|
his lodgings.--_Church Doc. Conn._, i, p. 20.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] "We received no persecution than that of the tongue until
|
||
|
December, 1709."--_Ibid._, i, p. 42.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] The Mohegan Indians had sold certain lands to the colony in 1659,
|
||
|
Major John Mason acting as agent. These lands had been conveyed to
|
||
|
English proprietors. John Mason, the major's grandson, representing
|
||
|
his own and other interests, pretended that both his grandfather and
|
||
|
the Indians had been overreached and wronged by the colony in the
|
||
|
transaction; that the colony had taken more land than agreed upon from
|
||
|
the Indians, and had also seized some that belonged by private
|
||
|
purchase to the Mason heirs. For the sake of peace and the credit of
|
||
|
magnanimity, the government offered to the chief, Owaneco, who
|
||
|
represented the Indians, to pay them again for the land, but Mason and
|
||
|
his party resolved to prevent such a settlement. One of them went to
|
||
|
England with a false report of extortion practiced upon the savages,
|
||
|
and a commission was sent out to investigate. Connecticut was willing
|
||
|
to answer the commissioners if they sought facts for a report, but
|
||
|
when they assumed the right to decide the question judicially, the
|
||
|
colony could only protest against their pretensions. The commissioners
|
||
|
adjudged the land in dispute to the Indians and the Mason party, and
|
||
|
charged the colony nearly L600 and costs. The colony appealed to the
|
||
|
Crown and won the case in 1743; but it was again appealed by Mason,
|
||
|
and in this fashion dragged along until after the Revolution, when the
|
||
|
Indians were content to accept the reservation allotted by the State
|
||
|
to them.--C. W. Bowen, _Boundary Disputes_, pp. 25-27.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[o] John Liveen of New London in 1689 left property to the "ministry
|
||
|
of the town." Major Fitz-John Winthrop and his brother-in-law Edward
|
||
|
Palmes were executors. Major Winthrop was absent with the army on the
|
||
|
northern frontier, but made no objection to the probating of the will
|
||
|
at a special court in New London in 1689. This probating Major Palmes,
|
||
|
a former friend of Andros, declared void, since Andros had ruled that
|
||
|
all wills should be probated at Boston. Upon special application of
|
||
|
Mrs. Liveen, in 1690, the county court probated a copy of the will,
|
||
|
since Palmes held the original. To this probating the latter also
|
||
|
objected on the ground that, though the court had been again
|
||
|
legalized, the "ministry" referred to must be that recognized by the
|
||
|
English law and not the Congregational ministry of the town,--the only
|
||
|
one then existing. The colonial courts decided against him, and John
|
||
|
and Nicholas Hallam, the widow's sons by a former marriage, virtually
|
||
|
accepted the terms of the will and the court's decision by being
|
||
|
parties to the sale of a portion of the Liveen estate, the ship
|
||
|
"Liveen." The estate could not be wholly settled; so the town
|
||
|
continued to receive a regular dividend until after the widow's death
|
||
|
in 1698. Then the sons attempted to contest the will. The Court of
|
||
|
Assistants confirmed the proceedings of the lower courts. Not
|
||
|
satisfied with this decision, Nicholas Hallam went to England in
|
||
|
1700-1702, and was allowed to plead his case before the Privy
|
||
|
Council. Sir Henry Ashurst held that the charter gave the right of
|
||
|
final decision, but the Lords Commissioners of Trade and Plantations
|
||
|
thought otherwise, and it looked as if Hallam was to win his case,
|
||
|
when he was ordered to return to America and, because of
|
||
|
technicalities, to retake all the testimony. In 1704, because of his
|
||
|
acknowledged signature in the sale of the "Liveen," the suit was
|
||
|
decided in favor of the colony.--F. M. Caulkins, _Hist. of New
|
||
|
London_, pp. 222-228.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE FIRST VICTORY FOR DISSENT
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ye shall not therefore oppress one another; but thou shalt fear
|
||
|
thy God; for I am the Lord your God.--Leviticus, xxv, 17.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The dissenters found the terms of the Toleration Act too narrow; the
|
||
|
conditions under which they could enjoy their own church life too
|
||
|
onerous. Consequently, they almost immediately began to agitate for a
|
||
|
larger measure of liberty, and persisted in their demands for almost
|
||
|
twenty years before obtaining any decided success.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Foremost among the dissenters pressing for greater liberty, for
|
||
|
exemption from taxes for the benefit of Congregational worship, and
|
||
|
for the same privileges in the support of their own churches as the
|
||
|
members of the Connecticut Establishment enjoyed, were the
|
||
|
Episcopalians. The year following the passage of the Toleration Act
|
||
|
witnessed the first persecution of these people beyond that of tongue
|
||
|
and pen. Fines and imprisonments began in earnest and were continued,
|
||
|
more or less frequently, for many years. Even as late as 1748, the
|
||
|
Episcopalians of Reading were fined for reading the Prayer-book and
|
||
|
for working on public fast-days. Still later, in 1762, there was
|
||
|
occasional oppression, as in the case of the New Milford
|
||
|
Episcopalians. They desired to build a church, but had to wait for the
|
||
|
county court to approve the site chosen. The court was averse to the
|
||
|
building of the church, and accordingly was a long time in complying
|
||
|
with this technicality. Meanwhile, the Episcopalians could not build,
|
||
|
neither would they attend Congregational worship, and the magistrates,
|
||
|
refusing to recognize the services held in private houses, fined them
|
||
|
for absence from public worship. This treatment was abandoned as soon
|
||
|
as it became known that the rector had counseled his people to submit,
|
||
|
as he intended to send a copy of the court's proceedings to England to
|
||
|
be passed upon as to their legality. It was such petty, yet costly,
|
||
|
persecution as this that became frequent after 1709, and from which
|
||
|
the Episcopalians were determined to escape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These Church-of-England men were increasing in numbers in the colony,
|
||
|
and, at the passage of the Toleration Act, were quite hopeful that the
|
||
|
Rev. John Talbot's mission to England to secure a bishop for America
|
||
|
would prove successful. Although he was not successful in obtaining
|
||
|
the episcopate, his mission received so much encouragement from those
|
||
|
in high places that, upon Talbot's return, a home for the prospective
|
||
|
bishop was purchased, in 1712, in Burlington, New Jersey. It was known
|
||
|
that Queen Anne was much interested in the proposed bishopric, and
|
||
|
letters were exchanged between the leaders of the movement in England
|
||
|
and the prominent Independent clergymen in the colonies, in order to
|
||
|
sound the state of public opinion. A bill for the American expansion
|
||
|
of the Church of England, as a branch to be severed from the
|
||
|
jurisdiction of the Bishop of London and to be planted in the colonies
|
||
|
under a bishop with full ecclesiastical powers, was prepared and was
|
||
|
ready for presentation in Parliament when the Queen's death, August 1,
|
||
|
1714, caused its withdrawal, and felled the hopes of Churchmen. George
|
||
|
I had too many temporal affairs to occupy his mind to burden himself
|
||
|
with the intricate rights, powers, and privileges of a new episcopate,
|
||
|
sought by a few colonials scattered through the American
|
||
|
wilderness;--too many vexatious secular affairs in the colonies, and
|
||
|
too heavy war-clouds darkening his European horizon. The Society for
|
||
|
the Propagation of the Gospel, in 1715, made one futile attempt to
|
||
|
interest the king, and then gave up any hope of the immediate
|
||
|
appointment of an American bishop.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the Connecticut colony, the Episcopalians had so increased that, in
|
||
|
1718, there was in Stratford a church of one hundred baptized persons,
|
||
|
thirty-six communicants, and a congregation that frequently numbered
|
||
|
between two and three hundred people. They were ministered to by
|
||
|
traveling missionaries of the Society for the Propagation of the
|
||
|
Gospel. When these Stratford people appealed to the Society for a
|
||
|
settled minister, they complained that "there is not any government in
|
||
|
America but has our settled Church and minister, but this of
|
||
|
Connecticut." [82] Still all the Society could then do was to send a
|
||
|
missionary priest, and to keep alive in England, among the powerful
|
||
|
Church party there, so keen an interest that it would seize upon the
|
||
|
first opportunity to use its great influence and to compel the English
|
||
|
government to force the Connecticut authorities to comply with the
|
||
|
demands of the colonial Churchmen for the unrestricted enjoyment of
|
||
|
their religion. Such an interest was kept up by the regular, full
|
||
|
reports which the Society required of all its missionaries. And these
|
||
|
reports, be it remembered, were expected to contain news of any kind,
|
||
|
and of everything that happened in the colony of Connecticut, or
|
||
|
elsewhere, that could possibly be turned to advantage in influencing
|
||
|
the home authorities, in pushing the interests of the English
|
||
|
Establishment in America, and in strengthening its membership
|
||
|
there. Although, after the death of Queen Anne, the king's
|
||
|
indifference checked the movement for the American episcopate, its
|
||
|
friends did not abandon it, and a persistent effort for its success
|
||
|
was soon begun. One of its prime movers was the Rev. George Pigott,
|
||
|
missionary to Stratford, Connecticut, in 1722.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Under Mr. Pigott, the Church of England in Connecticut made a most
|
||
|
encouraging and important gain, when, in 1722, Timothy Cutler, Rector
|
||
|
of Yale College, and six of his associates proclaimed their
|
||
|
dissatisfaction with Congregationalism, or, as they termed it, "the
|
||
|
Presbyterianism" of the Connecticut established church. They asserted
|
||
|
that "some of us doubt the validity, and the rest are more fully
|
||
|
persuaded of the invalidity of the Presbyterian ordination in
|
||
|
opposition to the Episcopal."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Three of these men remained in "doubt," and continued within the
|
||
|
Congregational church.[a] Four of them, Rector Timothy Cutler, Tutor
|
||
|
Daniel Brown, Rev. James Wetmore of North Haven, and Rev. Samuel
|
||
|
Johnson of West Haven, went to England to receive Episcopal
|
||
|
ordination.[b] The story of their conversion is to Churchmen an
|
||
|
illustration of the scriptural command, "Cast your bread upon the
|
||
|
waters and it will return to you after many days." The Connecticut
|
||
|
authorities had chosen the Rev. Timothy Cutler because of his
|
||
|
eloquence, and had sent him to Stratford to counteract the early
|
||
|
successes of the Church-of-England missionary priests, who were at
|
||
|
work among the people there. Later, in 1719, Cutler, because of his
|
||
|
abilities, was chosen President, or Rector, of Yale, as, in the early
|
||
|
days, the head of the college was called. The seeds of doubt had
|
||
|
entered his mind during his Stratford pastorate. He and his associates
|
||
|
found many books in the college library that, instead of lessening,
|
||
|
increased their doubts. After presiding for three years over the
|
||
|
greatest institution of learning in the colony, which had for its
|
||
|
object the preparation of men for service in civil office and, even
|
||
|
more in those days, for service in religion, Rector Cutler, together
|
||
|
with his associates, announced their change of faith. The colony was
|
||
|
taken by storm, and there spread throughout its length and breadth,
|
||
|
and throughout New England also, a great fear that Episcopacy had made
|
||
|
a _coup d'etat_ and was shortly to become the established church
|
||
|
of her colonies as well as of England herself. Naturally, among the
|
||
|
colonial Churchmen, it excited the largest hope "of a glorious
|
||
|
revolution among the ecclesiastics of the country, because the most
|
||
|
distinguished gentlemen among them are resolutely bent to promote her
|
||
|
(the Church's) welfare and embrace her baptism and discipline, and if
|
||
|
the leaders fall in there is no doubt to be made of the people." [83]
|
||
|
|
||
|
These hopes were in a degree confirmed by the conversion of one or two
|
||
|
more ministers, and by the Yale men that the classes of 1723, 1724,
|
||
|
1726, 1729, and 1733 gave to Episcopacy. By the impetus of these
|
||
|
conversions, within a generation, "the Episcopal Church under a native
|
||
|
born minister had penetrated every town, had effected lodgment in
|
||
|
every Puritan stronghold, and had drawn into her membership large
|
||
|
numbers of that sober-minded, self-contained, tenacious people who
|
||
|
constitute the membership of New England to-day."[84] After the
|
||
|
conversions of 1722, the movement for the apostolic episcopate in
|
||
|
America became more determined, and never wholly ceased until the
|
||
|
consecration of Samuel Seabury as bishop of Connecticut in 1784.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A decided change took place in Connecticut's policy upon the death of
|
||
|
Governor Saltonstall in 1724, and under his successor in office,
|
||
|
former Lieutenant-Governor Joseph Talcott. The new governor was a
|
||
|
Hartford man, more liberal in his ecclesiastical opinions and opposed
|
||
|
to severe measures against dissenters. Hardly had Governor Talcott
|
||
|
taken office when Edmund Gibson, Bishop of London, wrote him, urging
|
||
|
in behalf of the Episcopalians a remittance of ecclesiastical
|
||
|
taxes. "If I ask anything," wrote the Bishop, "inconsistent with the
|
||
|
laws of the country, I beg pardon; but if not, I hope my request for
|
||
|
favors for the Church of England will not appear unreasonable." The
|
||
|
Bishop accompanied his letter with a paper, a copy of a circular
|
||
|
letter to the different colonial governors, in which, among other
|
||
|
matters relating to his clergy, he professed his readiness to
|
||
|
discipline them if necessary "in order to contribute to the peace and
|
||
|
honor of the government." This proposal was due, in part, to the
|
||
|
scandalous reputation in New England which the southern settled clergy
|
||
|
bore. Because of this reputation, the Society for the Propagation of
|
||
|
the Gospel had from the first made a special point of the morals of
|
||
|
their missionary priests. Indeed, these priests, themselves, had
|
||
|
warned the Society that, if it expected any returns from its missions
|
||
|
in New England, it would have to take great pains to send out a
|
||
|
superior class of men. Governor Talcott replied to Bishop Gibson,
|
||
|
under date of December 1, 1725,[c] "that there is but one Church of
|
||
|
England minister in this colony, [d] and the church with him have the
|
||
|
same protection as the rest of our Churches and are under no
|
||
|
constraint to contribute to the support of any other minister." After
|
||
|
reflecting upon the number and character of the few persons in another
|
||
|
town or two "who claim exemption from rates," Governor Talcott quotes
|
||
|
the colony law for the support of the ministry in every town, and adds
|
||
|
that, upon the death of an incumbent, the townspeople "are quickly
|
||
|
supplied by persons of our own communion, educated in our public
|
||
|
schools of Learning; which through divine blessing afforded us, we
|
||
|
have sufficiency of those who are both learned and exemplary in their
|
||
|
lives." This was a polite way of informing the bishop that Connecticut
|
||
|
preferred to do without his missionaries. It was one thing for the
|
||
|
tolerant governor to grant exemption from Congregational taxes in the
|
||
|
case of an influential church like that of Stratford, and quite
|
||
|
another to extend the same toleration to every scattered handful of
|
||
|
people who might claim to be members of the Church of England, and who
|
||
|
might welcome the coming of her missionary priests.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Episcopalians, however, were not content to rest their privileges
|
||
|
upon their numerical power in each little town, or upon the personal
|
||
|
favor of the magistrates. They therefore continued their agitation for
|
||
|
exemption from support of Congregationalism and from fines for
|
||
|
neglecting its public worship. Under the lead of the wardens and
|
||
|
vestry of Fairfield, they obtained favor with the General Court in
|
||
|
1727,[e] when an act was passed, "providing how taxes levied upon
|
||
|
members of the Church of England for the support of the Gospel should
|
||
|
be disposed of," and exempting said members from paying any taxes "for
|
||
|
the building of meeting houses for the present established Churches of
|
||
|
this government." The law further declared that if within the parish
|
||
|
bounds--
|
||
|
|
||
|
there be a Society of y'e Church of England, where there is a
|
||
|
person in orders, according to y'e Canons of y'e Church of
|
||
|
England, settled and abiding among them and performing divine
|
||
|
service so near to any person that hath declared himself of y'e
|
||
|
Church of England, that he can conveniently and doth attend y'e
|
||
|
public worship there, then the collectors, having first
|
||
|
indifferently levied y'e tax, as aforesaid, shall deliver y'e
|
||
|
taxes collected of such persons declaring themselves, and
|
||
|
attending as aforesaid, unto y'e minister of y'e Church of
|
||
|
England, living near unto such persons; which minister shall have
|
||
|
power to receive and recover y'e same, in order to his support in
|
||
|
y'e place assigned to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But if such proportion of any taxes be not sufficient in any
|
||
|
Society of y'e Church of England to support y'e incumbent there,
|
||
|
then such Society may levy and collect of them who profess and
|
||
|
attend as aforesaid, greater taxes, at their own discretion, to
|
||
|
y'e support of their ministers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And the parishoners of y'e Church of England, attending as
|
||
|
aforesaid, are hereby excused from paying any taxes for y'e
|
||
|
building meeting houses for y'e present Established Churches of
|
||
|
this government.[85]
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the passing of this law, the magistrates contented themselves
|
||
|
with occasional unfair treatment of the weaker churches. They
|
||
|
sometimes haggled over the interpretation of the terms "near" and
|
||
|
"conveniently" as found in the law. They objected to the appointment
|
||
|
of one missionary to several stations or towns. They also did not
|
||
|
always enforce upon the Presbyterian collectors strict accuracy in
|
||
|
making out their lists, and when the Episcopalians sought redress for
|
||
|
unreturned taxes or unjust fines, they found their lawsuits blocked in
|
||
|
the courts. The magistrates, also, showed almost exclusive preference
|
||
|
for Congregationalists as bondsmen for strangers settling in the
|
||
|
towns, while the courts continued to frequently refuse or to delay the
|
||
|
approval of sites chosen for the erection of Episcopal churches.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally, there was a certain amount of political and social ostracism
|
||
|
directed against Churchmen. A notable attempt to defraud the
|
||
|
Episcopalians of a due share of the school money, derived from the
|
||
|
sale of public lands and from the emission of public bills, was
|
||
|
defeated in 1738 by a spirited protest, setting forth the illegality
|
||
|
of the proceeding, the probable indignation of the King at such
|
||
|
treatment of his good subjects and brethren in the faith, and by
|
||
|
pointing to the fact, as recently shown by a test case in
|
||
|
Massachusetts, that the Connecticut Establishment itself could not
|
||
|
exist without the special consent of the King. [86] The petition was
|
||
|
signed by six hundred and thirty-six male inhabitants of the
|
||
|
colony. They asserted in their protest that they had a share in equity
|
||
|
derived from the charter; that they bore their share of the expenses
|
||
|
of the government; and that the teaching of the Church of England made
|
||
|
just as good citizens as did that of the Presbyterian Church. The
|
||
|
public lands, from the sale of which the school money was derived,
|
||
|
were those along the Housatonic river. The money was appropriated
|
||
|
according to a law enacted in 1732 which distributed it among the
|
||
|
older towns as a reward for good schools. But, in 1738, the
|
||
|
legislature passed a bill by which a majority vote of the town or
|
||
|
parish could divert the money to the support of "the gospel ministry
|
||
|
as by law in the colony established." Naturally this new law operated
|
||
|
against all dissenters, who, equally anxious with the
|
||
|
Congregationalists to have good schools, were an ignored minority
|
||
|
whenever the latter chose to vote the money to the support of their
|
||
|
church. As a result of this spirited protest of the Episcopalians, the
|
||
|
enactment of 1738 was repealed two years later "because of
|
||
|
misunderstanding." Notwithstanding such hardships as the Episcopalians
|
||
|
suffered in Connecticut, their own writers declare that, at this
|
||
|
period of colonial history, the Churchmen in Connecticut had less to
|
||
|
complain of than their co-religionists in New York and in the southern
|
||
|
colonies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While the Episcopalians were agitating for a larger liberty than that
|
||
|
granted by the Toleration Act, the other dissenters, Rogerines,
|
||
|
Quakers, and Baptists, were not idle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The efforts of the Rogerines were marked more by violence than by
|
||
|
success. They had become less fanatic, and persecution had died away
|
||
|
during the first ten years following the passage of the Toleration
|
||
|
Act. All might have gone smoothly had they not suddenly stirred
|
||
|
Governor Saltonstall to renewed dislike, the magistrates to fresh
|
||
|
alarm, and the people to great contempt and indignation. This they
|
||
|
accomplished by a sort of mortuary tribute to their leader, John
|
||
|
Rogers, who died in 1721. This tribute took the form of renewed zeal,
|
||
|
and was marked by a revival of some of their most obnoxious
|
||
|
practices. The Rogerines determined to break up the observance of the
|
||
|
Puritan Sabbath. Immediately, an "Act for the Better Detecting and
|
||
|
more effectual Punishment of Prophaneness and Immorality" was
|
||
|
passed. It was especially directed against the Rogerines. Its most
|
||
|
striking characteristic was that it changed the policy of the
|
||
|
government from the time-honored Anglo-Saxon theory that every man is
|
||
|
innocent until proved guilty, to the doctrine that a man, accused,
|
||
|
must be guilty until proved innocent. In so oft-recurring a charge as
|
||
|
that of being absent from public worship, it became lawful to exact
|
||
|
fines unless the accused could prove before a magistrate that he had
|
||
|
been present. But this first act did not dampen sufficiently the
|
||
|
renewed zeal of the Rogerines, and for two years there was a
|
||
|
continuance of sharp legislation to reduce their disorderliness. They
|
||
|
were fined five shillings for leaving their houses on Sunday unless to
|
||
|
attend the orthodox worship, and twenty shillings for gathering in
|
||
|
meeting-houses without the consent of the ministers. They were given a
|
||
|
month, or less, in the house of correction, and at their own expense
|
||
|
for board, for each offense of unruly or noisy behavior on Sunday near
|
||
|
any meeting-house; for unlawful travel or behavior on that day; and
|
||
|
for refusal to pay fines assessed for breaking any of the colony's
|
||
|
ecclesiastical laws. These laws [87] were enforced one Sunday in 1725
|
||
|
against a company of Rogerines who were going quietly on their way
|
||
|
through Norwich to attend services in Lebanon. The outburst of
|
||
|
religious fervor spent itself in two or three years. Governor Talcott
|
||
|
did not believe in strong repressive measures, and it was soon
|
||
|
conceded that the ignoring of their eccentricities, if kept within
|
||
|
reasonable bounds, was the most efficient way to discourage the
|
||
|
Rogerines. Summarizing the influence of this sect, we find that they
|
||
|
contributed nothing definite to the slow development of religious
|
||
|
toleration in Connecticut. If anything, their fanaticism hindered its
|
||
|
growth, and they gained little for themselves and nothing for the
|
||
|
cause. As the years went on and their little sect were permitted to
|
||
|
indulge their peculiar notions, and the props of the State were not
|
||
|
weakened nor the purity of religion vitally assailed, the Rogerines
|
||
|
contributed their mite towards convincing mankind, and the Connecticut
|
||
|
people in particular, that brethren of different creeds and religious
|
||
|
practices might live together in security and harmony without danger
|
||
|
to the civil peace.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the seventeen years that Governor Talcott held office, 1724-41,
|
||
|
the life of the colony was marked by its notable expansion through the
|
||
|
settlement of new towns, [f] and by the dexterity with which its
|
||
|
foreign affairs--its relations to England and its boundary disputes
|
||
|
with its neighbors--were conducted. The last dragged on for years,
|
||
|
calling for several expensive commissions and causing much
|
||
|
confusion. The Massachusetts line was determined in 1713; that of
|
||
|
Rhode Island in 1728; and that of New York in 1735. Connecticut, in
|
||
|
all these cases, had to be wary lest the attempts to settle these
|
||
|
disputed claims should weary, antagonize, or anger the King.[88] Many
|
||
|
of the old charges were renewed, and Connecticut was no longer
|
||
|
regarded as a "dutiful" colony, but rather as one altogether too
|
||
|
independent, from whom it might be wise to wrest her charter,
|
||
|
subjecting her to a royal governor. As early as 1715, her colonial
|
||
|
agent had been advised to procure a peaceable surrender of the
|
||
|
charter. To this proposal, Governor Saltonstall had returned a
|
||
|
courteous and dignified refusal. But the danger was always cropping
|
||
|
up. Governor Talcott's English official correspondence is full of
|
||
|
details concerning Connecticut's increasing anxiety concerning the
|
||
|
attitude and the decisions of the home government; over the dangers
|
||
|
consequent to her institutions or to her charter. It was repeatedly
|
||
|
suggested that that charter should be surrendered, modified in favor
|
||
|
of the King's supervision, or annulled. In the Governor's letters, one
|
||
|
follows the intricacies of the boundary disputes, of the complicated
|
||
|
Mohegan case, and sounds the dangers to the colony from the
|
||
|
disposition and decisions of the Crown.[89]
|
||
|
|
||
|
One case in particular demands a passing consideration because of its
|
||
|
far-reaching effects, and because it paralleled in time the
|
||
|
legislation in the colony which broadened the Toleration Act. This was
|
||
|
the famous case of John Winthrop against his brother-in-law, Thomas
|
||
|
Lechmere, to recover real estate left by the elder Winthrop to his son
|
||
|
and daughter. The suit brought up the whole question of land entail in
|
||
|
Connecticut, and, with it, the possibility of an economic and social
|
||
|
revolution in the colony which would have been the death-blow to its
|
||
|
prosperity. Winthrop, by appealing the case to England, brought
|
||
|
Connecticut into still greater disfavor, and risked the loss of the
|
||
|
charter, together with many special privileges in religion and
|
||
|
politics which the colony enjoyed through a liberal interpretation of
|
||
|
that instrument. In the course of the suit, the constitutional
|
||
|
relations of Crown and colony had to be threshed out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Winthrop's father died in 1717, when, according to Connecticut,
|
||
|
but not English, law of primogeniture, Winthrop received as eldest son
|
||
|
a double portion of his father's real estate, and his sister, Thomas
|
||
|
Lechmere's wife, the rest. Winthrop's brother-in-law was not a man
|
||
|
wholly to be trusted to deal justly with his wife's property; but
|
||
|
this, in itself, was a very small factor in the suit. Winthrop was at
|
||
|
variance with the Connecticut authorities, and was dissatisfied with
|
||
|
his share both of his father's property and of his uncle's, whose heir
|
||
|
he was. No matter how much his own personal interests might endanger
|
||
|
the colony, Winthrop resolved to have all the property due him as
|
||
|
eldest son and heir under English law. He appealed his case to
|
||
|
England, taking it directly from the local probate court, and ignoring
|
||
|
the Court of Assistants, where he might have obtained some
|
||
|
redress. Moreover, to influence the decision in his favor he included
|
||
|
in his list of grievances many of the old offenses charged against
|
||
|
Connecticut. He did this, even while acknowledging that the colonial
|
||
|
Intestate Act, framed in 1699,[90] was but the embodiment of custom
|
||
|
that had existed from the beginning of the colony. While this case
|
||
|
dragged on, it was again intimated to Connecticut that the surrender
|
||
|
of her charter, or at least the substitution of an explanatory
|
||
|
charter, might be an acceptable price for the royal confirmation of
|
||
|
her Intestate Law. Finally, Winthrop went to England, and was given a
|
||
|
private hearing, at which no representative of the colony was present.
|
||
|
As a result of this hearing, an order in Council was issued February
|
||
|
15, 1728, annulling the Connecticut Intestate Act as contrary to the
|
||
|
laws of England and as exceeding charter rights. Moreover, the
|
||
|
colonial authorities were ordered to measure off the lands, claimed by
|
||
|
Winthrop, and to restore them to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of course, it would take some time to obey the order. Meanwhile, if
|
||
|
this restitution were made, if the decision were submitted to, it
|
||
|
would invalidate so many land titles as to threaten the very existence
|
||
|
of Connecticut's economic structure. The colony sought the best legal
|
||
|
talent obtainable. For seventeen years Connecticut continued this
|
||
|
expensive lawsuit, urging always her willingness to comply in the case
|
||
|
of Winthrop, if only the decision be made a special one and not a
|
||
|
precedent,--if only an order in Council, or an act of Parliament,
|
||
|
would reinstate the Connecticut Intestate Law. Her agents in England
|
||
|
were instructed to demonstrate how well the colonial division of
|
||
|
property had worked, and that under the English division, where all
|
||
|
real estate went to the eldest son, if it were practiced in a new and
|
||
|
heavily wooded country, whose chief wealth was agriculture, the rental
|
||
|
of lands would yield income barely sufficient to pay taxes and repair
|
||
|
fences, and there could be no dowry for the daughters. A still further
|
||
|
result would be, that the younger sons would be driven into
|
||
|
manufacturing or forced to emigrate. In each case the Crown would
|
||
|
suffer, either by the loss of a colonial market for its manufactured
|
||
|
products, or by an impoverished colony, incapable of making
|
||
|
satisfactory returns to the royal treasury. [91] Moreover, in the case
|
||
|
of emigration, when Connecticut, lacking men to plow her fields, could
|
||
|
no longer produce the foodstuffs the surplus of which she sold to the
|
||
|
"trading parts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island" to supply the
|
||
|
fisheries, the Crown would feel still another baneful effect from its
|
||
|
attempt to enforce the English law of entail. Again, there was another
|
||
|
aspect from which to view the annulment of the Connecticut Intestate
|
||
|
Law. Its annulment would render worthless many past and present
|
||
|
land-titles. Creditors who had accepted land for debt would
|
||
|
suffer. Titles to lands, held by towns, as well as individuals, would
|
||
|
become subject to litigation; the whole colony would be plunged into
|
||
|
lawsuits, and its economic framework would be rent in pieces. The
|
||
|
Intestate Law was in accordance with custom throughout New
|
||
|
England. When in 1737 a similar statute in Massachusetts was sustained
|
||
|
by the King in Council in the appeal of Phillips _vs._ Savage,
|
||
|
Connecticut, notwithstanding the renewed and repeated suggestions to
|
||
|
give up her charter, took courage to continue the contest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During these years the question of the constitutional relation of
|
||
|
colony and Crown was frequently raised, and Connecticut was called
|
||
|
upon to show that her laws were not contrary to the laws of
|
||
|
England. She had to prove that they were not contrary to the common
|
||
|
law of England; nor to the statute law, existing at the founding of
|
||
|
the colony; nor to those acts of Parliament that had been expressly
|
||
|
extended to the colony. This was the most commonly held of the three
|
||
|
interpretations of "not contrary to the laws of England." The most
|
||
|
restricted interpretation was that all colonial laws higher than
|
||
|
by-laws, and "which even within that term touched upon matters already
|
||
|
provided for by English common or statute law, were illegal" or
|
||
|
"contrary." Under this interpretation, "the colonies were as towns
|
||
|
upon the royal demesne." Connecticut herself held to a third
|
||
|
construction, maintaining that, as her own charter nowhere stipulated
|
||
|
that her administration should accord with the civil, common, or
|
||
|
statute law of England, she, at least, among the colonies was free to
|
||
|
frame her own laws according to her own needs and desires. Holding to
|
||
|
this opinion, which had never been corrected by the Crown, Connecticut
|
||
|
maintained that "contrary to the laws of England" was limited in its
|
||
|
intent to contrary to those laws expressly designed by Parliament to
|
||
|
extend to the plantations. Moreover, Connecticut insisted that the
|
||
|
colonies were not to be compared to English towns, because, unlike the
|
||
|
towns, they had no representation in Parliament. The Connecticut
|
||
|
Intestate Act was opposed to the English law according to the first
|
||
|
two interpretations, but not according to the third. Further, the
|
||
|
Connecticut authorities felt that if the conditions which had given
|
||
|
rise to the law were fully realized in England, the apparent
|
||
|
insubordination of the colony would disappear in the light of the real
|
||
|
equity of the colonial statute. In Governor Talcott's letter, dated
|
||
|
November 3, 1729, under "The Case of Connecticut Stated," there is a
|
||
|
summary of the reasons why the colony hesitated to appeal directly to
|
||
|
Parliament for a confirmation of the Intestate Act. She was afraid of
|
||
|
exciting still greater disfavor by seeming to ask privileges in
|
||
|
addition to those already conferred upon her in her very liberal
|
||
|
charter. She was afraid of courting inquiry in regard to her
|
||
|
ecclesiastical laws, her laws relating to the collegiate school, and
|
||
|
also sundry civil laws. The colony feared that the result of such an
|
||
|
investigation would be that she would thereafter be rated, not as a
|
||
|
government or province, but as a corporation with a charter permitting
|
||
|
only the enactment of by-laws. Moreover, she dreaded to be ranked with
|
||
|
"rebellious Massachusetts," and thus further expose herself to a
|
||
|
probable loss of her charter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After contesting the decision against her for many years, at last in
|
||
|
1746 she virtually won her case through a decision given in England in
|
||
|
the suit of Clarke _vs._ Tousey,[92]--a suit which had been
|
||
|
appealed from the colony, and which presented much the same claim as
|
||
|
Winthrop's. The decision in favor of Clarke was equivalent to a
|
||
|
recognition of Connecticut's Intestacy Law. It has been pointed out
|
||
|
that, important as the Winthrop controversy was from the economic
|
||
|
standpoint, it was equally important as fore-shadowing the legislation
|
||
|
of the English government some thirty years later, and as defining the
|
||
|
relation of colony and Crown. Moreover, in 1765, as in 1730, "economic
|
||
|
causes and conditions," writes Professor Andrews in his discussion of
|
||
|
the Connecticut Intestacy Law, "drove the colonists into opposition to
|
||
|
England quite as much as did theories of political independence, or of
|
||
|
so-called self-evident rights of man."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was during the continuance of this troublesome Winthrop suit, while
|
||
|
boundary lines were still unsettled, while as yet the Mohegan titles
|
||
|
remained in dispute, while the most grievous charge of encouraging
|
||
|
home manufactures, and many other complaints were brought against
|
||
|
Connecticut,--it was in the midst of her perplexities and conflicting
|
||
|
interests that the dissenters within her borders sought greater
|
||
|
religious liberty. They sought it, not only through their own local
|
||
|
efforts, but through the strength of their friends in England, who
|
||
|
brought all their influence to bear upon the home government. With
|
||
|
such help Episcopalians had won exemption in 1727, and within two
|
||
|
years Quakers and Baptists were accorded similar freedom.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut Quakers, though few in numbers, were very determined to
|
||
|
have their rights. From 1706, the Newport Yearly Meeting had
|
||
|
encouraged the collecting and recording of all cases of "sufferance."
|
||
|
In 1714, at the close of Queen Anne's War (1702-13), the Newport
|
||
|
Yearly Meeting reported to that of London that "there is much
|
||
|
suffering on account of the Indians at the Eastward, yet not one (of
|
||
|
ours) had fallen during the last year, Travelling preachers having
|
||
|
frequently visited those parts without the least harm.... Friends in
|
||
|
several places have suffered deeply on account of not paying
|
||
|
presbyterian priests, and for the Refusing to bear Armes, an Account
|
||
|
of which we Doe herewith Send." In 1715, the English law had granted
|
||
|
them the perpetual privilege of substituting affirmation for oath. The
|
||
|
Quakers were determined to have the same freedom in the colonies as in
|
||
|
England. Accordingly, they watched with interest the test case between
|
||
|
the Quaker constables of Duxbury and Tiverton,--both, then, under the
|
||
|
jurisdiction of Massachusetts,--and the authorities of that
|
||
|
colony. Fines and persecutions were so much alike in Connecticut and
|
||
|
Massachusetts that a dissenter's victory in one colony would go far
|
||
|
towards obtaining exemption in the other. The Quaker constables had
|
||
|
refused to collect the church rate, and for this refusal were thrown
|
||
|
into prison. Thereupon a petition, with many citations from the colony
|
||
|
law books, was sent to England, begging that the prisoners be released
|
||
|
and excused from their fines, and that such unjust laws be annulled.
|
||
|
The Privy Council ordered the prisoners released and their fine
|
||
|
remitted. This decision was rendered in 1724, and, with the success of
|
||
|
the Episcopalians three years later, still further encouraged both
|
||
|
Quakers and Baptists to seek relief from ecclesiastical taxes and
|
||
|
fines. Two years later, in May, 1729, the Quakers appealed to the
|
||
|
Connecticut Court for such exemption, and were released from
|
||
|
contributing to the support of the established ministry and from
|
||
|
paying any tax levied for building its meeting-houses, provided they
|
||
|
could show a certificate from some society of their own (either within
|
||
|
the colony or without it, if so near its borders that they could
|
||
|
regularly attend its services) vouching for their support of its
|
||
|
worship and their presence at its regular meetings. [93]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Turning to the Baptists, the oppressive measures employed to make them
|
||
|
violate their conscience ceased on the inauguration of Governor
|
||
|
Talcott in 1724. Thereafter, those among them who conformed to the
|
||
|
requirements of the Toleration Act received some measure of freedom.
|
||
|
To the neighborly interest of the Association of Baptist Churches of
|
||
|
North Kingston, Rhode Island, and to the influence of leading Baptists
|
||
|
in that colony, including among them its governor (who subjoined a
|
||
|
personal note to the Association's appeal to the Connecticut General
|
||
|
Court), was due the favor of the Court extended in October, 1729, [94]
|
||
|
to the Baptists, whereby they were granted exemption upon the same
|
||
|
terms as those offered the Quakers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus in barely twenty years from the passage of the Toleration Act,
|
||
|
Episcopalian, Quaker, and Baptist had driven the thin edge of a
|
||
|
destroying wedge into the foundations of the Connecticut
|
||
|
Establishment. Each dissenting body was pitifully small in absolute
|
||
|
strength, and they had no inclination toward united action. Quakers
|
||
|
and Baptists were required to show certificates, a requirement soon to
|
||
|
be considered in itself humiliating. The new laws were negative, in
|
||
|
that they empowered the assessor to _omit_ to tax those entitled
|
||
|
to exemption, but they provided no penalty to be enforced against
|
||
|
assessors who failed to make such omission. Indeed, in individual
|
||
|
cases, the laws might seem to be scarcely more than an admission of
|
||
|
the right to exemption. However, it was an admission that a century's
|
||
|
progress had brought the knowledge that brethren of different
|
||
|
religious opinions could dwell together in peace. It was an exemption
|
||
|
by which the government admitted, as well as claimed, the right of
|
||
|
choice in religious worship. It was a far cry to the acknowledgment
|
||
|
that a man was free to think his own thoughts and follow his own
|
||
|
convictions, provided they did not interfere with the rights of other
|
||
|
men. The new laws were a concession by a strongly intrenched church to
|
||
|
the natural rights of weaker ones, whose title to permanency it
|
||
|
greatly doubted. They were a concession by a government whose best
|
||
|
members felt it to be the State's moral and religious obligation to
|
||
|
support one form of religion and to protect it at the cost, if
|
||
|
necessary, of all other forms,--a concession, by such a government, to
|
||
|
a very small minority of its subjects, holding the same appreciation
|
||
|
of their religious duty as that which had nerved the founders of the
|
||
|
colony. It was a concession by the community to a very few among their
|
||
|
number, who were divergent in church polity and practice, but who were
|
||
|
united in a Protestant creed and in the conviction, held then by every
|
||
|
respectable citizen, that every man should be made to attend and
|
||
|
support some accepted and organized form of Christian worship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] The Rev. John Hart of East Guilford, Samuel Whittlesey of
|
||
|
Wallingford, and Jared Ellis of Killingworth. These men were always
|
||
|
friendly to the Churchmen.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] The Rev. Daniel Brown died in England. In the next forty years,
|
||
|
one tenth of those who crossed the sea for ordination perished from
|
||
|
dangers incident to the trip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] This year the home influence of the Church of England had been
|
||
|
brought to bear with sufficient pressure to forbid the calling of a
|
||
|
general synod of the New England churches which had been desired, and
|
||
|
towards which Massachusetts had taken the initial step. See
|
||
|
A. L. Cross, _Anglican Episcopate_, pp. 67-70.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] Stratford.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] This same year, George I granted to Bishop Gibson a patent
|
||
|
confirming the jurisdiction which, as Bishop of London, he claimed
|
||
|
over the Church of England in the colonies. George II renewed the
|
||
|
patent in 1728-29.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] Between 1700 and 1741 more than thirty new towns were organized,
|
||
|
making twice as many as in 1700.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
|
||
|
"THE GREAT AWAKENING."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wake, awake, for night is flying:
|
||
|
The watchmen on the heights are crying,
|
||
|
Awake, Jerusalem, arise!--Advent Hymn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The opposition of Episcopalian, Quaker, and Baptist to the Connecticut
|
||
|
Establishment, if measured by ultimate results, was important and
|
||
|
far-reaching. But it was dwarfed almost to insignificance, so feeble
|
||
|
was it, so confined its area, when compared to that opposition which,
|
||
|
thirty-five years after the Saybrook Synod and a dozen years after the
|
||
|
exemption of the dissenters, sprang up within the bosom of the
|
||
|
Congregational church itself, as a protest against civil enactments
|
||
|
concerning religion. This protest was a direct result of the moral and
|
||
|
spiritual renascence that occurred in New England and that became
|
||
|
known as the "Great Awakening." History in all times and countries
|
||
|
shows a periodicity of religious activity and depression. It would
|
||
|
sometimes seem as if these periodic outbreaks of religious aspirations
|
||
|
were but the last device of self-seeking,--were but attempts to find
|
||
|
consolation for life's hardships and to secure happiness
|
||
|
hereafter. Fortunately such selfish motives are transmuted in the
|
||
|
search for larger ethical and spiritual conceptions. An enlarged
|
||
|
insight into the possibilities of living tends to slough off
|
||
|
selfishness and to make more habitual the occasional, and often
|
||
|
involuntary, response to Christlike deeds and ideals. But so ingrained
|
||
|
is our earthly nature that, in communities as in nations, periods
|
||
|
alternate with periods, and the pendulum swings from laxity to
|
||
|
morality, from apathy to piety, gradually shortening its arc. So in
|
||
|
Connecticut, numbers of her towns from time to time had been roused to
|
||
|
greater interest in religion before the spiritual cyclone of the great
|
||
|
revival, or "Great Awakening," swept through the land in 1740 and the
|
||
|
two following years. The earlier and local revivals were generally
|
||
|
due to some special calamity, as sickness, failure of harvest,
|
||
|
ill-fortune in war, or some unusual occurrence in nature, such as an
|
||
|
earthquake or comet, with the familiar interpretation that Jehovah was
|
||
|
angry with the sins of his people. Sometimes, however, the zeal of a
|
||
|
devoted minister would kindle counter sparks among his people. Such a
|
||
|
minister was the Rev. Solomon Stoddard, who mentions five notable
|
||
|
revivals, or "harvests,"[a] as he calls them, during his sixty years
|
||
|
of ministry in the Northampton church. A few other New England towns
|
||
|
had similar revivals, but they were brief and rare.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Notwithstanding these occasional local "stirrings of the heart," at
|
||
|
the beginning of the second quarter of the eighteenth century a cold,
|
||
|
formal piety was frequently the covering of indifferent living and of
|
||
|
a smug, complacent Christianity, wherein the letter killed and the
|
||
|
spirit did not give life. This was true all over New England, and
|
||
|
elsewhere. Nor was this deadness confined to the colonies alone, for
|
||
|
the Wesleys were soon to stir the sluggish current of English
|
||
|
religious life. In New England, the older clergymen, like the Mathers
|
||
|
of Massachusetts, conservative men, whose memories or traditions were
|
||
|
of the golden age of Puritanism, had long bemoaned the loss of
|
||
|
religious interest, the inability of reforming synods to create
|
||
|
permanent improvement, and the helplessness of ecclesiastical councils
|
||
|
or of civil enactments to rouse the people from the real "decay of
|
||
|
piety in the land," and from their indifference to the immorality that
|
||
|
was increasing among them. This indifference grew in Connecticut after
|
||
|
the Saybrook Platform had laid a firm hold upon the churches. Its
|
||
|
discipline created a tendency, on the one hand, to hard and narrow
|
||
|
ecclesiasticism, and, on the other, to careless living on the part of
|
||
|
those who were satisfied with a mere formal acceptance of the
|
||
|
principles of religion and with the bare acknowledgment of the right
|
||
|
of the churches to their members' obedience.[b]
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is a great mistake [writes Jonathan Edwards] if any one imagines
|
||
|
that all these external performances (owning the covenant, accepting
|
||
|
the sacraments, observing the Sabbath and attending the ministry), are
|
||
|
of the nature of a _profession_ of anything that belongs to
|
||
|
_saving grace_, as they are commonly used and
|
||
|
understood.... People are taught that they may use them all, and not
|
||
|
so much as make any pretence to the least degree of _sanctifying
|
||
|
grace_; and this is the established custom. So they are used and so
|
||
|
they are understood.... It is not unusual ... for persons, at the same
|
||
|
time they come into the church and pretend to own the covenant, freely
|
||
|
to declare to their neighbors, that they have no imagination that they
|
||
|
have any true faith in Christ or love to Him.[95]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General Court, relieved from the oversight of the churches, had
|
||
|
bent itself to preserving the colony's charter rights from its enemies
|
||
|
abroad, and to the material interests involved in a conservative,
|
||
|
wise, and energetic home development. The people's thoughts were with
|
||
|
the Court more than with the clergy, who had fallen from a healthy
|
||
|
enthusiasm in their profession into a sort of spiritual deadness and
|
||
|
dull acceptance of circumstances. [96] As a sort of corollary to
|
||
|
Stoddard's teaching that the Lord's Supper was itself a means toward
|
||
|
attaining salvation, it followed that clergymen, though they felt no
|
||
|
special call to their ministry, were nevertheless believed to be
|
||
|
worthy of their office. The older theology of New England had tended
|
||
|
to morbid introspection. Stoddard, in avoiding that danger, had thrown
|
||
|
the doors of the Church too widely open, and the result was a gradual
|
||
|
undermining of its spiritual power. The continued acceptance of the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant, "laxative rather than astringent in its nature,"
|
||
|
helped to produce a low estimate of religion. The tenderness that the
|
||
|
Cambridge Platform had encouraged towards "the weakest measure of
|
||
|
faith" had broadened into such laxity that, in many cases, ministers
|
||
|
were willing to receive accounts of conversions which had been written
|
||
|
to order for the applicants for church membership. The Church,
|
||
|
moreover, had come directly under the control of politics, a condition
|
||
|
never conducive to its purity. The law of 1717, "for the better
|
||
|
ordering and regulating parishes or societies," had made the minister
|
||
|
the choice of the majority of the townsmen who were voters. This
|
||
|
reversed the early condition of the town, merged by membership into
|
||
|
the church, to a church merged into the town. [97] There was still
|
||
|
another factor, often the last and least willingly recognized in times
|
||
|
of religious excitement, namely, the commercial depression throughout
|
||
|
the country, resulting from years of a fluctuating currency. This
|
||
|
depression contributed largely to the revival movement, and helped to
|
||
|
spread the enthusiasm of the Great Awakening. Connecticut's currency
|
||
|
had been freer from inflation than that of other New England
|
||
|
colonies. But her paper money experiments in the years from 1714 to
|
||
|
1749 grew more and more demoralizing. Up to 1740, Connecticut had
|
||
|
issued L156,000 in paper currency. At the time of the Great Awakening
|
||
|
she had still outstanding L39,000 for which the colony was
|
||
|
responsible. Of this, all but L6000 had been covered by special
|
||
|
taxation. There still remained, however, about L33,000 which had been
|
||
|
lent to the various counties. Taxation was heavy, wages low and
|
||
|
prices high, and there was not a man in the colony who did not feel
|
||
|
the effect of the rapidly depreciating currency.[98] This general
|
||
|
depression fell upon a generation of New Englanders whose minds no
|
||
|
longer dwelt preeminently upon religious matters, but who were, on the
|
||
|
contrary, preeminently commercial in their interests.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such were the general conditions throughout New England and such the
|
||
|
low state of religion in Connecticut, when, in the Northampton church,
|
||
|
Solomon Stoddard's grandson, the great Jonathan Edwards, in December,
|
||
|
1734, preached the sermons which created the initial wave of a great
|
||
|
religious movement. This religious revival spread slowly through
|
||
|
generally lax New England, and through the no less lax Jerseys, and
|
||
|
through the backwoods settlements of Pennsylvania, until it finally
|
||
|
swept the southern colonies. At the time, 1738, the Rev. George
|
||
|
Whitefield was preaching in Carolina, and acceptably so to his
|
||
|
superior, Alexander Garden, the Episcopal commissary to that
|
||
|
colony. Touched by the enthusiasm of the onflowing religious movement,
|
||
|
Whitefield's zeal and consequent radicalism, as he swayed toward the
|
||
|
Congregational teaching and practices, soon put him in disfavor with
|
||
|
his fellow Churchmen. Such disfavor only raised the priest still
|
||
|
higher in the opinion of the dissenters, and they flocked to hear his
|
||
|
eloquent sermons. Whitefield soon decided to return to England. There
|
||
|
he encountered the great revival movement which was being conducted,
|
||
|
principally by the Wesleys, and he at once threw himself into the
|
||
|
work. Meanwhile, he had conceived a plan for a home for orphans in
|
||
|
Georgia, and, a little later, he determined upon a visit to New
|
||
|
England in its behalf. Upon his arrival in Boston in 1740, the
|
||
|
Rev. George Whitefield was welcomed with open arms. Great honor was
|
||
|
paid him. Crowds flocked to hear him, and he was sped with money and
|
||
|
good-will throughout New England as he journeyed, preaching the
|
||
|
gospel, and seeking alms for the southern orphanage. His advent
|
||
|
coincided in time with the reviving interest in religion, especially
|
||
|
in Connecticut. Interest over the revival of 1735 had centred on that
|
||
|
colony the eyes of the whole non-liturgical English-speaking
|
||
|
world. Whitefield's preaching was to this awakening religious
|
||
|
enthusiasm as match to tinder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The religious passion, kindled in 1735 by Edwards, and hardly less by
|
||
|
his devoted and spiritually-minded wife, had in Connecticut swept over
|
||
|
Windsor, East Windsor, Coventry, Lebanon, Durham, Stratford, Ripton,
|
||
|
New Haven, Guilford, Mansfield, Tolland, Hebron, Bolton, Preston,
|
||
|
Groton, and Woodbury. [99] The period of this first "harvest" was
|
||
|
short. The revival had swept onward, and indifference seemed once more
|
||
|
to settle down upon the land. But the news of the revival in
|
||
|
Connecticut had reached England through letters of Dr. Benjamin
|
||
|
Coleman of Boston. His account of it had created so much interest that
|
||
|
Jonathan Edwards was persuaded to write for English readers his
|
||
|
"Narrative of the Surprising Work of God." Editions of this book
|
||
|
appeared in 1737-38 in both England and America, and all Anglo-Saxon
|
||
|
non-prelatical circles pored over the account of the recent revival in
|
||
|
Connecticut. Religious enthusiasm revived, and was roused to a high
|
||
|
pitch by Whitefield's itinerant preaching, as well as by that of
|
||
|
Jonathan Edwards, and by the visit to New England of the Rev. Gilbert
|
||
|
Tennant, one of two brothers who had created widespread interest by
|
||
|
their revival work in New Jersey. A religious furor, almost mania,
|
||
|
spread through New England, and the "Great Awakening" came in earnest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Rev. George Whitefield reached Newport, Rhode Island, in
|
||
|
September, 1740. Crowds flocked to hear him during his brief visit
|
||
|
there. In October, he proceeded to Boston, where he preached to
|
||
|
enthusiastic audiences, including all the high dignitaries of Church
|
||
|
and State. During his ten days' sojourn in the city, no praise was too
|
||
|
fulsome, no honor too great. Whitefield next went to Northampton,
|
||
|
drawn by his desire to visit Edwards. After a week of conference with
|
||
|
the great divine, Whitefield passed on through Connecticut, preaching
|
||
|
as he went, and devoted the rest of the year to itinerating through
|
||
|
the other colonies. Already his popularity had been too much for him,
|
||
|
and he frequently took it upon himself to upbraid, in no measured
|
||
|
terms, the settled ministry for lack of earnestness in their calling
|
||
|
and lack of Christian character. This visit of Whitefield was followed
|
||
|
by one from the Rev. Gilbert Tennant, who arrived in Boston in
|
||
|
December, and spent his time, until the following March, preaching in
|
||
|
Massachusetts and Connecticut. Tennant was also outspoken in his
|
||
|
denunciations, and both men, while sometimes justified in their
|
||
|
criticisms, were frequently hasty and censorious in their judgments of
|
||
|
those who differed from them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ministers throughout New England were quick to support or to oppose
|
||
|
the revival movement, and a goodly number of them, as itinerants, took
|
||
|
up the evangelical work. Dr. Colman and Dr. Sewall of Boston, Jonathan
|
||
|
Edwards and Dr. Bellamy of Connecticut, were among the most
|
||
|
influential divines to support the Great Awakening,--to call the
|
||
|
revival by the name by which it was to go down in
|
||
|
history. Unfortunately, among the aroused people, there were many who
|
||
|
pressed their zeal beyond the reverent bounds set by these
|
||
|
leaders. The religious enthusiasm rushed into wild ecstasies during
|
||
|
the preaching of the almost fanatic Rev. James Davenport of Southold,
|
||
|
and of those itinerant preachers who, ignorant and carried away by
|
||
|
emotions beyond their control, attempted to follow his example.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During this religious fever there were times when all business was
|
||
|
suspended. Whole communities gave themselves up to conversion and to
|
||
|
passing through the three or more distinct stages of religious
|
||
|
experience which Jonathan Edwards, as well as the more ignorant
|
||
|
itinerants, accepted as signs of the Lord's compassion. Briefly
|
||
|
stated, these stages were, first, a heart-rending misery over one's
|
||
|
sinfulness; a state of complete submissiveness, expressing itself in
|
||
|
those days of intense belief both in heaven and in a most realistic
|
||
|
hell, as complete willingness "to be saved or damned,"[c] whichever
|
||
|
the Lord in his great wisdom saw would fit best into His eternal
|
||
|
scheme. Finally, there was the blessed state of ecstatic happiness,
|
||
|
when it was borne in upon one that he or she was, indeed, one of the
|
||
|
few of "God's elect." [100] The revival meetings were marked by
|
||
|
shouting, sobbing, sometimes by fainting, or by bodily contortions.
|
||
|
All these, in the fever of excitement, were believed by many persons
|
||
|
to be special marks of supernatural power, and, if they followed the
|
||
|
words of some ignorant and rash exhorter, they were even more likely
|
||
|
to be considered tokens of divine favor,--illustrations of God's
|
||
|
choice of the simple and lowly to confound the wisdom of the
|
||
|
world. The strong emotional character of the religious meetings of our
|
||
|
southern negroes, as well as their frequent sentimental rather than
|
||
|
practical or moral expression of religion, has been credited in large
|
||
|
measure to the hold over them which this great religious revival of
|
||
|
the eighteenth century gained, when its enthusiasm rolled over the
|
||
|
southern colonies. Be that as it may, any adequate appreciation of the
|
||
|
frequent daily occurrences in New England during the Great Awakening
|
||
|
would be best realized by one of this twentieth century were it
|
||
|
possible to form a composite picture, having the unbridled
|
||
|
emotionalism of our negro camp-meetings superimposed upon the solid
|
||
|
respectability and grave reasonableness of the men of that earlier
|
||
|
day. As the lines of one and the other constituent of this composite
|
||
|
picture blend, the momentary feeling of impatience and disgust
|
||
|
vanishes in a wave of compassion as the irresistible earnestness and
|
||
|
the pitiless logic of those days press, for recognition, and we
|
||
|
realize the awful sufferings of many an ignorant or sensitive soul. It
|
||
|
was not until the religious revival had passed its height that the
|
||
|
people began to realize the folly and dangers of the hysteria that had
|
||
|
accompanied it. It was not until long afterward that many of its
|
||
|
characteristics, which had been interpreted as supernatural signs,
|
||
|
were known and understood, and correctly diagnosticated as outward
|
||
|
evidence of physical and nervous exhaustion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such, outwardly, were the marked features of the Great Awakening. Yet
|
||
|
its incentives to noble living were great and lasting. Its immediate
|
||
|
results were a revolt against conventional religion, a division into
|
||
|
ecclesiastical parties, and a great schism within the Establishment,
|
||
|
which, before the breach was healed, had improved the quality of
|
||
|
religion in every meeting-house and chapel in the land and broadened
|
||
|
the conception of religious liberty throughout the colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] At Northampton in 1680, 1684, 1697, 1713, and 1719.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] As early even as 1711, the Hartford North Association suggested
|
||
|
some reformation in the Half-Way Covenant practice because it noted
|
||
|
that persons, lax in life, were being admitted under its terms of
|
||
|
church membership.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] This "to be saved or damned" was, later, a marked characteristic
|
||
|
of Hokinsianism, or the teaching of the Rev. Samuel Hopkins,
|
||
|
1723-1813.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER X
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE GREAT SCHISM
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
If a house be divided against itself.--Mark iii, 25.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From such a revival as that of the Great Awakening, parties must of
|
||
|
necessity arise. Upon undisciplined fanaticism, the Established church
|
||
|
must frown. But when it undertook to discipline large numbers of
|
||
|
church members or whole churches, recognizedly within its embracing
|
||
|
fold and within their lawful privileges, a great schism resulted, and
|
||
|
the schismatics were sufficiently tenacious of their rights to come
|
||
|
out victorious in their long contest for toleration.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The proviso of the Saybrook Platform had arranged for the continued
|
||
|
existence of churches, Congregational rather than Presbyterian in
|
||
|
their interpretation of that platform; yet, as late as 1730, when but
|
||
|
few remained, the question had arisen whether members of such
|
||
|
churches, "since they were allowed and under the protection of the
|
||
|
laws," ought to qualify according to the Toleration Act. The Court
|
||
|
decided in the negative, [101] arguing that, although they differed
|
||
|
from the majority of the churches in preferring the Cambridge Platform
|
||
|
of church discipline, they had been permitted under the colony law of
|
||
|
May 13, 1669, establishing the Congregational church, and had been
|
||
|
protected by the proviso of 1708. The Court in its decision of 1730
|
||
|
seems also to have included a very few churches that had revolted from
|
||
|
the religious formalism creeping in under the Saybrook system, and
|
||
|
that had returned to the earlier type of Congregationalism. After the
|
||
|
Great Awakening, churches "thus allowed and under the protection of
|
||
|
our laws" were found to increase so rapidly that the movement away
|
||
|
from the Saybrook Platform threatened to undermine the ecclesiastical
|
||
|
system, and to endanger the Establishment. Seeing this, the Court, or
|
||
|
General Assembly,[a] began to enforce the old colony law that with it
|
||
|
alone belonged the power to approve the incorporating of churches. And
|
||
|
shortly after it began to harass these separating churches, and to
|
||
|
enact laws to prevent the farther spread of reinvigorated
|
||
|
Congregationalism unless of the Presbyterian type. Soon after 1741,
|
||
|
the churches that drew away from the Saybrook system of government
|
||
|
became known as Separate churches, and their members as
|
||
|
Separatists. When these people found that the Assembly would no longer
|
||
|
approve their organizing as churches, they attempted, as sober
|
||
|
dissenters from the worship established in the colony, to take the
|
||
|
benefit of the Toleration Act. The Assembly next "resolved that those
|
||
|
commonly called Presbyterians or Congregationalists should not take
|
||
|
the benefit of that Act." [102]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here was a difficulty indeed. There was no place for the Separatist,
|
||
|
yet there was need of him, and he felt sure there was. Furthermore,
|
||
|
there were others who felt the need to the community of his strong
|
||
|
religious earnestness, though they might deplore his
|
||
|
extravagances. His strong points were his assertion of the need of
|
||
|
regeneration, his reassertion of the old doctrines of justification by
|
||
|
faith and of a personal sense of conversion, including, as a duty
|
||
|
inseparable from church membership, the living of a highly moral
|
||
|
life. The weakness of the Separatist lay in his assertion, first, that
|
||
|
every man had an equal right to exercise any gifts of preaching or
|
||
|
prayer of which he believed himself possessed; secondly, of the value
|
||
|
of visions and trances as proofs of spirituality; and finally, of
|
||
|
every one's freedom to withdraw from the ministry of any pastor who
|
||
|
did not come up to his standard of ability or helpfulness. It followed
|
||
|
that the Separatists insisted upon the right to set up their own
|
||
|
churches and to appoint their own ministers, although the latter might
|
||
|
have only the doubtful qualification of feeling possessed with the
|
||
|
gift of preaching. The Separatists organized between thirty and forty
|
||
|
churches. Some of them endured but a short time, suffering
|
||
|
disintegration through poverty. Others fell to pieces because of the
|
||
|
unrestrained liberty of their members in their exhortations, in their
|
||
|
personal interpretation of the Scriptures, and in their exercise of
|
||
|
the right of private judgment, with the consequent harvest of
|
||
|
confusion, censoriousness, and discord that such practices created. In
|
||
|
years later, many of the Separate churches, tired of the struggle for
|
||
|
recognition and weighed down by their double taxation for the support
|
||
|
of religion, buried themselves under the Baptist name. Indeed they
|
||
|
"agreed upon all points of doctrine, worship, and discipline, save the
|
||
|
mode and subject of baptism." A few Separatist churches, a dozen or
|
||
|
more, continued the struggle for existence until victory and
|
||
|
toleration rewarded them. After the teachings of Jonathan Edwards had
|
||
|
purified the churches and had driven out the Half-Way Covenant,
|
||
|
against which the Separatists uttered their loudest protests, many of
|
||
|
these reformers returned to the Established church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the practice of--their principles, the Separatists, both as
|
||
|
churches and as individuals, were often headstrong, officious,
|
||
|
intermeddling, and censorious. They frequently stirred up ill-feeling
|
||
|
and often just indignation. The rash and heedless among them accused
|
||
|
the conservative and regular clergy of Arminianism, when the latter,
|
||
|
influenced by the Great Awakening, revived the doctrines of original
|
||
|
sin, regeneration, and justification by faith, but were careful to add
|
||
|
to these Calvinistic dogmas admonitions to such practical Christianity
|
||
|
as was taught by Arminian preachers. The Separatists feared lest the
|
||
|
doctrine of works would cause men to stray too far from the doctrine
|
||
|
of justification by faith alone, and they were often very intemperate
|
||
|
in their denunciation of such "false teachers." It was a day of freer
|
||
|
speech than now, and at least two of the great leaders in the revival
|
||
|
had set a very bad example of calling names. Mr. Whitefield considered
|
||
|
Mr. Tennant a "mighty charitable man," yet here are a few of the
|
||
|
latter's descriptive epithets, collected from one of his sermons and
|
||
|
published by the Synod of Philadelphia. Dr. Chauncey of Boston quotes
|
||
|
them in an adverse criticism of the revival movement. Mr. Tennant
|
||
|
speaks of the ministers thus:--hirelings, caterpillars, letter-learned
|
||
|
Pharisees, Hypocrites, Varlets, Seed of the Serpent, foolish Builders
|
||
|
whom the Devil drives into the ministry, dead dogs that cannot bark,
|
||
|
blind men, dead men, men possessed of the devil, rebels and enemies of
|
||
|
God. [103]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naturally, party lines were soon drawn in New England. There were the
|
||
|
Old Calvinists or Old Lights on the one side, and the Separatists and
|
||
|
New Lights on the other. The New Lights were those within the churches
|
||
|
who were moved by the revival and who desired to return to a more
|
||
|
vital Christianity. In many respects they sympathized with the
|
||
|
Separatists, although disapproving their extravagances. In many
|
||
|
churches, hounded by the opposition of the conservatives, the New
|
||
|
Lights drew off and formed churches of their own. Thus while the
|
||
|
Separatists may be compared to the early English Separatists, the New
|
||
|
Lights would correspond more to the Puritan party that desired reform
|
||
|
within the Establishment. In the eighteenth century movement, in
|
||
|
Connecticut, the Old Lights held the political as well as the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical control until, in the process of time, the New Lights
|
||
|
gained an influential vote in the Assembly. Always, there was a good,
|
||
|
sound stratum of Calvinism in both the Old and the New Light parties,
|
||
|
and also among the Separatists, and the latter were generally included
|
||
|
in the New Light party, especially if spoken of from the point of view
|
||
|
of political affiliations. The idiosyncrasies of the Separatists
|
||
|
softened down and fell away in time. The Calvinism of Old and New
|
||
|
Lights became a rallying ground whereon each, in after years, gathered
|
||
|
about the standard of a reinvigorated church life; and then the terms
|
||
|
Old Light and New, with their suggestions of party meaning, whether
|
||
|
religious, or political, passed away. The term Separatist was retained
|
||
|
for a while longer, merely to distinguish the churches that preferred
|
||
|
to be known as strict Congregationalist rather than as
|
||
|
Presbyterianized Congregationalist, or, for short, Presbyterian.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the time of the Great Awakening, there were nearly forty years of
|
||
|
party contest over religious privileges, many of which had been
|
||
|
previously accorded but which were speedily denied to the Separatists
|
||
|
by a party dominant in the churches and paramount in the legislature;
|
||
|
by a party which was determined to bring the whole machinery of Church
|
||
|
and State to crush the rising opposition to its control. Accordingly,
|
||
|
it was nearly forty years before the Separatists received the same
|
||
|
measure of toleration as that accorded to Episcopalian, Quaker, and
|
||
|
Baptist. It was ten years before the New Lights in the Assembly
|
||
|
could, as a preliminary step to such toleration, force the omission
|
||
|
from the revised statutes of all persecuting laws passed by the Old
|
||
|
Light party.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The keynote to the long struggle was sounded at a meeting of the
|
||
|
General Consociation at Guilford, November 24, 1741. This was the
|
||
|
first and only General Consociation ever called. It was convened at
|
||
|
the expense of the colony, to consider her religious condition and the
|
||
|
dangers threatening her from the excitement of the Great Awakening,
|
||
|
from unrestrained converts, from rash exhorters, and from itinerant
|
||
|
preachers, who took possession of the ministers' pulpits with little
|
||
|
deference to their proper occupants. The General Consociation
|
||
|
decided--
|
||
|
|
||
|
that for a minister to enter another minister's parish, and preach
|
||
|
or administer the seals of the Covenant, without the consent of,
|
||
|
or in opposition to the set tied minister of the parish, is
|
||
|
disorderly, notwithstanding if a considerable number of the people
|
||
|
in the parish are desirous to hear another minister preach,
|
||
|
provided the same be orthodox, and sound in the faith and not
|
||
|
notoriously faulty in censuring other persons, or guilty of any
|
||
|
scandal, we think it ordinar rily advisable for the minister of
|
||
|
the parish to gratify them by giving his consent upon their
|
||
|
suitable application to him for it, unless neighboring ministers
|
||
|
advise him to the contrary. [104]
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was not necessarily an intolerant attitude, but it was hostile
|
||
|
rather than friendly to the revival. It left neighboring ministers,
|
||
|
that is, the Associations, if one among their number seemed to be too
|
||
|
free in lending his pulpit to itinerant preachers, to curb his
|
||
|
friendliness. Intolerance might come through this limitation, for the
|
||
|
local Association might be prejudiced. If its advice were disregarded
|
||
|
and disorders arose, the Consociation of the county could step in to
|
||
|
settle difficulties and to condemn progressive men as well as
|
||
|
fanatics. In its phrasing, this ecclesiastical legislation left room
|
||
|
for the ministrations of reputable itinerants, for among many, some of
|
||
|
whom were ignorant and self-called to their vocation, there were
|
||
|
others whose abilities were widely recognized. Foremost among such men
|
||
|
in Connecticut were Jonathan Edwards himself, Dr. Joseph Bellamy of
|
||
|
Bethlem, trainer of many students in theology, Rev. Eleazer Whelock of
|
||
|
Lebanon, Benjamin Pomroy of Hebron, and Jonathan Parsons of
|
||
|
Lyme. Among itinerants coming from other colonies, the most noted,
|
||
|
after Whitefield and Tennant, was Dr. Samuel Finley of New Jersey,
|
||
|
later president of Princeton. Naturally men like these, who felt
|
||
|
strongly the need of a revival and believed in supporting the "Great
|
||
|
Awakening," despite its excitement and errors, did not countenance the
|
||
|
rash proceedings of many of the ignorant preachers, who ran about the
|
||
|
colony seeking audiences for themselves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The measures of the General Consociation were mild in comparison with
|
||
|
the laws passed by the legislature in the following May. Governor
|
||
|
Talcott, tolerant toward all religious dissenters, had recently died,
|
||
|
and the conservative Jonathan Law of Milford was in the chair of the
|
||
|
chief magistrate. Governor Law had grown up among the traditions of
|
||
|
that narrow ecclesiasticism which had always marked the territory of
|
||
|
the old New Haven Colony. Moreover, the measures of the Consociation
|
||
|
had been futile. One of the chief offenders against them was the
|
||
|
Rev. James Davenport of Southold, Long Island, who not only went
|
||
|
preaching through the colony, stirring up by his fanaticism, his
|
||
|
visions, and his ecstasies, the common people, and finding fault with
|
||
|
the regular clergy as "unconverted men," but who pushed his religious
|
||
|
enthusiasm to great extremes by everywhere urging upon excitable young
|
||
|
men the duty to become preachers like himself. He had introduced a
|
||
|
kind of intoning at public meetings. This tended to create nervous
|
||
|
irritability and hysterical outbursts of religious emotionalism, and
|
||
|
these, Davenport taught his disciples, were the signs of God's
|
||
|
approval of them and their devotion to Him. The government, watching
|
||
|
these tumultuous meetings, concluded that it was time to show its
|
||
|
ancient authority and to save the people from "divisions and
|
||
|
contentions," the ecclesiastical constitution from destruction, and
|
||
|
the ministry from "unqualified persons entering therein." Accordingly,
|
||
|
in May, 1742, the Assembly passed a series of laws, [105] so severe
|
||
|
that even ordained ministers were forbidden to preach outside their
|
||
|
own parishes without an express invitation and under the penalty of
|
||
|
forfeiting all benefits and all support derived from any laws for the
|
||
|
encouragement of religion ever made in the colony. The new enactments
|
||
|
also forbade any Association to license a candidate to preach outside
|
||
|
its own bounds or to settle any disputes beyond its own
|
||
|
territory.[106] These laws also permitted any parish minister to lodge
|
||
|
with the society clerk a certificate charging that a man had entered
|
||
|
his parish and had preached there without first obtaining
|
||
|
permission. Furthermore, there was no provision for confirming the
|
||
|
truth or proving the falsity of such a statement. In connection with
|
||
|
the certificate clause, it was also enacted that no assistant, or
|
||
|
justice of the peace, should sign a warrant for collecting a
|
||
|
minister's rates until he was sure that nowhere in the colony was
|
||
|
there such a certificate lodged against the minister making
|
||
|
application for this mode of collecting his ministerial dues. [107]
|
||
|
Finally, the laws provided that a bond of L100 should be demanded of a
|
||
|
stranger, or visiting minister, who had preached without invitation,
|
||
|
and that he should be treated as a vagrant, and sent by warrant "from
|
||
|
constable to constable, out of the bounds of this Colony."[108]
|
||
|
|
||
|
These laws restrained both _ordained Ministers_ and
|
||
|
_licensed candidates_ from preaching in _other_ Men's
|
||
|
Parishes without _their_ and the _Church's_ consent and
|
||
|
wholly prohibited the _Exhortations of Illiterate Laymen_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These laws were a high-handed infringement of the rights of
|
||
|
conscience, and in a few years fell and buried with them the party
|
||
|
that had enacted them. These were the laws which he (Davenport)
|
||
|
exhorted his hearers to set at defiance; and seldom, it must be
|
||
|
acknowledged, has a more plausible occasion been found in New
|
||
|
England to preach disregard for the law.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The laws were framed to repress itinerants and exhorters through loss
|
||
|
of their civil rights. By them, a man's good name was dishonored and
|
||
|
he was deprived of all his temporal emoluments. By many, in their own
|
||
|
day, the laws were regarded as contrary to scriptural commands, and to
|
||
|
the opinion and practice of all reformers and of all Puritans. These
|
||
|
laws, with others that followed, were not warranted by the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical constitution of the colony, and could find no parallel
|
||
|
either in England or in her other colonies. Trumbull calls them--
|
||
|
|
||
|
a concerted plan of the Old Lights or Arminians both among the
|
||
|
clergy and civilians, to suppress as far as possible, all zealous
|
||
|
Calvinistic preachers, to confine them entirely to their own
|
||
|
pulpits; and at the same time to put all the public odium and
|
||
|
reproach upon them as wicked, disorderly men, unfit to enjoy the
|
||
|
common rights of citizens. [109]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet for these laws the Association of New Haven sent a vote of thanks
|
||
|
to the Assembly when it convened in their city in the following fall.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jonathan Edwards opposed both the spirit of the General Consociation
|
||
|
and also the legislation of the Assembly. He expressed his attitude
|
||
|
toward the Great Awakening both at the time and later. In 1742 he
|
||
|
wrote:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
If ministers preached never so good a doctrine, and are never so
|
||
|
laborious in their work, yet if at such a day as this they show
|
||
|
their people that they are not well affected to this work [of
|
||
|
revival], they will be very likely to do their people a great deal
|
||
|
more hurt than good.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Six years later Edwards wrote a preface to his "An Humble Inquiry into
|
||
|
the Qualifications for Full Communion in the Visible Church of God," a
|
||
|
treatise severely condemning the Half-Way Covenant, and urging the
|
||
|
revival of the early personal account of conversion. In this preface
|
||
|
he excuses his hesitation in publishing the work, on the ground that
|
||
|
he feared the Separatists would seize upon his arguments to encourage
|
||
|
them and strengthen them in many of their reprehensible
|
||
|
practices. These, Edwards reminds his reader, he had severely
|
||
|
condemned in his earlier publications, notably in his "Treatise on
|
||
|
Religious Affections," 1746, and in his "Observations and Reflections
|
||
|
on Mr. Brainerd's Life." In his preface Edwards repeats his
|
||
|
disapproval of the Separatist "notion of a _pure church_ by means
|
||
|
of a _spirit of discerning_; their _censorious outcries_
|
||
|
against the standing ministers and churches in general, their _lay
|
||
|
ordinations_, their _lay-preaching_ and _public
|
||
|
exhortings_ and administering sacraments; and their
|
||
|
self-complacent, presumptuous spirit." Edwards believed that
|
||
|
enthusiasts, though unlettered, might exhort in private, and even in
|
||
|
public religious gatherings might be encouraged to relate in a proper,
|
||
|
earnest, and modest manner their religious experiences, and might also
|
||
|
entreat others to become converted. He maintained that much of the
|
||
|
criticism of an inert ministry was well founded, that much of the
|
||
|
enthusiastic work of laymen and of the itinerants deserved to be
|
||
|
recognized by the regular clergy, and that they ought to bestir
|
||
|
themselves in furthering such enthusiasm among their own
|
||
|
people. Edwards urged also his belief in the value of good works, not
|
||
|
as meriting the reward of future salvation, but as manifesting a heart
|
||
|
stirred by a proper appreciation of God's attributes. Jonathan Edwards
|
||
|
held firmly to the foundation principles of the conservative school,
|
||
|
while he sympathized with and supported the best elements in the
|
||
|
revival movement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This attitude of Edwards eventually cost him his pastorate, for he
|
||
|
judged it best to resign from the Northampton church, in 1750, because
|
||
|
of the unpopularity arising from his repeated attacks upon the
|
||
|
Half-Way Covenant and the Stoddardean view of the Lord's
|
||
|
supper. Nevertheless, it was the influence of Jonathan Edwards and of
|
||
|
his following which gradually brought about a union of the religious
|
||
|
parties, after the Separatists had given up their eccentricities and
|
||
|
the leaven of Edwards' teachings had brought a new and invigorated
|
||
|
life into the Connecticut churches. This preacher, teacher, and
|
||
|
evangelist was remarkable for his powerful logic, his deep and tender
|
||
|
feeling, his sincere and vivid faith. These characteristics urged on
|
||
|
his resistless imagination, when picturing to his people their
|
||
|
imminent danger and the awful punishment in store for those who
|
||
|
continued at enmity with God. Of his work as a theologian, we shall
|
||
|
have occasion to speak elsewhere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some illustrations of church life in the troublous years following the
|
||
|
Great Awakening will best set forth the confusion arising, the
|
||
|
difficulties between Old and New Lights, and the hardships of the
|
||
|
Separatists. Among the colony churches, the trials of three may be
|
||
|
taken as typical,--the New Haven church[110], the Canterbury
|
||
|
church,[111] and the church of Enfield.[112] Nor can the story of the
|
||
|
first two be told without including in it an account of later acts of
|
||
|
the Assembly and of the attitude of the College during the years of
|
||
|
the great schism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The pastor of the New Haven church was Mr. Noyes, whom many of his
|
||
|
parishioners thought too noncommittal, erroneous, or pointless in
|
||
|
discussing the themes which the itinerant preachers loved to dwell
|
||
|
upon. Moreover, Mr. Noyes had refused to allow the Rev. George
|
||
|
Whitefield to preach from his pulpit while on his memorable pilgrimage
|
||
|
through New England. Mr. Noyes had also forbidden the hot-headed
|
||
|
James Davenport to occupy it. As a result of their minister's actions,
|
||
|
the New Haven church was divided in their estimate of their
|
||
|
pastor. There were the friendly Old Lights and the hostile New.
|
||
|
Neither party wished to carry their trouble before the Consociation of
|
||
|
New Haven county, for that had come at last to be a tribunal "whose
|
||
|
decision was at that time considered _judicial_ and
|
||
|
_final_." Moreover, at the meeting of the General Consociation at
|
||
|
Guilford in November, 1741, it was known that Mr. Noyes had been a
|
||
|
most active worker in favor of suppressing the New Light
|
||
|
movement. Consequently the New Lights, though at the time in the
|
||
|
minority, sought to find a way out from under the jurisdiction of the
|
||
|
Saybrook Platform and its councils by declaring that the church had
|
||
|
never _formally_ been made a Consociated church. This was
|
||
|
literally true, but the weight of precedent and their own observances
|
||
|
were against them. Like other churches in the county, which had come
|
||
|
slowly to the acceptance of the Saybrook councils as ecclesiastical
|
||
|
courts, it had finally accepted them in their most authoritative
|
||
|
character. Such being the case, the New Lights hesitated to appeal
|
||
|
against their minister before a court presumably favorable to
|
||
|
him. After the New Lights had declared the church not under the
|
||
|
Saybrook system, Mr. Noyes determined to take the vote of his people
|
||
|
as to whether they considered themselves a Consociated church. But as
|
||
|
he was a little fearful of the result of the vote, he secured the
|
||
|
victory for his own faction by excluding the New Lights from
|
||
|
voting. Thereupon, the New Lights took the benefit of the Toleration
|
||
|
Act as "sober dissenters," and became a Separate church. The
|
||
|
committee, appointed for the organization of the new church, declared
|
||
|
that "they were reestablished as the original church." The benefit of
|
||
|
the Toleration Act accorded to these New Light dissenters in New
|
||
|
Haven, to some in Milford,[b] and to several other reinvigorated
|
||
|
churches in the southern part of the colony, roused the opposition of
|
||
|
the Old Lights in the Assembly, and, as they counted a majority, they
|
||
|
repealed the act in the following year, 1743. Three or four weeks
|
||
|
after the New Haven New Lights had formed what was afterwards known as
|
||
|
the North Church, the General Assembly met for its fall session in
|
||
|
that city, and, as has been said, the New Haven Association
|
||
|
immediately sent a vote of thanks for the stringent laws passed at the
|
||
|
May meeting. The Court, moved by this indication of the popular
|
||
|
feeling, by the importance of the church schism and its influence
|
||
|
throughout the colony, by the conservative attitude of Yale College,
|
||
|
and also by having among its delegates large numbers of Old Lights,
|
||
|
proceeded to enact yet more stringent measures than those of the
|
||
|
preceding session. The result was that the North Church could hire no
|
||
|
preacher until they could find one acceptable to the First Church and
|
||
|
Society, because the pastor elected by the First Church was the only
|
||
|
lawfully appointed minister, since he owed his election to the
|
||
|
majority votes of the First Society. Furthermore, the Court, in 1743,
|
||
|
refused a special application of the North Church for permission to
|
||
|
settle their chosen minister, and it was some five or six years before
|
||
|
it ceased this particular kind of persecution and permitted the church
|
||
|
to have a regular pastor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The story of this New Haven church extends beyond the time-limit of
|
||
|
this chapter, but it is better completed here. The stringency of the
|
||
|
laws only increased the bitterness of faction. In 1745, feeling ran so
|
||
|
high that a father refused to attend his son's funeral merely because
|
||
|
they belonged to opposing factions, and an attempt to build a house of
|
||
|
worship for this Separate church resulted in serious disturbances and
|
||
|
in the charge of incendiarism. The New Lights preferred imprisonment
|
||
|
to the payment of taxes assessed for the benefit of the First
|
||
|
Church. At last, in 1751, the October session of the General Assembly
|
||
|
thought it best "for the good of the colony and for the peace and
|
||
|
harmony of this and other churches" infected by its example, to advise
|
||
|
that the differences within it be healed by a council to be composed
|
||
|
of both Old and New Lights.[113] The suggestion bore no fruit, and a
|
||
|
year later the New Lights themselves again asked for a council, even
|
||
|
offering to apologize to the First Church for their informality in
|
||
|
separating from it, and for their part in the heated controversy that
|
||
|
followed; but Mr. Noyes induced his party to refuse to accede to the
|
||
|
proposed conference. As the North Church had grown strong enough by
|
||
|
this time to support a regular pastor, Mr. Bird accepted its call; yet
|
||
|
for six years longer, because the Assembly refused to divide the
|
||
|
society, the New Lights were held to be members of the First Society
|
||
|
and taxable for its support. But in 1757, the New Lights gained the
|
||
|
majority both in church and society, a majority of _one_. At
|
||
|
once, the New Lights were released from taxes to the First Church. Now
|
||
|
the dominant party, they attempted to pay back old scores, and
|
||
|
accordingly demanded a division of both church and society
|
||
|
property. The claim to the first was unfair, and they eventually
|
||
|
abandoned it. The church quarrel finally ceased in 1759, after a
|
||
|
duration of eighteen years, and in 1760 Mr. Bird was formally
|
||
|
installed with fitting honors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the early days of the Great Awakening, the Canterbury church became
|
||
|
divided into Old Lights and New, and a separation took place. Before
|
||
|
the separation, a committee, who were appointed to look up the church
|
||
|
records, gave it as their opinion that the church was not and never
|
||
|
had been pledged to the Saybrook Platform. Nevertheless, the very men
|
||
|
who gave this decision became the leaders of the minority, who
|
||
|
determined to support the government in carrying out its oppressive
|
||
|
laws of 1742. These laws had been passed while the committee were
|
||
|
searching the church records. The majority of the church, incensed at
|
||
|
having their liberty curtailed, proceeded to defy the law by listening
|
||
|
to lay exhorters and to itinerants just as they had been in the habit
|
||
|
of doing ever since the church had felt the quickening influences of
|
||
|
the Great Awakening. This majority declared that it was "regular for
|
||
|
this church to admit persons into this church that are in full
|
||
|
communion with other churches and come regularly to this." This
|
||
|
decision the minority characterized as unlawful according to the
|
||
|
recent acts of the Assembly. The majority proceeded to argue the
|
||
|
right of the majority in the church as above the right of the majority
|
||
|
in the society, or parish, to elect the minister and to guide the
|
||
|
church. In an attempt to satisfy both parties, candidates were tried,
|
||
|
but they could not command a sufficient number of votes from either
|
||
|
side to be located permanently. A meeting in 1743 of the Consociation
|
||
|
of Windham (to whose jurisdiction the Canterbury church belonged),
|
||
|
together with a council of New Lights, brought temporary peace. A
|
||
|
candidate was agreed upon; but in a few months the New Lights became
|
||
|
dissatisfied with him because of his approval of the Saybrook system
|
||
|
of church government, his acceptance of the Half-Way Covenant, and
|
||
|
other opinions. Controversy revived. The majority of the church
|
||
|
withdrew, and for a while met in a private house for services, which
|
||
|
were conducted by Solomon Paine or by some other layman. As a result,
|
||
|
the Windham Association passed a vote of censure against the
|
||
|
seceders. Paine wrote a sharp retort, for which he was arrested,
|
||
|
although ostensibly on the charge of unlawfully conducting public
|
||
|
worship. He refused to give bonds and was committed to Windham jail
|
||
|
in September, 1744. Such crowds flocked to the prison yard to hear him
|
||
|
preach, and excitement ran so high, that the officer who had conducted
|
||
|
his trial appeared before the Assembly to protest that such legal
|
||
|
proceedings did but tend to increase the disorders they were intended
|
||
|
to cure. Accordingly, Paine was released in October.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The interest of the whole colony was now centred on the defiant and
|
||
|
determined Canterbury Separate church, and the November meeting of the
|
||
|
Windham Association had the schism under consideration, when Yale
|
||
|
expelled two Canterbury students whose parents were members of that
|
||
|
church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In October, 1742, in order to protect the college and the ministry and
|
||
|
to deal a blow at the "Shepherd's Tent," a kind of school or academy
|
||
|
which the New Lights had set up in New London for qualifying young men
|
||
|
as exhorters, teachers, and ministers, the General Assembly had
|
||
|
decided that no persons should presume to set up any college, seminary
|
||
|
of learning, or any public school whatever, without special leave of
|
||
|
the legislature.[115] The Court had also enacted that no one should
|
||
|
take the benefit of the laws respecting the settlement and support of
|
||
|
ministers unless he were a graduate of Yale or Harvard, or some other
|
||
|
approved Protestant university. It had also given explicit directions
|
||
|
for the supervision of the schools throughout the colony and of their
|
||
|
masters' orthodoxy,[116] and had advised Yale to take especial care
|
||
|
that her students should not be contaminated by the New Lights. The
|
||
|
Congregationalists had reported the "Shepherd's Tent" as a noisy,
|
||
|
tumultuous resort, because it was occasionally used for meetings, and
|
||
|
had added that it was openly taught in that school that there would
|
||
|
soon be a change in the government, and that disobedience to the civil
|
||
|
laws was not wrong. The Assembly, fearing that it might "train up
|
||
|
youth in ill practices and principles," sought to put an end to it. As
|
||
|
to the advice to the college, Yale was only too eager to follow it,
|
||
|
and the same year expelled the saintly David Brainerd[117] for
|
||
|
criticising the prayers of the college preachers as lacking in
|
||
|
fervor. His offense was against a college law of the preceding year
|
||
|
which forbade students to call their officers "hypocritical, carnal or
|
||
|
unconverted men." The college, as the New Light movement increased,
|
||
|
came to the further conclusion that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
since the principal design of erecting this college was to train
|
||
|
up a succession of learned and orthodox ministers by whose example
|
||
|
people might be directed in the ways of religion and good order
|
||
|
... it would be a contradiction to the civil government to support
|
||
|
a college to educate students to trample upon their own laws, to
|
||
|
break up the churches which they establish and protect, especially
|
||
|
since the General Assembly in May 1742, thought proper to give the
|
||
|
governors of the college some special advice and direction upon
|
||
|
that account, which was to the effect that proper care should be
|
||
|
taken to prevent the scholars from imbibing those or like errors;
|
||
|
and those who would not be orderly and submissive, should not be
|
||
|
allowed the privileges of the college.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Solomon Paine made answer to this law. With fine irony, he assured the
|
||
|
people that in effect it forbade all students attending Yale College
|
||
|
to go to any religious meeting even with their parents, should they be
|
||
|
Separatists or New Lights, because--
|
||
|
|
||
|
no scholar upon the Lord's day or other day, under pretence of
|
||
|
religion, shall go to any public or private meeting, not
|
||
|
established or allowed by public authority or approved by the
|
||
|
President, under penalty of a fine, confession, admonition or
|
||
|
otherwise, according to the state and demerit of the offence, for
|
||
|
fear that such preaching would end in "Quakerism," open
|
||
|
infidelity, and the destruction of all Christian religion, and
|
||
|
make endless divisions in the Christian church till nothing hut
|
||
|
the name of it would be left in the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two Cleveland brothers, John and Ebenezer, had spent the fall
|
||
|
vacation of 1744 [c] with their parents at their home in Canterbury,
|
||
|
and by request of their elders had frequented the Separatist church
|
||
|
there. On their return to Yale, the boys were admonished. They
|
||
|
professed themselves ready to apologize, but not in such words as the
|
||
|
authorities thought sufficiently submissive, for the latter considered
|
||
|
that the boys had broken the laws "of God, of the Colony and of the
|
||
|
College."[119] The boys very ably argued that, under the
|
||
|
circumstances, there had been nothing else for them to do but to go to
|
||
|
church with their parents when requested to do so, and held to their
|
||
|
position. Yale expelled them, and there followed a sensation
|
||
|
throughout the colony.[120]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The leaders of the New Light party in the church of Canterbury were
|
||
|
the nearest relatives and friends of the Cleveland boys, who came to
|
||
|
be regarded as martyrs to their religion. Their treatment opened the
|
||
|
question as to whether the steadily increasing numbers of New Lights
|
||
|
were to lose for their children the benefit of the college, that they
|
||
|
helped to support. Must they, in order to send their sons to college,
|
||
|
deprive them for four years of a "Gospel ministry" and lay them open
|
||
|
to consequent grave perils? Why should New Lights be required to make
|
||
|
such a sacrifice, or why, in vacation, should their children be
|
||
|
required to submit to the ecclesiastical laws of the college? If
|
||
|
Episcopalians were permitted to have their sons, students at Yale,
|
||
|
worship with them during the vacations, why should not the same
|
||
|
liberty be granted to equally good citizens who differed even less in
|
||
|
theological opinions?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Because of this college incident the difficulties in the Canterbury
|
||
|
church attracted still more attention, but the end of the schism was
|
||
|
at hand. In the month that witnessed the expulsion of the Clevelands,
|
||
|
the minority of the original First Church voted that they were "The
|
||
|
Church of Canterbury," and that those who had gone forth from among
|
||
|
them in the January of the preceding year, 1743, as Congregationalists
|
||
|
after the Cambridge Platform, had abrogated that of
|
||
|
Saybrook. Consequently, to the minority lawfully belonged the election
|
||
|
of the minister, the meeting house, and the taxes for ministerial
|
||
|
support. Having thus fortified their position, they by a later vote
|
||
|
declared:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
That those in the society who are differently minded from us, and
|
||
|
can't conscientiously join in ye settlement of Mr. James
|
||
|
Coggeshall as our minister may have free liberty to enjoy their
|
||
|
own opinion, and we are willing they should be released and
|
||
|
discharged from paying anything to ye support of Mr. Coggeshall,
|
||
|
or living under his ministry any longer than until they have
|
||
|
parish privileges granted them and are settled in church by
|
||
|
themselves according to ye order of ye Gospel, or are lawfully
|
||
|
released. [121]
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the repeal of the Toleration Act in 1743, a new method had been
|
||
|
prescribed for sober dissenters who wished to separate from the state
|
||
|
church, and who were not of the recognized sects. The method of
|
||
|
relief, thereafter, was for the dissenters, no matter how widely
|
||
|
scattered in the colony, to appeal in person to the General Assembly
|
||
|
and ask for special exemption. Moreover, they were promised only that
|
||
|
their requests would be listened to, and the Assembly was growing
|
||
|
steadily more and more averse to granting such petitions. As a result
|
||
|
of this policy, the Separatist church of Canterbury did not have a
|
||
|
very good prospect of immediate ability to accept the good-will of the
|
||
|
First Church, which went even farther than the resolution cited
|
||
|
above. The First Church offered to assist the Separatists in obtaining
|
||
|
recognition from the Assembly. This offer the Separatists refused,
|
||
|
preferring to submit to double taxation, and thus to become a standing
|
||
|
protest to the injustice of the laws.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the expulsion of the Clevelands, Yale made one more pronounced
|
||
|
effort to discipline its students and to repress the growth of the
|
||
|
liberal spirit. She attempted to suppress a reprint of Locke's essay
|
||
|
upon "Toleration" which the senior class had secretly printed at their
|
||
|
expense. An attempt to overawe the students and to make them confess
|
||
|
on pain of expulsion was met by the spirited resistance of one of the
|
||
|
class, who threatened to appeal to the King in Council if his diploma
|
||
|
were denied him. His diploma was granted; and some years after, when
|
||
|
the sentiment in the colony had further changed, the college gave the
|
||
|
Cleveland brothers their degree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The church in Enfield[122] had an experience somewhat similar to that
|
||
|
of Canterbury, to which it seems to have looked for spiritual advice
|
||
|
and example. The Enfield Separate church was probably organized
|
||
|
between 1745 and 1751, though its first known documents are a series
|
||
|
of letters to the Separate church in Canterbury covering the period
|
||
|
1751-53. These letters sought advice in adjusting difficulties that
|
||
|
were creating great discord in the church, which had already separated
|
||
|
from the original church of Enfield. In 1762, the Enfield Separatists,
|
||
|
once more in harmony, renewed their covenant, and called Mr. Nathaniel
|
||
|
Collins to be their pastor. They struggled for existence until 1769,
|
||
|
when they appealed to the General Assembly for exemption from the
|
||
|
rates still levied upon them for the benefit of the First
|
||
|
Society. They asked for recognition, separation, and incorporation as
|
||
|
the Second Society and Church of Enfield. They were refused; but in
|
||
|
May of the following year,--a year to be marked by special legislation
|
||
|
in behalf of dissenters,--the Enfield Separatists again memorialized
|
||
|
the Assembly, and in response were permitted to organize their own
|
||
|
church. [123] This permission, however, was limited to the
|
||
|
memorialists, eighty in number; to their children, if within six
|
||
|
months after reaching their majority they filed certificates of
|
||
|
membership in this Separate church; and to strangers, who should enter
|
||
|
the new society within one year of their settling in the town. The
|
||
|
history of the Enfield Separatists gives glimpses of the frequent
|
||
|
double discord between the New Lights and the Old and among the New
|
||
|
Lights themselves. The period of the Enfield persecution extended over
|
||
|
years when, elsewhere in the colony, Separatists had obtained
|
||
|
recognition of their claims to toleration, if only through special
|
||
|
acts and not by general legislation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If churches suffered from the severe ecclesiastical laws of 1742-43,
|
||
|
individuals did also. Under the law which considered traveling
|
||
|
ministers as vagrants, and which the Assembly had made still more
|
||
|
stringent by the additional penalty "to pay down the cost of
|
||
|
transportation," so learned a man as the Rev. Samuel Finley,
|
||
|
afterwards president of Princeton, was imprisoned and driven from the
|
||
|
colony because he insisted upon preaching in Connecticut. Indeed, it
|
||
|
was his persistence in returning to the colony that caused the
|
||
|
magistrates to increase the severity of the law.[124] When the
|
||
|
ministers John Owen of Groton and Benjamin Pomeroy of Hebron, as well
|
||
|
as the itinerant James Davenport of Southold, criticised the laws, all
|
||
|
of them were at once arraigned for the offense before the Assembly.
|
||
|
There was so much excitement over the arrest of Pomeroy and Davenport
|
||
|
that it threatened a riot. All three men were discharged, but
|
||
|
Davenport was ordered out of the colony for his itinerant preaching
|
||
|
and for teaching resistance to the civil laws. Pomeroy, his friend,
|
||
|
had declared that the laws forbade any faithful minister, or any one
|
||
|
faithful in civil authority, to hold office. Events bore out his
|
||
|
statement, for ministers were hounded, and the New Light justices of
|
||
|
the peace, and other magistrates, were deprived of office. Pomeroy,
|
||
|
himself, was discharged only to be complained of for irregular
|
||
|
preaching at Colchester and in punishment to be,deprived of his salary
|
||
|
for seven years.[125] The Rev. Nathan Stone of Stonington was
|
||
|
disciplined for his New Light sympathies. Philemon Bobbins of Branford
|
||
|
was deposed for preaching to the Baptists at Wallingford. This last
|
||
|
procedure was the work of the Consociation of New Haven county, which
|
||
|
thereby began a six years' contest, 1741-47, with the Branford
|
||
|
church. In 1745 this church attempted to throw off the yoke of the
|
||
|
Consociation by renouncing the Saybrook Platform.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During these years of persecution, the opposition to the Old Light
|
||
|
policy was gradually gaining effective power, although the college had
|
||
|
expelled Brainerd, and Mr. Cook, one of the Yale corporation, had
|
||
|
found it expedient to resign because of his too prominent part in the
|
||
|
formation of the North Church of New Haven. The Old Lights in the
|
||
|
legislature of 1743 passed the repeal of the Toleration Act because
|
||
|
the New Lights had no commanding vote; but they were increasing
|
||
|
throughout the colony. Fairfield East Consociation had licensed
|
||
|
Brainerd the year that Yale expelled him. Twelve ministers of New
|
||
|
London and Windham county had met to approve the revival,
|
||
|
notwithstanding the repeal of the Toleration Act and the known
|
||
|
antagonism of the Windham Association to the Separatists. Windham
|
||
|
Consociation and that of Fairfield East favored the revival. Large
|
||
|
numbers of converts were made in these districts, and many also in
|
||
|
Hartford county. In the New Haven district the spirit of antagonism
|
||
|
and of persecution was strongest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was in accordance with the laws of 1742-43 that Mack, Shaw, and
|
||
|
Pyrlaus, Moravian missionaries, on a visit in 1744 to their mission
|
||
|
stations among the Indians in Connecticut, were seized as Papists and
|
||
|
hustled from sheriff to sheriff for three days until "the Governor of
|
||
|
Connecticut honorably dismissed them," though their accusers insisted
|
||
|
upon their being bound over under a penalty of L100 to keep the law.
|
||
|
"Being not fully acquainted with all the special laws of the country,
|
||
|
they perceived a trap laid for them and thought it prudent to retire
|
||
|
to Shekomeko" (Pine Plains, Dutchess County, N. Y.). Missionaries sent
|
||
|
out from Nazareth and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, had established this
|
||
|
sub-centre for work in New York and Connecticut, and in the latter
|
||
|
colony, in 1740-43, had made Indian converts at Sharon, Salisbury
|
||
|
Indian Pond, near Newtown, and at Pachgatgoch, two miles southwest of
|
||
|
Kent. Here was their principal station in Connecticut. They had made,
|
||
|
in all, some twenty converts among the Indians, and had reclaimed
|
||
|
several of their chief men from drunkenness and idleness. Moravian
|
||
|
principles forbade these missionaries to take an oath. Consequently,
|
||
|
the greed of traders, the rivalry of creeds, together with the belief
|
||
|
that there was something wrong about men who would not swear
|
||
|
allegiance to King George,--notwithstanding their willingness to
|
||
|
affirm it, and notwithstanding their denial of the Pretender,--gave
|
||
|
rise to the conviction that they must be Papists[d] in league with the
|
||
|
French and their Indian allies. Accordingly both magistrates and
|
||
|
ministers arrested the missionaries, and hurried them before the court
|
||
|
at Poughkeepsie or at New Milford. Though the governors of both states
|
||
|
recognized the value of the mission work, popular feeling ran so high
|
||
|
that New York, in September, 1744, passed a law requiring them to take
|
||
|
the oaths prescribed or to leave the country, and also commanding that
|
||
|
"vagrant Teachers, Moravians, and disguised Papists should not preach
|
||
|
or teach in public or private" without first obtaining a license. In
|
||
|
Connecticut, as has been said, the laws of 1742-1743 were enforced
|
||
|
against them; later, when during the Old French War groundless rumors
|
||
|
of their intrigues with hostile Indians were circulated against them,
|
||
|
a vain hunt was made for three thousand stands of arms that were said
|
||
|
to be secreted in their missions. The severe persecution in New York
|
||
|
had driven these missionaries into Pennsylvania and into Connecticut,
|
||
|
but these rumors of intrigue broke up their work and caused the
|
||
|
abandonment of their stations in the latter colony. Some of these,
|
||
|
such as Kent, Sharon, and Salisbury, were revived in 1749-1762, at the
|
||
|
request of the English settlers as well as of the Indian
|
||
|
converts.[126]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Returning to the main story of the progress of dissent, we find that
|
||
|
in 1746 the General Court of Connecticut felt obliged to safeguard the
|
||
|
Establishment by the passage of a law entitled, "Concerning who shall
|
||
|
vote in Society Meetings."[127] Its preamble states that persons
|
||
|
exempted from taxes for the support of the established ministry,
|
||
|
because of their dissenting from the way of worship and ministry of
|
||
|
the Presbyterian, Congregational, or Consociated churches, "ought not
|
||
|
to vote in society meetings with respect to the support or to the
|
||
|
building and maintaining of meeting houses," yet some persons,
|
||
|
exempted as aforesaid, "have adventured to vote and act therein," as
|
||
|
there was no express law to the contrary. The new law forbade such
|
||
|
voting, and limited the ecclesiastical ballot to members of the
|
||
|
Establishment who "were persons of full age and in full communion with
|
||
|
the church," and to other unexempted persons who held a freehold rated
|
||
|
at fifty shillings per year, or personal property to the value of
|
||
|
forty pounds. This law was just, in that it excluded all dissenters
|
||
|
who had received exemption from Presbyterian rates. It included all
|
||
|
others having the property qualification, whether they wanted to vote
|
||
|
or not. That it was felt to be a necessity is a witness to the
|
||
|
increasing recognition of the strength of the dissenting element.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1747, the Consociation of Windham sent forth a violent pamphlet
|
||
|
describing the Separatists as a people in revolt against God and in
|
||
|
rebellion against the Church and government. But the tide of public
|
||
|
opinion was turning, and popular sentiment did not support the writers
|
||
|
of this pamphlet. Moreover, the secular affairs of the colony were
|
||
|
calling minds away from religious contentions as the stress of the Old
|
||
|
French War was more and more felt. In 1748, venturing upon the
|
||
|
improvement in public sentiment, Solomon Paine sent to the legislature
|
||
|
a memorial signed by three hundred and thirty persons and asking for a
|
||
|
repeal of such laws as debarred people from enjoying the liberty
|
||
|
"granted by God and tolerated by the King."[128] It was known to these
|
||
|
memorialists that a revision of the laws, first undertaken in 1742,
|
||
|
was nearing completion, and their desire was that all obnoxious or
|
||
|
unfair acts should be repealed. The petition met with a sharp rebuff,
|
||
|
and, as a punishment, three members were expelled from the Assembly
|
||
|
for being Separatists. But by such measures the Old Lights were
|
||
|
overreaching themselves. A mark of the turning of public opinion was
|
||
|
given this same year, when, upon the request of his old church in
|
||
|
Hebron, the church vouching for his work and character, the Assembly
|
||
|
restored to his ministerial rights and privileges the Rev. James
|
||
|
Pomeroy. The unjust laws of 1742-43 and of the following years were
|
||
|
never formally repealed, but were quietly dropped out of the revision
|
||
|
of the laws issued in 1750.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thenceforth the people began to tolerate variety in religious opinions
|
||
|
with better grace, and the dominant authoritative rule of the Saybrook
|
||
|
Platform began to wane, though for twenty years more it strove to
|
||
|
assert its power. In 1755, the Middletown Association advised
|
||
|
licensing candidates for the ministry for a term of years. The idea
|
||
|
was to prevent errors arising from the personal interpretation of the
|
||
|
Scriptures and indifference to dogmatic truths of religion from
|
||
|
creeping into the churches. About the same time, the Consociation of
|
||
|
New Haven invited their former member, Mr. Bobbins of Branford, to sit
|
||
|
with them again at the installation of Mr. Street of East
|
||
|
Haven. Conciliatory acts and measures such as these originated with
|
||
|
both the Old and New Lights, and did much to lessen the division
|
||
|
between them. Discussion turned more and more from personal opinions,
|
||
|
character, and abilities, to considerations of doctrinal points. The
|
||
|
churches found more and more in common, while worldly interests left
|
||
|
the masses with only a half-hearted concern in church discussions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To summarize the effect of the Great Awakening as evidenced by the
|
||
|
great schism and its results thus far considered: The strength of the
|
||
|
revival movement, as such, was soon spent. The number of its converts
|
||
|
throughout New England was estimated by Dr. Dexter to be as high as
|
||
|
forty or fifty thousand, while later writers put it as low as ten or
|
||
|
twelve thousand, out of the entire population of three hundred
|
||
|
thousand souls. The years 1740-42 were the years of the Great
|
||
|
Awakening, and after them there were comparatively few conversions
|
||
|
during any given time. Even in Jonathan Edwards's own church in
|
||
|
Northampton there were no converts between 1744 and 1748. The
|
||
|
influence of the Great Awakening was not, however, transient, nor was
|
||
|
it confined to the Congregational churches, whether of the Cambridge
|
||
|
or the Saybrook type. Baptist churches felt the impetus, receiving
|
||
|
many directly into their membership, and also indirectly, from those
|
||
|
Separatist churches which found themselves too weak to
|
||
|
endure. Episcopalians added to their numbers from among religiously
|
||
|
inclined persons who sought a calm and stable church home unaffected
|
||
|
by church and political strife. The Great Awakening created the
|
||
|
Separatist movement and the New Light party, revitalized the
|
||
|
Established churches, invigorated others, and through the persecution
|
||
|
and counter-persecution that the great schism produced, taught the
|
||
|
Connecticut people more and more of religious tolerance, and so
|
||
|
brought them nearer to the dawn of religious liberty. Such liberty
|
||
|
could only come after the downfall of the Saybrook, Platform, and
|
||
|
after a complete severance of Church and State. The last could not
|
||
|
come for three quarters of a century. Meanwhile the leaven of the
|
||
|
great revival would be working. On its intellectual side, the Great
|
||
|
Awakening led to the discussion of doctrinal points, an advance from
|
||
|
questions of church polity. These themes of pulpit and of religious
|
||
|
press led, finally, to a live interest in practical Christianity and
|
||
|
to a more genial religion than that which had characterized the
|
||
|
Puritan age. The Half-Way Covenant had been killed. Education had
|
||
|
received a new impulse, Christian missions were reinvigorated, and the
|
||
|
monthly concert of prayer for the conversion of the world was
|
||
|
instituted. [129] True, French and Indian wars, the Spanish
|
||
|
entanglement with its West Indian expedition, and the consuming
|
||
|
political interests of the years 1745-83, shortened the period of
|
||
|
energetic spiritual life, and ushered in another half century of
|
||
|
religious indifference. But during that half century the followers of
|
||
|
Edwards and Bellamy were to develop a less severe and more winning
|
||
|
system of theology, and the fellowship of the churches was to suggest
|
||
|
the colonial committees of safety as a preliminary to the birth of a
|
||
|
nation, founded upon the inherent equality of all men before the
|
||
|
law. This conception of political and civil liberty was to develop
|
||
|
side by side with a clearer notion of the value of religious freedom.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] This term came with the royal charter of 1662, but only gradually
|
||
|
displaced the familiar "General Court."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] The Milford church, like that of New Haven, suffered for many
|
||
|
years from unjust exactions and taxation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] Commencement then came in September.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] And this notwithstanding their willingness to include in their
|
||
|
affirmation a denial of Mariolatry, purgatory, and other vital Romish
|
||
|
tenets.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XI
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE ABROGATION OF THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
That house cannot stand.--Mark iii, 25.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The times change and we change with them.--Proverb.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The omission of all persecuting acts from the revision of the laws in
|
||
|
1750 was evidence that the worst features of the great schism were
|
||
|
passing, that public opinion as a whole had grown averse to any great
|
||
|
severity toward the Separatists as dissenters. But the continuance in
|
||
|
the revised statutes of the Saybrook Platform as the legalized
|
||
|
constitution of the "Presbyterian, Congregational or Consociated
|
||
|
Church," and the almost total absence of any provision for exempting
|
||
|
Congregational Separatists from the taxes levied in its behalf,
|
||
|
operated, notwithstanding the many acts of conciliation between these
|
||
|
two types of churches, to revive at times the milder forms of
|
||
|
persecution. And such injustice would continue until the Separatists
|
||
|
as a body were legally exempted from ecclesiastical rates, and until
|
||
|
the Saybrook Platform was either formally annulled or, in its turn,
|
||
|
quietly dropped from the statute book. But henceforth, the measure of
|
||
|
intolerance would be determined more by local sentiment and less by
|
||
|
the text of the law, more by the proportion of Old Lights to New in a
|
||
|
given community. And the measure of toleration must eventually take
|
||
|
the form of legalized rights rather than of special privileges, and
|
||
|
this through a growing appreciation of the value of the Separatists as
|
||
|
citizens. The abrogation of the Saybrook Platform might follow upon a
|
||
|
reaffiliation of all Presbyterians and all Congregationalists in a new
|
||
|
spirit of mutual tolerance and helpfulness. Whatever the events or
|
||
|
influences that should bring about this reaffiliation, the new bonds
|
||
|
of church life would necessarily lack the stringency of the palmy days
|
||
|
of Saybrook autocratic rule. Consequently when such a time arrived,
|
||
|
the Platform, at least in its letter, could be dropped from the
|
||
|
law-book. The old colonial laws for the support of religion would
|
||
|
still suffice to protect and exalt the Establishment, and to preserve
|
||
|
it as the spiritual arm of the State. It so happened that toleration
|
||
|
was granted to the Separatists at the beginning of the Revolutionary
|
||
|
struggle, and that the abrogation of the Saybrook Platform followed
|
||
|
close upon its victorious end. Many influences, both religious and
|
||
|
secular, had their part in bringing about these progressive steps
|
||
|
toward religious freedom, toward full and free liberty of conscience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The revision of the laws completed in 1750 had been under
|
||
|
consideration since 1742. At the beginning of the great schism, the
|
||
|
important task had been placed in the hands of a committee consisting
|
||
|
of Roger Wolcott, Thomas Fitch, Jonathan Trumbull, and John Bulkley,
|
||
|
Judge of the Superior Court. The first three names are at once
|
||
|
recognized as Connecticut's chief magistrates in 1750-54, 1754-66,
|
||
|
1769-1783, respectively. During the eight years that the revision was
|
||
|
in the hands of this committee, the church quarrel had passed its
|
||
|
crisis; the Old Lights had slowly yielded their political, as well as
|
||
|
their ecclesiastical power; and their controlling influence was
|
||
|
rapidly passing from them. The Old French War, with its pressing
|
||
|
affairs, had so affected the life of the colony as to lessen religious
|
||
|
fervor, weaken ecclesiastical animosities, and, at the same time, to
|
||
|
develop a broader conception of citizenship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
English influence, moreover, had modified the ecclesiastical laws in
|
||
|
the revision of 1750. The Connecticut authorities, when imbued with
|
||
|
the persecuting spirit, did not always stop to distinguish between the
|
||
|
legally exempt Baptist dissenters and the unexempted Separatists. This
|
||
|
was due in part to the fact that many of the latter, like the church
|
||
|
of which Isaac Backus was the leader, went over to the Baptist
|
||
|
denomination. The two sects held similar opinions upon all subjects,
|
||
|
except that of baptism. It was much easier to obtain exemption from
|
||
|
ecclesiastical taxes by showing Baptist certificates than to run the
|
||
|
risk of being denied exemption when appeal was made to the Assembly,
|
||
|
either individually or as a church body, the form of petition demanded
|
||
|
of these Separatists. The persecuted Baptists at once turned to
|
||
|
England for assistance, and to the Committee of English Dissenters, of
|
||
|
which Dr. Avery was chairman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This committee had been appointed to look after the interests of all
|
||
|
dissenters, both in England and in her colonies, for the English
|
||
|
dissenting bodies were growing in numbers and in political
|
||
|
importance. To this committee the Connecticut Baptists reported such
|
||
|
cases of persecution as that of the Saybrook Separatist church, which
|
||
|
in 1744 suffered through the arrest of fourteen of its members for
|
||
|
"holding a meeting contrary to law on God's holy Sabbath day." These
|
||
|
fourteen people were arraigned, fined, and driven on foot through deep
|
||
|
mud twenty-five miles to New London, where they were thrust into
|
||
|
prison for refusing to pay their fines, and left there without fire,
|
||
|
food, or beds. There they were kept for several weeks, dependent for
|
||
|
the necessaries of life upon the good will of neighboring
|
||
|
Baptists.[130] The Separatists could report the trials of the Separate
|
||
|
church of Canterbury, of that of Enfield, of the First Separate church
|
||
|
of Milford, hindered in the exercise of its legal rights for over
|
||
|
twenty years, and they could also recount the persecution of churches
|
||
|
and of individuals in Wethersfield, Windsor, Middletown, Norwich, and
|
||
|
elsewhere. Upon receiving such reports, Dr. Avery had written, "I am
|
||
|
very sorry to hear of the persecuting spirit which prevails in
|
||
|
Connecticut.... If any gentleman that suffers by these coercive laws
|
||
|
will apply to me, I will use my influence that justice be done them."
|
||
|
The letter was read in the Assembly, and is said to have influenced
|
||
|
the committee of revision, causing them to omit the persecuting laws
|
||
|
of 1742-44, in order that they might no longer be quoted against the
|
||
|
colony. Governor Law replied to Dr. Avery that the disorders and
|
||
|
excesses of the dissenters had compelled the very legislation of which
|
||
|
they complained. To which Dr. Avery returned answer that, while
|
||
|
disorders were to be regretted, civil penalties were not their proper
|
||
|
remedy. This was a sentiment that was gaining adherents in the colony
|
||
|
as well as in England. Among other instances of persecution among the
|
||
|
Baptists was that of Samuel, brother of Isaac Backus, who in 1752,
|
||
|
with his mother and two members of the Baptist society, was imprisoned
|
||
|
for thirteen days on account of refusal to pay the ecclesiastical
|
||
|
taxes.[131] Another was that of Deacon Nathaniel Drake, Jr.,[132] of
|
||
|
Windsor, who, in 1761, refused to pay the assessment for the Second
|
||
|
Society's new meeting-house. For six years the magistrates wrestled
|
||
|
with the Deacon, striving to collect the assessment. But the Deacon
|
||
|
was obstinate, and rather than pay a tax of which his conscience
|
||
|
disapproved, he preferred to be branded in the hand. Outside of
|
||
|
Baptist or Separatist, there were other afflicted churches, such as
|
||
|
that of Wallingford,[133] where the New Lights could complain that, in
|
||
|
1758, the Consociation of New Haven county had refused to install the
|
||
|
candidate of the majority, Mr. Dana; and had attempted to discipline
|
||
|
the twelve ministers who had united in ordaining him; and that as a
|
||
|
result the twelve were forced to meet in an Association by themselves
|
||
|
for fourteen years, or until 1772.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Separatists attempted to obtain exemption through petitions to the
|
||
|
Assembly, trusting that, as each new election sent more and more New
|
||
|
Lights to that body, each prayer for relief would be more favorably
|
||
|
received. One of the most important of these petitions was that of
|
||
|
1753, when more than twenty Separatist churches, representing about a
|
||
|
thousand members, united in an appeal wherein they complained of the
|
||
|
distraining of their goods to meet assessments and taxes for the
|
||
|
benefit of the Established churches; of imprisonments, with consequent
|
||
|
deprivation of comforts for their families; and of the danger to the
|
||
|
civil peace threatened by these evils. The Assembly refused
|
||
|
redress. Whereupon the petition was at once reconstructed,[a] and,
|
||
|
with authentic records and testimonies, to which Governor Fitch set
|
||
|
the seal of Connecticut, was sent, in 1756, [134] to London. The
|
||
|
Committee in behalf of Dissenters were to see that it was presented to
|
||
|
the King in Council. The petition charged violation of the colony's
|
||
|
charter, excessive favoritism, and legislation in favor of one
|
||
|
Christian sect to the exclusion of all others and to the oppression,
|
||
|
even, of some. The English Committee thought that these charges might
|
||
|
anger the King and endanger the Connecticut charter. Accordingly, they
|
||
|
again wrote to the Connecticut authorities, remonstrating with them
|
||
|
because of their treatment of dissenters. At the same time, they sent
|
||
|
a letter advising the petitioners to show their loyalty to the best
|
||
|
interests of the colony by withdrawing their complaint. These
|
||
|
dissenters were further advised to begin at once a suit in the
|
||
|
Connecticut courts for their rights, and with the intent of carrying
|
||
|
their case to England, should the colony fail to do them
|
||
|
justice. Legal proceedings were immediately begun, but were allowed to
|
||
|
lapse, partly because of the press of secular interests, for the
|
||
|
colonial wars, the West India expedition, and other affairs of great
|
||
|
moment claimed attention, and partly because there were indications
|
||
|
that the government would regard the Separatists more favorably.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the colony itself a change was taking place through which the
|
||
|
college was to go over to the side of the New Lights. In 1755,
|
||
|
President Clap had established the College Church in order to remove
|
||
|
the students from the party strife that was still distracting the
|
||
|
churches. In order to avoid a conflict over the matter, he refused to
|
||
|
ask the consent of the Assembly, claiming the right of an incorporated
|
||
|
college and the precedent of the English universities, since, in 1745,
|
||
|
the Assembly had formally incorporated "The President and Fellows of
|
||
|
Yale College," vesting in them all the usual powers appertaining to
|
||
|
colleges. In the same year, also, the initial step toward establishing
|
||
|
a chair of divinity had been taken, and it became the first toward the
|
||
|
founding of the separate College Church. President Clap always
|
||
|
maintained that "the great design of founding Yale was to educate
|
||
|
ministers in our way,"[135] and the chair of divinity had been
|
||
|
established in answer to the suggestion of the Court that the college
|
||
|
take measures to protect its students from the New Light
|
||
|
movement. President Clap was hurried on in his policy of establishing
|
||
|
the College Church both by his desire to separate the students from
|
||
|
the New Light controversy in Mr. Noyes's church, where they were wont
|
||
|
to attend, and by an appeal to him, in 1753, of Rector Punderson, the
|
||
|
priest recently placed in charge of the Church-of-England mission in
|
||
|
New Haven. The rector had two sons in college, and he asked that they
|
||
|
and such other collegians as were Episcopalians might be permitted to
|
||
|
attend the Church-of-England services. President Clap refused to give
|
||
|
the desired permission, except for communion and some special
|
||
|
services, and he at once proceeded to organize a church within the
|
||
|
college. The trustees and faculty upheld him, but the Old Lights, then
|
||
|
about two-thirds of the deputies to the Assembly, opposed his course
|
||
|
of action, and succeeded in taking away the annual grant that, at the
|
||
|
incorporation of the college, had been given to Yale. After this, they
|
||
|
regarded President Clap as a "political New Light," but as the latter
|
||
|
party increased in the Assembly, and became friendly to Yale, the
|
||
|
college gradually reinstated itself in the favor of the legislature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If in his petitions the Separatist demanded only exemption, only that
|
||
|
much toleration, in his controversial writings he ably argued the
|
||
|
right of all men to full liberty of conscience. Unfortunately, the
|
||
|
ignorance and follies of many of the Separatists, when battling in
|
||
|
advance of their age for religious liberty, militated against the
|
||
|
logic of their position. Harmony among themselves would have commended
|
||
|
and strengthened their cause, and given it a forceful dignity. They
|
||
|
blundered, as did their English predecessors of a much earlier date,
|
||
|
by laying too much stress upon the individual, upon his
|
||
|
interpretations of Scripture, and upon his right of criticism. Much of
|
||
|
their work in behalf of religious liberty took the form of
|
||
|
pamphleteering. Again, it was their misfortune that the Establishment
|
||
|
could boast of writers of more ability and of greater training. Yet
|
||
|
the Separatists had some bold thinkers, some able advocates, and, as
|
||
|
time wore on, and their numbers were increased and disciplined, the
|
||
|
strength and quality of their petitions and published writings
|
||
|
improved greatly. Sometimes these dissenters were helped by the
|
||
|
theories of their opponents, which, when pushed to logical conclusions
|
||
|
and practical application, often became strong reasons for granting
|
||
|
the very liberty the Separatists sought. Sometimes an indignant member
|
||
|
of the Establishment, smarting under its interference, was roused to
|
||
|
forceful expression of the broader notions of personal and church
|
||
|
liberty that were slowly spreading through the community. A few
|
||
|
extracts from typical pamphlets of the time will give an idea of the
|
||
|
atmosphere surrounding the disputants.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1749, a tract was issued from the New London press by one
|
||
|
E. H. M. A. entitled, "The present way of the Country in maintaining
|
||
|
the Gospel ministry by a Public Rate or Tax is Lawful, Equitable, and
|
||
|
agreable to the Gospel; As the same is argued and proved in way of
|
||
|
Dialogue between John Queristicus and Thomas Casuisticus, near
|
||
|
Neighbors in the County." In answer to this, and for the purpose of
|
||
|
vindicating the religious practices and opinions of the Separatists,
|
||
|
Ebenezer Frothingham, a Separatist minister, took the field in 1750 as
|
||
|
the champion of religious liberty. His book of four hundred and fifty
|
||
|
pages had for its title "The Articles of Faith and Practice with the
|
||
|
Covenant that is confessed by the Separate Churches of Christ in this
|
||
|
land. Also a discourse." So influential and so characteristic was this
|
||
|
work, that rather long extracts from it are permissible, and, with a
|
||
|
few arguments from other writers, will serve to reflect the thought
|
||
|
and feeling of the day, and will best give the point of view of both
|
||
|
dissenter and member of the Establishment, of liberal and
|
||
|
conservative; for the pamphlet of the period was apt to be religious
|
||
|
or political, or more likely both.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frothingham, speaking of the injustice done the Separatists, writes:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
That religion that hath not authority and power enough within
|
||
|
itself to influence its professors to support the same, without
|
||
|
Bargains, Taxes or Rates, and the Civil Power, and Prisons, &c. is
|
||
|
a false Religion. ... Now, if the Religion generally professed
|
||
|
and practiced in this land, be the Religion of Jesus Christ, why
|
||
|
do they strain away the Goods of the Professors of it, and waste
|
||
|
their substance to support it? which has frequently been done. And
|
||
|
which is worse, why do they take their Neighbors (that don't
|
||
|
worship with them, but have solemnly covenanted to worship God in
|
||
|
another place) by the throat, and cast them into Prison? or else
|
||
|
for a Rate of Twenty Shillings, Three or Six Pounds, send away
|
||
|
Ten, Twenty, or Thirty Pounds worth of Goods, and set them up at
|
||
|
Vendue; where they will generally assemble the poor, miserable
|
||
|
Drunkard, and the awful foul-mouthed Swearer, and the bold,
|
||
|
covetous, Blasphemous Scoffer at things Sacred and Divine, and the
|
||
|
Scum of Society for the most part will be together, to count and
|
||
|
make their Games about the Goods upon Sale, and at the owners of
|
||
|
them too, and at the Holy Religion that the Owners thereof
|
||
|
profess; and at such Vendues there are rarely any solid, thinking
|
||
|
men to be found there; or if there are any such present, they do
|
||
|
not care to act in that oppressive way of supporting the
|
||
|
Gospel. Such men find something is the matter. God's Vice-regent
|
||
|
in their Breasts, tells them it is not equal to make such Havock
|
||
|
of men's Estates, to support a Worship they have nothing to do
|
||
|
with; yes, the Consciences of these persons will trouble them so
|
||
|
that they had rather pay twice their part of the Rates, and so let
|
||
|
the oppressed Party go free.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon the difficulty of securing collectors, Frothingham remarks: "If
|
||
|
it be such a good Cause, and no good men in the Society, to undertake
|
||
|
that good Work, surely then such a Society is awfully declined, if
|
||
|
that is the case." Frothingham quotes the Suttler of the "Dialogue" as
|
||
|
saying, "We have good reason to believe, that if this Hedge of human
|
||
|
Laws, and Enclosure of Order round the Church, were wholly broken
|
||
|
down, and taken away, there would not be, ('t is probable) one regular
|
||
|
visible Church left subsisting in this land, fifty years hence, or, at
|
||
|
most, not many. "To this, Frothingham replied that if by the "visible
|
||
|
church, here spoken of," is meant "Anti-Christ's Church, we should be
|
||
|
apt to believe it," for "it needs Civil Power, Rates and Prisons to
|
||
|
support it. But if the Gospel Church, set up at first without the aid
|
||
|
of civil power could continue and spread, why can't it subsist without
|
||
|
the Civil Power now as well as then?" "To this day," this author adds,
|
||
|
"the true Church of Christ is in bondage, by usurping Laws that
|
||
|
unrighteously intrude upon her ecclesiastical Rights and civil
|
||
|
Enjoyments; .... And Wo! Wo! to New England! for the God-provoking
|
||
|
Evil, which is too much indulged by the great and mighty in the
|
||
|
Land. The cry of oppression is gone up into the ears of the Lord God
|
||
|
of Sabbaoth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frothingham thrusts at the payment or support of the ministry by
|
||
|
taxation in his assertion that "there is no instance of Paul's
|
||
|
entering into any civil Contract or Bargain, to get his wages or Hire,
|
||
|
in all his Epistles; but we have frequent accounts of his receiving
|
||
|
free contributions."[136] (Here, he but repeats a part of the Baptist
|
||
|
protest in the Wightman-Bulkley debate of 1707.) Frothingham states
|
||
|
that "the scope and burden of it [his book] were to shew ... both
|
||
|
from scripture and reason that the standing ministers and Churches in
|
||
|
this Colony [Connecticut] are not practising in the rule of God's
|
||
|
word."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The book at once commanded the attention desired by its author. It
|
||
|
drew upon Frothingham the concentrated odium of the Rev. Moses
|
||
|
Bartlett, pastor of the Portland church, in a fifty-four-paged
|
||
|
pamphlet entitled "False and Seducing Teachers." Among such Bartlett
|
||
|
includes and roundly denounces Frothingham and the two Paines, Solomon
|
||
|
and his brother Elisha. Elisha Paine had removed to Long
|
||
|
Island. Returning to Canterbury for some of his household goods, he
|
||
|
was seized by the sheriff for rates overdue, and thrown into Windham
|
||
|
jail.[137] After waiting some weeks for his release, he sent the
|
||
|
following bold and spicy letter to the Canterbury assessors:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
To you gentlemen, practioners of the law from your prisoner in
|
||
|
Windham gaol, because his conscience will not let him pay a
|
||
|
minister that is set up by the laws of Connecticut, contrary to
|
||
|
his conscience and consent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Roman Emperor was called Pontifex Maximus, because he presided
|
||
|
over civil and ecclesiastical affairs; which, is the first beast
|
||
|
that persecuted the Christians that separated from the Established
|
||
|
religion, which they call the holy religion of their forefathers;
|
||
|
and by their law, fined, whipped, imprisoned and killed such as
|
||
|
refused obedience thereto. We all own that the Pope or Papal
|
||
|
throne is the second beast, because he is the head of the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical, and also meddles in civil affairs.... He also
|
||
|
compels all under him to submit to his worship, decrees and laws,
|
||
|
by whips, fines, prisons, fire and fagots. Now what your prisoner
|
||
|
requests of you is a clear distinction between the Ecclesiastical
|
||
|
Constitution of Connecticut, by which I am now held in prison, and
|
||
|
the aforesaid two thrones or beasts in the foundation,
|
||
|
constitution and support thereof. For if by Scripture and reason
|
||
|
you can show they do not all stand on the throne mentioned in
|
||
|
Psalm xciv: 20, [b] but that the latter is founded on the Rock
|
||
|
Christ Jesus, I will confess my fault and soon clear myself of the
|
||
|
prison. But if this Constitution hath its rise from _that
|
||
|
throne_ ... better is it to die for Christ, than to live
|
||
|
against him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From an old friend to this civil constitution, and long your
|
||
|
prisoner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ELISHA PAINE.
|
||
|
|
||
|
WINDHAM JAIL, Dec. 11, 1752.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1744, in addition to his memorials and letters, Solomon Paine had
|
||
|
published "A Short View of the Constitution of the Church of Christ,
|
||
|
and the Difference between it and the Church Established in
|
||
|
Connecticut." Frothingham, when alluding to Moses Bartlett's
|
||
|
denunciation of himself and Paine, refers to this book in his remark,
|
||
|
"Elder Paine and myself have labored to prove, and I think it evident,
|
||
|
that the religious Constitution of this Colony is not founded upon the
|
||
|
Scriptures of truth, but upon men's inventions."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the year 1755, the same in which he established the college church,
|
||
|
President Clap issued his "History and Vindication of the doctrines
|
||
|
received and established in the Churches of New England," [c] to which
|
||
|
Thomas Darling's "Some Remarks on President Clap's History" was a
|
||
|
scathing rejoinder. Darling asserted that for the President to uphold
|
||
|
the Saybrook System of Consociated Churches was to set up the
|
||
|
standards of men, a thing the forefathers never did;[138] that the
|
||
|
picture of the Separatists' "New Scheme," which the President drew,
|
||
|
was a scandalous _spiritual_ libel;[139] and then, falling into
|
||
|
the personal attacks permitted in those days, Darling adds that
|
||
|
President Clap was an overzealous sycophant of the General Assembly, a
|
||
|
servant of politics rather than of religion, and that it would be
|
||
|
better for him to trust to the real virtues of the Consociated Church
|
||
|
to uphold it than to strive for legal props and legislative favors for
|
||
|
his "ministry-factory,"[140] the college. To raise the cry of heresy,
|
||
|
Darling declared, was the President's political powder, and "The
|
||
|
Church, the Church is in danger!" his rallying cry. He concluded his
|
||
|
arraignment with:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
But would a man be tried, judged and excommunicated by such a
|
||
|
standard as this? No! Not so long as they had one atom of
|
||
|
_common_ sense left. These things will never go down in a
|
||
|
free State, where people are bred in, and breathe the free air,
|
||
|
and are formed upon principles of liberty; they might answer in a
|
||
|
popish country, or in _Turkey_, where the common people are
|
||
|
sank and degraded almost to the state of brutes.... But in a free
|
||
|
state they will be eternally ridiculed and abhorred.... 'T is too
|
||
|
late in the Day for these things, these gentlemen should have
|
||
|
lived twelve or thirteen hundred years ago.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among the champions of religious liberty was the Seventh-day Baptist,
|
||
|
John Bolles. He wrote "To worship God in Spirit and in Truth, is to
|
||
|
worship him in true Liberty of Conscience," and also "Concerning the
|
||
|
Christian Sabbath, which that Sabbath commanded to Israel, after they
|
||
|
came out of Egypt, was a Sign of. Also Some Remarks upon a Book
|
||
|
written by Ebenezer Frothingham." These works were published in 1757,
|
||
|
and, five years later, called out in defense of the Establishment
|
||
|
Eobert Ross's "Plain Address to the Quakers, Moravians, Separates,
|
||
|
Separatist-Baptists, Rogerines, and other Enthusiasts on immediate
|
||
|
impulses, and Revelation, &c," wherein the author considers all those
|
||
|
whom he addresses as on a level with Frothingham, whom he names and
|
||
|
scores for "trampling on all Churches and their Determinasions, but
|
||
|
your own, with the greatest disdain."[141]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the same year, 1762, the Separatist Israel Holly published a
|
||
|
defense of his opinions, quoting freely from Dr. Watts and from his
|
||
|
own earlier work, "A Seasonable Plea for Liberty of Conscience, and
|
||
|
the Eight of private Judgment in matters of Religion, without any
|
||
|
control from Human Authority." This "A Word in Zion's Behalf" [d]
|
||
|
boldly ranges itself with Frothingham and Bolles, arguing against, and
|
||
|
emphatically opposing, the state control of religion. Holly also
|
||
|
engaged in a printed controversy, publishing in connection with it
|
||
|
"The Power of the Congregational Church to ordain its officers and
|
||
|
govern itself."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1767, while the Separatists still outnumbered the Baptists in
|
||
|
Connecticut, Ebenezer Frothingham put forth another powerful and
|
||
|
closely argued tract, "A Key to unlock the Door, that leads in, to
|
||
|
take a fair view of the Religious Constitution Established by Law in
|
||
|
the Colony of Connecticut," [e] etc. In his preface he states:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
The main Thing I have in View thro' the whole of this Book is free
|
||
|
Liberty of Conscience... the Right of thinking and choosing and
|
||
|
acting for one's self in matters of Religion, which respects God
|
||
|
and Conscience ... for my Readers may see Liberty of Conscience,
|
||
|
was the main and leading Point in View in planting this Land and
|
||
|
Colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frothingham defines the Religious Constitution as "certain Laws in the
|
||
|
Colony Law Book, called ecclesiastical, with the Confession of Faith,
|
||
|
agreed upon by the Elders and Messengers of the Churches, met at
|
||
|
Saybrook, especially the Articles of Administration of Church
|
||
|
Discipline." This Constitution Plan "gives the General Assembly (which
|
||
|
is, and always should so remain, a civil body to transact in civil and
|
||
|
moral things) power to constitute or make a spiritual or
|
||
|
ecclesiastical body."[142]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such power, Frothingham maintains, is contrary to reason. Citing from
|
||
|
the Colony Law Book the statute, "Concerning who shall vote in town or
|
||
|
Society meeting" Frothingham comments thus:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
This supposes no person to have a right to form themselves into a
|
||
|
religious society without their [the Assembly's] leave. No,--not
|
||
|
King George the Third himself would have liberty to worship God
|
||
|
according to his conscience. [Yet] any Atheist, Deist, Arian,
|
||
|
Socinian, a Prophane Drunkard, a Sorcerer, a Thief, if they have
|
||
|
such a freehold (as the law demands), can vote to keep out a
|
||
|
minister. [Such a] plan challenges the sole right of making
|
||
|
religious societies and the government of conscience. Yea, I think
|
||
|
it assumes the prerogative that belongs to the Son of God
|
||
|
alone.[143]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fines for the neglect of the established worship and for
|
||
|
assembling for worship approved by conscience [leave] no gap for
|
||
|
one breath of gospel liberty. For if we exercise our gifts and
|
||
|
graces in the lawful assemblies, we are had up, and carried to
|
||
|
prison, for making disturbance on the Sabbath. I myself have been
|
||
|
confined in Hartford prison near five months, for nothing but
|
||
|
exhorting and warning the people, after the public worship was
|
||
|
done and the assembly dismissed. And while I was there confined,
|
||
|
three more persons were sent to prison; one for exhorting, and two
|
||
|
for worshipping God in a private house in a separate meeting. And
|
||
|
quick after I was released, by the laws being answered by natural
|
||
|
relations unbeknown to me, then two brethren more was committed
|
||
|
for exhorting and preaching, and several afterward, for attending
|
||
|
the same duties and I myself was twice more sent to prison for the
|
||
|
ministers rates.[144]
|
||
|
|
||
|
I have no Man or Men's persons as such, in View in my Writings,
|
||
|
But would as much as is proper, separate Ministers, Civil Rulers,
|
||
|
and Churches, from the Constitution, and consider this Religious
|
||
|
Constitution as it is compiled or written, as though it was not
|
||
|
established in this Colony; but presented here from some remote
|
||
|
part of Christendom, for Examination, to see if it was according
|
||
|
to the Word of God, and the sacred Right of Conscience.[145]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In scathing terms, Frothingham attacks the "Anti-Christian" character
|
||
|
of the Establishment and its fear that, by granting liberty of
|
||
|
conscience, an open door for church separation would result, and
|
||
|
thereby its speedy downfall, because of the multiplication of churches
|
||
|
and the loss of taxes enforced for its support. Experience had taught
|
||
|
the authorities that, even when all the people favored one form of
|
||
|
religion, compulsory support had to be resorted to as a spur to
|
||
|
individual contributious. Moreover, the best governments of which they
|
||
|
knew had recourse to a similar system in order to maintain purity of
|
||
|
religion and the moral welfare of the state. The authorities could not
|
||
|
see, as did the champion of religious liberty, the opportunities of
|
||
|
oppression that such a system afforded; nor could they feel with him
|
||
|
the harshness of its taxation, nor the injustice of distraining
|
||
|
dissenters' goods,--or, as he phrased it, "their lack of faith in God
|
||
|
and in God's people to uphold religion." They certainly would not
|
||
|
acknowledge Frothingham's charge that they seriously feared the loss
|
||
|
of political power through the granting of soul liberty, and as a
|
||
|
consequence the probable disintegration of the Establishment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frothingham argues that to suffer the existence of different sects
|
||
|
would really strengthen the authority of the colony; since,--
|
||
|
|
||
|
when persons know that the Most High is alone the absolute Lord of
|
||
|
Conscience; that no mortal breathing has any right to hinder them
|
||
|
from thinking and acting for themselves, in religious
|
||
|
affairs... the law of nature, reason and grace will lay subjects
|
||
|
under strong obligations to their rulers, when equal justice is
|
||
|
ministered to them of different principles, in the practice of
|
||
|
religion. [l46]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frothingham confutes the declaration that there was liberty of
|
||
|
conscience in the colony, "for the separates have gone to the General
|
||
|
Assembly with their prayers, from year to year, asking nothing but
|
||
|
their just rights, full and free liberty of conscience, and have been,
|
||
|
and still are, denied their request."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Furthermore, the colony law supported criminals in prison and gave the
|
||
|
poor man's oath to debtors, but nothing to the man who was in prison
|
||
|
for conscience's sake. Such a one was dependent upon the charity of
|
||
|
his friends for the very necessities of life. Such laws and the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical constitution which they support become--
|
||
|
|
||
|
a forfeiture of the charter grant because they exercise that
|
||
|
oppression and persecution contrary to its first intent, and are
|
||
|
the direct cause of contention and disunion, which is repugnant to
|
||
|
the principal design of constituting the colony; viz. that it "May
|
||
|
be so religiously, peaceably and civilly governed as may win and
|
||
|
invite the natives to the Christian faith." [l47]
|
||
|
|
||
|
This "Key to unlock the Door" was probably the strongest work put
|
||
|
forth from the dissenter's standpoint, and within three years it was
|
||
|
followed by a legislative act granting a measure of toleration. But
|
||
|
there were other important books of similar character. Two among these
|
||
|
were Robert Bragge's "Church Discipline,"[f] reprinted in 1768, and
|
||
|
Joseph Brown's (Baptist) "Letter to the Infant Baptizers of North
|
||
|
Parish in New London." Brown closes his book with a mild and
|
||
|
reasonable appeal to every one to try to put himself in the place of
|
||
|
the oppressed dissenter.[g] In Brown's argument, as in that of the
|
||
|
majority of the dissenters, the plea is for toleration in the choice
|
||
|
of the form of religion to be supported, and not for liberty to
|
||
|
support or neglect religion itself. Those who believed in the
|
||
|
voluntary support of religion were not seeking exemption as
|
||
|
individuals, but as organized societies or churches, whose highest
|
||
|
privilege it was to support Christ's teachings. Considered from this
|
||
|
point of view, they were only seeking those privileges which had been
|
||
|
granted the Episcopalians, the Quakers, and Baptists in
|
||
|
1727-29. Looked at from the point of view of the government, however,
|
||
|
these Separatists varied so slightly from the legalized polity and
|
||
|
worship, and yet withal so dangerously, that they did not deserve to
|
||
|
be classed as "sober dissenters." To recognize them as such would be
|
||
|
to set the seal of approval upon all who chose to question the
|
||
|
authority, or the righteousness, of the Saybrook system. With the fear
|
||
|
of such an undermining of authority, and realizing the increasing
|
||
|
tendency of churches throughout the colony to renounce the Saybrook
|
||
|
Platform, the very conservative people felt that to grant toleration
|
||
|
to the Separatists might prove disastrous both to Church and civil
|
||
|
order.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While the Baptists and the Separatists were waging the battle for
|
||
|
toleration and for religious liberty with the great weapon of their
|
||
|
time,--the pamphlet,--the Consociated Churches were also making
|
||
|
valiant use of it, not only in defense of the Establishment, but in
|
||
|
controversial warfare among themselves, for in the New England of the
|
||
|
second half of the eighteenth century, two schools of religious
|
||
|
thought were slowly developing. They gained converts more rapidly as
|
||
|
the means of communication, of publication, and of exchange of opinion
|
||
|
increased. The improvement of roads, the introduction of carriages and
|
||
|
coaches, the establishment of printing-presses, and the founding of
|
||
|
newspapers, were important agents in developing and moulding public
|
||
|
opinion. Of these, the printing-press was foremost, for with its
|
||
|
pamphlet and its newspaper it gained a hearing not only in the cities,
|
||
|
but in the isolated farmhouses of New England, carrying on its weekly
|
||
|
visit the gist of the secular and religious news.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The newspaper made its first appearance in Connecticut in 1755, when
|
||
|
the "Connecticut Gazette" [h] issued from the recently established New
|
||
|
Haven press. The newspaper arrived later in the distant colony of
|
||
|
Connecticut than in those on the seaboard that were in closer touch
|
||
|
with European thought by reason of their more direct and frequent
|
||
|
sailing vessels. Among American newspapers, the year 1704 saw the
|
||
|
birth of the "Boston News Letter"; the year 1719, of the "Boston
|
||
|
Gazette" and of the "American Weekly Mercury" of Philadelphia. Boston
|
||
|
added a third paper, the "New England Courant," in 1721, while New
|
||
|
York issued its first sheet in 1725. Benjamin Franklin founded the
|
||
|
"Pennsylvania Gazette" in 1729, and, in 1741, began the publication of
|
||
|
the "General Magazine and Historical Chronicle for, all the British
|
||
|
Plantations in America." In 1743, Boston sent out the "American
|
||
|
Magazine and Historical Chronicle," containing, along with European
|
||
|
news, not only lists of new books and excerpts therefrom, but full
|
||
|
reprints of the best essays from the English magazines. New York, in
|
||
|
1752, issued the "Independent Reflector," a magazine of similar
|
||
|
character. Thus, through papers and magazines, as well as through a
|
||
|
limited importation of books, and through personal correspondence, the
|
||
|
life of Europe, and preeminently of England, was brought home to the
|
||
|
colonists.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the religious non-prelatical world of England, the Presbyterian
|
||
|
churches were undergoing a transformation, and were, by 1750,
|
||
|
prevailingly Arian. The English Congregationalists resisted Arianism,
|
||
|
but they, also, felt its influence, as well as that of Arminianism,
|
||
|
and they began to attach less importance to creeds, and to develop a
|
||
|
broader tolerance of many shades of religious belief. New England
|
||
|
sympathized more with the Congregational movement, but, as interest in
|
||
|
both was awakened, English thought came to have great influence in the
|
||
|
religious development of New England during the next half-century.
|
||
|
Broadly speaking of these progressive changes, Connecticut, and
|
||
|
Connecticut-trained men in western Massachusetts, developed the
|
||
|
so-called New Divinity, while Massachusetts clergy, especially those
|
||
|
of her eastern section, favored that liberal theology which, after the
|
||
|
Revolutionary period, gave rise to the Unitarian conflict.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The older religious controversies had concerned themselves with church
|
||
|
polity, or, popularly speaking, with what men thought concerning their
|
||
|
relation to God through his church, in distinction from doctrine, or
|
||
|
what men felt should be their attitude towards God and their
|
||
|
fellow-men. Pushing aside polity and doctrine, the twentieth century
|
||
|
emphasizes action, or man's reflection of the life of Christ. Doctrine
|
||
|
came to the front with Jonathan Edwards. In his opposition to the
|
||
|
Arminian teaching of the value of a sincere obedience to God's laws
|
||
|
and "the efficacy of means of grace," Jonathan Edwards asserted the
|
||
|
Calvinistic idea of the sovereignty of God, and maintained that
|
||
|
justification was by faith alone; but his idea of justification held
|
||
|
within it the duty of personal responsibility in loving and obeying
|
||
|
God. Edwards, though defining love as general benevolence, a delight
|
||
|
in God's holiness, and the essence of all true virtue, did introduce,
|
||
|
as factors in personal religion, the will and the emotions. These
|
||
|
characteristics of true, personal religion, as his mind, influenced by
|
||
|
the Great Awakening, conceived and elaborated them, he set forth in
|
||
|
his "Religious Affections," published in 1746. In his "Qualifications
|
||
|
for Full Communion," 1749, he again dwelt upon the same theme; but his
|
||
|
main purpose was to uproot the Half-Way Covenant practice and the
|
||
|
Stoddardean view of the Lord's supper. He attempted to do this by
|
||
|
exposing the inefficiency of "means," and at English Arminianism in
|
||
|
particular Edwards leveled his "Freedom of the Will," [i] published in
|
||
|
1754. His friend and disciple, Joseph Bellamy, put forth in 1750 "True
|
||
|
Religion Delineated," wherein he advances from Edwards's limited
|
||
|
atonement theory to that of a general one. [j] In 1758, Bellamy, in
|
||
|
brilliant dialogue, replied to "A Winter's Evening Conversation Upon
|
||
|
the Doctrine of Original Sin in which the Notion of our having sinned
|
||
|
in Adam and being on that Account only liable to eternal Damnation, is
|
||
|
proved to be unscriptural," a book by Rev. Samuel Webster of
|
||
|
Salisbury, Massachusetts, and of which a reprint had appeared from the
|
||
|
New Haven Press in 1757, the year of its publication. Bellamy took
|
||
|
sides with the Rev. Peter Clark of Danvers, Massachusetts, who replied
|
||
|
in "A Summer Morning's Conversation." Both men summoned as their
|
||
|
authority a work of Edwards, "Original Sin Defended," which was about
|
||
|
to appear from the press, and to which Edwards's followers were
|
||
|
looking forward as the last work of their master, he having died while
|
||
|
its pages were still in press. Edwards had destined the book to be a
|
||
|
refutation of English Arianism of the Taylor school, of which Webster
|
||
|
was a follower. This same year, 1758, Bellamy discoursed upon "The
|
||
|
Wisdom of God in the Permission of Sin," and gave a series of sermons
|
||
|
on "The Divinity of Jesus Christ," a defense of the Trinity, which
|
||
|
Jonathan Mayhew of Boston had attacked. Bellamy may have felt that
|
||
|
this defense was due from a Connecticut man because the colony,
|
||
|
strenuously orthodox, had in the revision of the laws in 1750 added
|
||
|
the requirement of a belief in the Trinity, and caused the denial
|
||
|
thereof to be ranked as felony. Denial of the Trinity, or of the
|
||
|
divine inspiration of the Scriptures, was punishable, for the first
|
||
|
offense, by ineligibility to office, whether ecclesiastical, civil, or
|
||
|
military, and, upon a second conviction, by disability to sue, to act
|
||
|
as guardian or as administrator. [148] Though there was never a
|
||
|
conviction under the statute, the presence of such a law in the colony
|
||
|
code indicates the religious temper of her people at a time when
|
||
|
radical changes were creeping into man's conception of religion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Joseph Bellamy's influence, great as it was as writer and preacher,
|
||
|
was even greater as a teacher. His home in Bethlehem from 1738 to
|
||
|
1790 was virtually a divinity school, and it is estimated that at
|
||
|
least sixty students, trained in his system of theology and in his
|
||
|
antagonism to the Half-Way Covenant, [k] spread through New England
|
||
|
an influence counter to that of the Mayhews, Briant, [l] Webster, and
|
||
|
other disciples of the Liberal Theology. Upon Bellamy, as a leader,
|
||
|
fell Edwards's mantle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Bellamy was the great exponent of Jonathan Edwards's teachings
|
||
|
in Connecticut, another friend and famous pupil of the great divine's,
|
||
|
Samuel Hopkins, taught at Great Barrington, Massachusetts, 1743-69,
|
||
|
and in Newport, Ehode Island, 1770-1803, urging an extension of his
|
||
|
master's principles--especially of that of "benevolence." Hopkins,
|
||
|
however, attributed a certain value to "means of grace," while
|
||
|
teaching that sin and virtue consist in exercise of the will, or in
|
||
|
definite acts. [m] Consequently, he included in his theology a denial
|
||
|
of man's responsibility for Adam's sin, which Edwards had
|
||
|
maintained. Hopkins advocated also a willing and disinterested
|
||
|
submission to'God's will, the Hopkinsian "to be saved or damned,"
|
||
|
since God, in his wisdom, will do that which is best for his
|
||
|
universe. These characteristic doctrines, both of Bellamy and Hopkins,
|
||
|
were modified by the younger generation of students, notably by
|
||
|
Stephen West, John Smalley, Jonathan Edwards, Jr., and--greatest of
|
||
|
all--Nathaniel Emmons, who, together with the first Timothy Dwight,
|
||
|
were to introduce two sub-schools of the New Divinity. [n] Emmons,
|
||
|
following Hopkins, developed extreme views of sin, even in little
|
||
|
children; held the theories of reprobation and election; and was most
|
||
|
intensely Calvinistic. Dwight developed a more conciliatory and benign
|
||
|
system of theology, but his influence, as founder of a school of
|
||
|
religious thought, belongs to the post-Revolutionary era. Emmons held
|
||
|
one long pastorate at Franklin, Massachusetts, 1773-1827, [o] where,
|
||
|
as a trainer of youth for the ministry, his influence was greatest,
|
||
|
and his powers at their best. Nearly a hundred ministers passed to
|
||
|
their pulpits from his tutelage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such were the teachings that fashioned a generation of preachers, of
|
||
|
ministers, wielding a tremendous influence over the men and measures
|
||
|
of pre-Revolutionary and Revolutionary days. The clergy were then the
|
||
|
close friends of their parishioners; their counselors in all matters,
|
||
|
spiritual or worldly; and frequently their arbitrators in disputed
|
||
|
rights, for the legal class was still small, and its services
|
||
|
costly. The pastor knew intimately every soul in his parish. He was
|
||
|
the State's moral guardian. He was the intellectual leader and more,
|
||
|
for, in the scarcity of books and newspapers, not alone in his Sunday
|
||
|
sermon but in those on fast days and thanksgivings, and on all public
|
||
|
and semi-public occasions, he talked to his people upon current
|
||
|
events. The story is told of a clergyman who in his Sunday prayer
|
||
|
recounted the life of his parish during the preceding week, making
|
||
|
personal mention of its actors; who then passed, still praying, from
|
||
|
local history to the welfare of the nation, including a tribute to
|
||
|
Washington and a description of a battle; and who did not end his
|
||
|
hour-long prayer until he had anathematized the enemy, and circled the
|
||
|
globe for recent examples of divine wrath and benevolence. Such a
|
||
|
clergyman is by no means a myth. Each pastor made his own
|
||
|
contribution, inconspicuous or notable as it might be, to the
|
||
|
broadening of thought, and contributed his part to the development
|
||
|
among his people of ideas of personal liberty, even as the colonial
|
||
|
wars were developing confidence in the ability to defend that liberty
|
||
|
should it be endangered. A voluntary theocracy may uphold a faith
|
||
|
which teaches that only a very limited number are of the "elect," but,
|
||
|
under the ordinary conditions of life, such a belief is discouraging,
|
||
|
deadening, and as men threw off this idea of spiritual bondage, they
|
||
|
advanced to a larger conception of personal responsibility, dignity,
|
||
|
and freedom. Such enlargement of ideas necessitated a mutual tolerance
|
||
|
of diverse opinions. It also tended to create revolt against
|
||
|
infractions of civil liberty or violations of political justice. The
|
||
|
colonists were not so badly taxed--as colonial policy went--when they
|
||
|
made their stand for "no taxation without representation," when they
|
||
|
exhausted their resources in a long war because of acts of Parliament
|
||
|
that, had they submitted to them, would have offered a precedent for
|
||
|
still more repressive measures and for the overthrow of the
|
||
|
Englishman's right to determine, through the representatives of the
|
||
|
people, how the people's money should be spent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the town-meeting, the sermon, the religious or political pamphlet,
|
||
|
and the newspaper did each its part in developing a people, there was
|
||
|
also another factor that, starting as part of a discussion of
|
||
|
ecclesiastical polity, brought before all men important questions of
|
||
|
civil, political, and personal liberty, and of constitutional rights.
|
||
|
However unnecessary the severe anguish of Jonathan Mayhew's spirit,
|
||
|
due to his exaggerated fear of the American episcopate, he did but
|
||
|
express "the sincere thought of a multitude of his most rational
|
||
|
contemporaries." [l49] A review of events will show some reason for
|
||
|
the antagonism and horror that filled New England when the project of
|
||
|
the episcopate was revived. After the death of Queen Anne in 1714, the
|
||
|
Crown took no interest in the project of an American episcopate until
|
||
|
Thomas Sherlock became Bishop of London in 1748. The Connecticut
|
||
|
clergy of the Church of England, together with others of New England
|
||
|
and the Middle colonies, had, however, never ceased their efforts to
|
||
|
secure an American bishop; and now, in Bishop Sherlock, their
|
||
|
Metropolitan in London, they had one who firmly believed in the
|
||
|
necessity of colonial bishops, who deliberately refused to exercise
|
||
|
the traditional powers of his office, or to obtain a legal renewal of
|
||
|
them (in so far as they applied to the colonies), because he had
|
||
|
determined that by such a policy he would force the English government
|
||
|
to appoint one--or preferably several--American bishops. He defined
|
||
|
his scheme for the episcopate as one in which the Bishop was: (1) to
|
||
|
have no coercive power over the laity, only regulative over the
|
||
|
clergy; (2) to have no share in the temporal government; (3) to be of
|
||
|
no expense to the colonists; (4) and to have no authority, except to
|
||
|
ordain the clergy, in any of the colonies where the government was in
|
||
|
the hands of dissenters from the Church of England. This plan was
|
||
|
essentially the same as that advocated later by Bishops Secker and
|
||
|
Butler, and by succeeding bishops to the time of the
|
||
|
Revolution. Bishop Sherlock obtained the King's permission to submit
|
||
|
his plan to the English ministers of state. So great was the dread
|
||
|
inspired in America by the rumors of a revival of active measures for
|
||
|
a colonial episcopate, that a deputation, sent to England in 1749,
|
||
|
appointed a committee of two to wait upon those nearest to the King
|
||
|
and to advise them that the appointment would be "highly Prejudicial
|
||
|
to the Interests of Several of the Colonies." [150] This committee
|
||
|
redoubled its energies in 1750, and it was due to its watchfulness as
|
||
|
well as to the clearer foresight of the King's ministers that Bishop
|
||
|
Sherlock's plan was frustrated. The chief advisers of the government
|
||
|
objected to it on the ground that it would be repugnant to the
|
||
|
dissenting colonies, to the dissenters of all sorts in England, and
|
||
|
would also rouse in the home-land party-differences that had slumbered
|
||
|
since the overthrow of the Pretender in 1745.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Despite the English opposition to Bishop Sherlock's scheme, its
|
||
|
discussion in England and the journey of the bishop's agent through
|
||
|
the several American colonies to sound their sentiment had created so
|
||
|
much apprehension that the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
|
||
|
enjoined its missionaries, in 1753, "that they take special care to
|
||
|
give no offence to the civil government by intermeddling with affairt,
|
||
|
not relating to their calling or function." Even Bishop Seeker of
|
||
|
Oxford, a strong adherent of Bishop Sherlock, saw fit, in 1754, to
|
||
|
suppress Dr. Johnson of Stratford, Connecticut, bidding his enthusiasm
|
||
|
wait until a more propitious season, and advising him, and the rest of
|
||
|
his clergy, to conciliate the dissenters. Bishop Sherlock, himself, in
|
||
|
1752, withdrew sufficiently from his first position to assume the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical oversight of the colonies, although he would not take
|
||
|
out a commission to renew that which had expired by the death of
|
||
|
Bishop Gibson. Meanwhile, Sherlock's demonstration that the Bishop of
|
||
|
London had little authority in law, or in fact, over the American
|
||
|
colonies created two parties. One [p] held that the colonies were a
|
||
|
part of the English nation and consequently were subject to the civil
|
||
|
and religious laws existing in the home country, and that the
|
||
|
authority of the Church of England extending to the colonies had been
|
||
|
reinforced by the Gibson patent of 1727-28. The other party
|
||
|
maintained that the colonists were not members of the Church of
|
||
|
England, nor subject to its rules. They quoted the Lord Chief Justice,
|
||
|
who declared to Governor Dummer, in 1725, that "there was no regular
|
||
|
establishment of any national or provincial church in these
|
||
|
plantations" (of New England), and that Bishop Gilman, in his letter
|
||
|
of May 24, 1735, to Dr. Colman had written, "My opinion has always
|
||
|
been that the religious state of New England is founded on an equal
|
||
|
liberty to all Protestants, none of which can claim the name of a
|
||
|
national establishment, or of any kind of superiority over the rest."
|
||
|
This party further maintained that no acts of Parliament, passed after
|
||
|
the founding of the colonies, were binding upon them, unless such acts
|
||
|
were specially extended to the colonies. Here again was the old
|
||
|
contention that had appeared in the earlier controversy over the
|
||
|
Connecticut Intestacy Act.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An American controversy, parallel in time with the attempt to
|
||
|
establish the episcopate, roused the always latent New England
|
||
|
hostility to the Episcopal church as one contrary to gospel
|
||
|
teaching. This controversy of 1747-51 [q] broke out over the validity
|
||
|
of Presbyterian ordination versus Episcopal. The battle surged about
|
||
|
the contingent questions of (1) whether the Church of England extended
|
||
|
to the colonies; (2) whether it was prudent for the long established
|
||
|
New England churches to go over to the English communion; and (3)
|
||
|
whether it would be lawful. In debating the last two, incidental
|
||
|
matters of expense, of unwise ecclesiastical dependence, and of the
|
||
|
consequent decay of practical godliness in the land, were discussed by
|
||
|
the Rev. Noah Hobart of Stratford, Conn., who represented the
|
||
|
Consociated churches, while Episcopacy was defended by Rev. James
|
||
|
Wetmore of Rye, N. Y., Dr. Johnson of Stratford, Conn., Rev. John
|
||
|
Beach of Reading, Conn., and by the Rev. Henry Caner of Boston.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This discussion at once suggested to a few far-sighted men that the
|
||
|
bishops recently proposed, and which at the end of the Seven Years'
|
||
|
War, in 1763, were again earnestly advocated by Bishop Seeker (who had
|
||
|
become Archbishop of Canterbury) should not acquire any powers in
|
||
|
addition to those suggested by Bishop Sherlock. The growing fear of
|
||
|
such increased authority flamed out again in the Mayhew controversy of
|
||
|
1763-65, when all the inherited Puritan dislike to the Church of
|
||
|
England as a religious body, and all the terror of such a hierarchy,
|
||
|
as a part of the English state, hurled itself into argument, and threw
|
||
|
to the front the discussion of the American episcopate as a measure of
|
||
|
English policy,--an attempt to transplant the Church as an arm of the
|
||
|
State; an attempt to "episcopize," to proselyte the colonies, and
|
||
|
eventually to overturn the New England ecclesiastical and civil
|
||
|
governments.[r] "It was known," wrote John Adams fifty years later,
|
||
|
"that neither the king nor ministry nor archbishop could appoint
|
||
|
bishops in America without Act of Parliament, and if Parliament could
|
||
|
tax us, it could establish the Church of England with all its creeds,
|
||
|
articles, ceremonies, and prohibit all other churches as conventicles
|
||
|
and schism-shops." [s] Therefore, when England declared her right to
|
||
|
tax the colonies, and followed it by Sugar Act and Stamp Act, the
|
||
|
political situation threw a lurid light about the Chandler-Chauncy
|
||
|
controversy [t] of 1767-71 as it rehearsed the _pros_ and
|
||
|
_cons_ of the proposed episcopate. The New England colonies were
|
||
|
greatly excited, and others shared the unrest, for, even where the
|
||
|
Church of England was strongest, the laity as a body preferred the
|
||
|
greater freedom accorded them under commissaries as sub-officers of
|
||
|
the Bishop of London. The indifference of the American laity as a
|
||
|
whole to the project of the episcopate; the impotence of the English
|
||
|
bishop to attain it, thwarted as he was by the threefold opposition of
|
||
|
the ministry, the colonial agents, and the great body of English
|
||
|
dissenters, did not lessen the prevailing suspicion and fear among the
|
||
|
colonists, especially among those of New England. They felt no
|
||
|
confidence in the profession [u] that authority purely ecclesiastical
|
||
|
would alone be accorded to the bishop, or that American churchmen
|
||
|
themselves would long be satisfied with a bishopric so shorn of
|
||
|
power. And already, on November 1, 1766, the Episcopalians of New
|
||
|
York, New Jersey, and Connecticut had met together in their first
|
||
|
annual convention at Elizabethtown. [v] The avowed object of their
|
||
|
conference was the defense of the liberties of the Church of England,
|
||
|
and "to diffuse union and harmony, and to keep up a correspondence
|
||
|
throughout the united body and with their friends abroad." [151]
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a time of drawing together, whether of the colonies as
|
||
|
political bodies, or of their people as groups of individuals
|
||
|
affiliating with similar groups beyond the local boundaries. Upon
|
||
|
November 5, 1766, also at Elizabethtown, the Consociated Churches of
|
||
|
Connecticut had united with the Presbyterian Synod of New York and
|
||
|
Philadelphia in their first annual convention, which was composed of
|
||
|
Presbyterian delegates to the Synod and of representatives from the
|
||
|
Associations in Connecticut. While the general object was the
|
||
|
promotion of Christian friendship between the two religious bodies,
|
||
|
the spread of the gospel, and the preservation of the liberties of
|
||
|
their respective churches, the conventions of 1769-75 determined to
|
||
|
prosecute measures for preserving these same liberties, threatened "by
|
||
|
the attempt made by the friends of Episcopacy in the Colonies and
|
||
|
Great Britain, for the establishment of Diocesan Bishops in America."
|
||
|
[152] Accordingly this representative body at once entered into
|
||
|
correspondence with the Committee of Dissenters in England. In
|
||
|
recalling these movements towards combination, one remembers that,
|
||
|
among the dissenters, the Quakers had long held to their system of
|
||
|
Monthly, Quarterly, and Annual Meetings, to their correspondence with
|
||
|
the London Annual Meeting, and to the frequent interchange of
|
||
|
traveling preachers. In the years 1767-69, the scattered Baptists of
|
||
|
New England had united in the Warren (Rhode Island) Association. It
|
||
|
was a council for advice only, yet its approval lent multiple weight
|
||
|
to the influence of any Baptist preacher. It urged the collection of
|
||
|
all authentic reports of oppression or persecution, and a firm, united
|
||
|
resistance on the part of the weaker churches. [w] The founding of
|
||
|
Brown University, Rhode Island, as a Baptist College in 1764, gave the
|
||
|
sect prestige by marking their approval of education and of a "learned
|
||
|
ministry."
|
||
|
|
||
|
To return to the subject of the episcopate, the Chandler controversy
|
||
|
had been precipitated by Dr. Johnson of Connecticut, who, at the
|
||
|
Elizabeth convention, urged that the opposition to the American
|
||
|
bishops was largely caused by ignorance concerning their proposed
|
||
|
powers and office, and that if some one would put the scheme more
|
||
|
fully before the people, they might be won over. The task was assigned
|
||
|
to Thomas Bradbury Chandler, who published his "An Appeal to the
|
||
|
Public," 1767. Dr. Charles Chauncy of Boston replied to Chandler,
|
||
|
giving the New England view of bishops in "The Appeal Answered."
|
||
|
Chandler, as has been said, retorted with his "The Appeal Defended,"
|
||
|
and the newspapers took up the controversy. The discussion turned
|
||
|
immediately and almost entirely from the ecclesiastical aspect, with
|
||
|
its dangers to New England church-life, to the political and
|
||
|
constitutional phases of this proposed extension of the Church of
|
||
|
England. The New York and Philadelphia press agitated the subject in
|
||
|
1768-69, while all New England echoed Mayhew's earlier denunciations
|
||
|
of the evils to be anticipated. In the pulpit, by the study fire, and
|
||
|
at the tavern-bar, leaders, scholars, people discussed the possible
|
||
|
loss of civil and personal liberty. Let the bishops once be seated;
|
||
|
and would they not introduce ecclesiastical courts, demand uniformity,
|
||
|
and impose a general tax for their church which might be perverted to
|
||
|
any use that the whim of the King and of his subservient bishops might
|
||
|
propose? There is no question that this subject of the episcopate,
|
||
|
with its political and constitutional phases, and with the
|
||
|
considerations of personal and civil liberty involved, did much to
|
||
|
familiarize the people with those principles upon which they made
|
||
|
their final break with England, and helped to prepare their minds for
|
||
|
the separation from the mother country.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In considering the various elements that contributed to the
|
||
|
development of the national spirit, to the destruction of that
|
||
|
provincialism so marked in the colonies before 1750, and to the
|
||
|
creation in each of breadth of thought and clearness of vision, trade
|
||
|
and commerce had their part. Because of them, came increasing
|
||
|
knowledge of the widely different habits of life in the thirteen
|
||
|
colonies. It came also from the association of the people of the
|
||
|
different sections when as soldiers of their King they were summoned
|
||
|
to the various wars. Still another impetus was given to the national
|
||
|
idea by the fashion of long, elaborate correspondence. Especially was
|
||
|
this true after the Albany convention of 1754, called to discuss
|
||
|
Franklin's Plan of Union, had introduced men of like minds, abilities,
|
||
|
and purpose, and also the needs of their respective sections, and had
|
||
|
interested them in the common welfare of all. Moreover, Franklin was
|
||
|
the highest representative of still another movement that roused the
|
||
|
slumbering intelligence of men by opening their minds to impressions
|
||
|
from the vast and unexplored world of natural science. He founded, in
|
||
|
1743, the University of Pennsylvania and the American Philosophical
|
||
|
Society. The recognition, in 1753, [x] of his work by European
|
||
|
scholars was an honor in which every American took pride as marking
|
||
|
the entrance of the colonies into the world of scientific
|
||
|
investigation. Such honorable recognition produced a widespread
|
||
|
interest in the stuiy of the physical world and its forces. Following
|
||
|
this awakening and broadening of the intellectual life, there came, at
|
||
|
the very dawn of the Revolution, the first out-cropping of genuine
|
||
|
American literature in the satires and poems of Philip Freneau of New
|
||
|
York, a graduate of Princeton, and in those of John Trumbull and Joel
|
||
|
Barlow [y] of Yale. New Haven became a centre of literary life, and
|
||
|
the cultivation of literature took its place beside that of the
|
||
|
classics, broadening the preeminently ministerial groove of the Yale
|
||
|
curriculum.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In considering some of the individual acts leading up to Connecticut's
|
||
|
part in the Revolution, we find that the colony had disapproved
|
||
|
Franklin's Plan of Union of 1754. She thought it lacking in efficiency
|
||
|
and in dispatch in emergencies, and possibly dangerous to the
|
||
|
liberties of the colonies. She also believed it liable to plunge the
|
||
|
colonies into heavy expense, when many of them were already
|
||
|
floundering in debt. Yet Connecticut had, with Massachusetts,
|
||
|
willingly borne the brunt of expense and loss necessary to protect the
|
||
|
colonies in the wars arising from French and English claims. She,
|
||
|
accordingly, greatly rejoiced at the Peace of Ryswick, 1763, for it
|
||
|
gave security to her borders by the cession of Canada to England,
|
||
|
brought safety to commerce and the fisheries, and promised a new era
|
||
|
of prosperity. The attempt of England to recoup herself for the
|
||
|
expenses of the war by a rigid enforcement of the Navigation Laws--an
|
||
|
enforcement that paralyzed commerce, and turned the open evasion of
|
||
|
honorable merchantmen into the treasonable acts of smugglers--grieved
|
||
|
Connecticut; the Sugar Act provoked her, and the proposed Stamp Act
|
||
|
drove her to remonstrance. Her magistrates issued the dignified and
|
||
|
spirited address, "Reasons why the British Colonies in America should
|
||
|
not be charged with Internal Taxes by Authority of Parliament." [z] It
|
||
|
was firmly believed in the colony that when the severity of the
|
||
|
English acts should be demonstrated, they would at once be removed and
|
||
|
some substitute, such as the proposed tax on slaves or on the fur
|
||
|
trade, would be adopted. Jared Ingersoll, the future stamp-officer,
|
||
|
carried the address to England. There it received praise as an able
|
||
|
and temperate state-paper. Ingersoll is credited with having succeeded
|
||
|
in slightly modifying the Stamp Act and in postponing somewhat the
|
||
|
date for its going into effect. Having done what he could to modify
|
||
|
the measure, and not appreciating the growth of opposition to it
|
||
|
during his absence, he accepted the office of Stamp-Distributer, and
|
||
|
returned to America, where he was straightway undeceived as to the
|
||
|
desirability of his office, but made his way from Boston to
|
||
|
Connecticut, hoping for better things. On reaching New Haven, he was
|
||
|
remonstrated with for accepting his office and urged to give it
|
||
|
up. But learning that Governor Fitch, after mature deliberation, had
|
||
|
resolved to take the oath to support the Stamp Act, and had done so,
|
||
|
though seven of his eleven Councilors, summoned for the ceremony, had
|
||
|
refused to witness the oath, Ingersoll decided to push on to
|
||
|
Hartford. Starting alone and on horseback, he rode unmolested through
|
||
|
the woods; but as he journeyed through the villages, group after group
|
||
|
of stern-looking men, bearing in their hands sticks peeled bare of
|
||
|
bark so as to resemble the staves carried by constables, silently
|
||
|
joined him, and, later, soldiers and a troop of horse. Thus he was
|
||
|
escorted into Wethersfield, where, virtually a prisoner, he was made
|
||
|
to resign his commission. The cavalcade, ever increasing, proceeded
|
||
|
with him to Hartford, [aa] where he publicly proclaimed his
|
||
|
resignation and signed a paper to that effect. Everywhere the towns
|
||
|
burned him in effigy. Everywhere the spirit of indignation and of
|
||
|
opposition spread. The "Norwich Packet" discussed the favored East
|
||
|
Indian monopolies and the Declaratory and Revenue Acts of
|
||
|
Parliament. The "Connecticut Courant" (founded in Hartford in 1764),
|
||
|
the "Connecticut Gazette," the "Connecticut Journal and New Haven
|
||
|
Post-Boy," [ab] and the "New London Gazette" encouraged the spirit of
|
||
|
resistance. A Norwich minister[153] preached from the text "Touch not
|
||
|
mine anointed," referring to the people as the "anointed" and arguing
|
||
|
that kings, through Acts of Parliament which take away, infringe, or
|
||
|
violate civil rights, touch the "anointed" people in a way forbidden
|
||
|
by God. This Norwich minister was not alone among the clergy, for the
|
||
|
sermons of the three sects, Baptist, Separatist, and Congregational,
|
||
|
"connected with one indissoluble bond the principles of civil
|
||
|
Government and the principles of Christianity." The laity of the
|
||
|
Episcopal church were, as a body, patriots, and so, also, were many of
|
||
|
their clergy; but party spirit, roused by the discussion of the
|
||
|
episcopate and of their relation to the King, as head of their church
|
||
|
as well as head of the State, tended to Toryism. From their pulpits
|
||
|
was more frequently heard the doctrine of passive obedience. But in
|
||
|
all the opposition to the Stamp Act, in all the preparations for
|
||
|
resistance, in the carrying out of non-importation agreements, in the
|
||
|
movement that created small factories and home industries to supply
|
||
|
the lack of English imports, and later during the struggle for
|
||
|
independence, the Connecticut colonists, whether Congregationalists,
|
||
|
patriotic Episcopalians, Baptists, or Separatists, worked as one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toward the Separatists, oppressed dissenters yet loyal patriots, there
|
||
|
began to be the feeling that some legislative favor should be
|
||
|
shown. Accordingly the Assembly, having them in mind, in 1770 passed
|
||
|
the law that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
no person in this Colony, professing the Christian protestant
|
||
|
religion, who soberly and conscientiously dissent from the worship
|
||
|
and ministry established or approved by the laws of this Colony
|
||
|
and attend public worship by themselves, shall incur any of the
|
||
|
penalties ... for not attending the worship and ministry so
|
||
|
established on the Lord's day or on account of their meeting
|
||
|
together by themselves on said day for the public worship of God
|
||
|
in a way agreeable to their consciences.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And in October of the same year, it was further decreed that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
all ministers of the gospel that now are or hereafter shall be
|
||
|
settled in this Colony, during their continuance in the ministry,
|
||
|
shall have all their estates lying in the same society as well as
|
||
|
in the same town wherein they dwell exempted out of the lists of
|
||
|
polls and rateable estates. [154]
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for the Separatists to obtain exemption from ecclesiastical taxes
|
||
|
for the benefit of the Establishment required seven more years of
|
||
|
argument and appeal. During the time, they and the Baptists continued
|
||
|
to increase in favor. The Separatist, Isaac Holly, preached and
|
||
|
printed a sermon upholding the Boston tea-party. The Baptists were so
|
||
|
patriotic as to later win from Washington his "I recollect with
|
||
|
satisfaction that the religious society of which you are members have
|
||
|
been throughout America uniformly and almost unanimously the firm
|
||
|
friends of civil liberty, and the persevering promoters of our
|
||
|
glorious revolution." [155] In 1774, good-will was shown to the
|
||
|
Suffield Baptists by a favorable answer to their memorial to be
|
||
|
relieved from illegal fines. In behalf of these Baptists, Governor
|
||
|
Trumbull frequently exerted his influence. He also wrote to those of
|
||
|
New Roxbury, who were in distress as to whether they had complied with
|
||
|
the law, assuring them that the act of 1770 had done away with the
|
||
|
older requirement of a special application to the General Assembly for
|
||
|
permission to unite in church estate. [156] Notwithstanding such
|
||
|
favor, there was still so much injustice that the Baptists of Stamford
|
||
|
wrote, during the rapid increase of the sect through the local
|
||
|
revivals of 1771-74, that the emigration from Connecticut of Baptists
|
||
|
was because "the maxims of the land do not well suit the genius of our
|
||
|
Order, and beside, the country is so fully settled, as population
|
||
|
increases, the surplusage must go abroad for settlements."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among the Baptists, the most vigorous champion for mutual toleration
|
||
|
and for liberty of conscience was Isaac Backus, "the father of
|
||
|
American Baptists," and their first historian. In _An Appeal to the
|
||
|
Public for Religious Liberty_, Boston, 1773, after calling
|
||
|
attention to the lack of state provision in Massachusetts as well as
|
||
|
in Connecticut for ecclesiastical prisoners,[157] he thus defines the
|
||
|
limits of spiritual and temporal power:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
And it appears to us that the true difference and exact limits
|
||
|
between ecclesiastical and civil government is this. That the
|
||
|
church is armed with _light and truth_, to pull down the
|
||
|
strongholds of iniquity and to gain souls to Christ and into his
|
||
|
church to be governed by his rules therein; and again to exclude
|
||
|
such from their communion who will not be so governed; while the
|
||
|
state is armed with _the sword to guard the peace and to punish
|
||
|
those who violate the same_. Where they have been confounded
|
||
|
together no tongue nor pen can fully describe the mischiefs that
|
||
|
have ensued.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He proceeds to argue that every one has an equal right to choose his
|
||
|
religion, since each one must answer at God's judgment seat for his
|
||
|
own choice and his life's acts. Consequently, there is no warrant for
|
||
|
the making of religious laws and the laying of ecclesiastical
|
||
|
taxes. With this premise, it followed that the Baptist exemption act
|
||
|
of 1729 was defective and unjust, in that it demanded certificates;
|
||
|
and from this time there began a steadily increasing opposition to the
|
||
|
giving of these papers. Backus objected to the certificates upon
|
||
|
several grounds, chief of which were:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
(1) Because the very nature of such a practice implies an
|
||
|
acknowledgement that the civil power has right to set one
|
||
|
religious sect up above another.... It is a tacit allowance that
|
||
|
they have the right to make laws about such things which we
|
||
|
believe in our own conscience they have not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(2) The scheme we oppose tends to destroy the purity and life of
|
||
|
religion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(3) The custom which they want us to countenance is very hurtful
|
||
|
to civil society.... What a temptation then does it not lay for
|
||
|
men to contract guilt when temporal advantages are annexed to one
|
||
|
persuasion and disadvantages laid upon another? _i.e._, in
|
||
|
plain terms, how does it tend to lying hypocrisy and lying? [159]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In all his writings this man pleads the cause of religious liberty,
|
||
|
and, whenever possible, he emphasizes the likeness of the struggle of
|
||
|
the dissenters for freedom of conscience to that of the colonists for
|
||
|
civil liberty, and argues the injustice of wresting thousands of
|
||
|
dollars from the Baptists for the support of a religion to them
|
||
|
distasteful, while they exert themselves to the utmost to win
|
||
|
political freedom for all; "with what heart can we support the
|
||
|
struggle?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Two remarkable little books of some eighty or ninety pages that were
|
||
|
issued from the Boston press in 1772 require a word of notice because
|
||
|
of their hearty welcome. Two editions were called for within the year,
|
||
|
and more than a thousand copies of the second were bespoken before it
|
||
|
went to press. They had originally been put forth, the first in 1707,
|
||
|
"The Churches Quarrel Espoused: or a Reply In Satyre to certain
|
||
|
Proposals made, etc." (the Massachusetts "Proposals of 1705"), and the
|
||
|
second in 1717, "A Vindication of the Government of the New England
|
||
|
Churches, Drawn from Antiquity; Light of Nature; Holy Scripture; the
|
||
|
Noble Nature; and from the Dignity Divine Providence has put upon it."
|
||
|
In 1772 their author, the Rev. John Wise, a former pastor of the
|
||
|
church in Ipswich, Massachusetts, had been dead for over forty
|
||
|
years. In his day, he had regarded the "Proposals" as treasonable to
|
||
|
the ancient polity of Congregationalism, and had attacked what he
|
||
|
considered their assumptions, absurdities, and inherent tyranny. His
|
||
|
books were forceful in their own day, serving the churches, persuading
|
||
|
those of Massachusetts to hold to the more democratic system of the
|
||
|
Cambridge Platform, and largely affecting the character of the later
|
||
|
polity of the New England churches. The suffering colonist of 1772,
|
||
|
smarting under English misrule, turned to the vigorous, clear, and
|
||
|
convincing pages wherein John Wise set forth the natural rights of
|
||
|
men, the quality of political obligation, the relative merits of
|
||
|
government, whether monarchies, aristocracies, or democracies, and the
|
||
|
well developed concept that civil government should be founded upon a
|
||
|
belief in human equality. In his second attempt to defend the
|
||
|
Cambridge Platform, Wise had advanced to the proposition that
|
||
|
"Democracy is Christ's government in Church and State." [160]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such expositions as these, and those in Isaac Backus's "The Exact
|
||
|
Limits between Civil and Ecclesiastical Government," published in
|
||
|
1777, and in his "Government and Liberty described," of 1778, together
|
||
|
with the discussion prevalent at the time, and with the logic of the
|
||
|
Revolutionary events, opened the mind of the people to a clearer
|
||
|
conception of liberty of conscience, though their practical
|
||
|
application of the notion was deferred. For many years longer, persons
|
||
|
had to be content with a toleration that was of itself a contradiction
|
||
|
to religious liberty. Yet in May, 1777, such toleration was broadened
|
||
|
by the "Act for exempting those Persons in this State, commonly styled
|
||
|
Separates from Taxes for the Support of the established Ministry and
|
||
|
building and repairing Meeting Houses," on condition that they should
|
||
|
annually lodge with the clerk of the Established Society, wherein they
|
||
|
lived, a certificate, vouching for their attendance upon and support
|
||
|
of their own form of worship. Said certificate was to be signed by the
|
||
|
minister, elder, or deacon of the church which "they ordinarily did
|
||
|
attend." [161]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Israel Holly's "An Appeal to the Impartial, or the Censured Memorial
|
||
|
made Public, that it may speak for itself. To which is added a few
|
||
|
Brief Remarks upon a Late Act of the General Assembly of the State of
|
||
|
Connecticut, entitled an 'Act for Exempting those Persons in this
|
||
|
State Commonly styled Separates, from Taxes for the Support of the
|
||
|
Established Ministry &c.'" gave in full an "Appeal" of eleven
|
||
|
Separatist churches to the General Assembly in May, 1770. That body
|
||
|
would not suffer the petition to be read through, stopping the reader
|
||
|
in the midst, while some of its members went so far as to declare that
|
||
|
"all, who had signed it, ought to be sent for to make answer to the
|
||
|
Court for their action." But the majority of the legislature were not
|
||
|
so intolerant, so that during the session the act above mentioned was
|
||
|
passed. Holly, in his book, includes with the "Appeal" a severe
|
||
|
criticism of the new law, and, in quoting the petition, he gives a
|
||
|
full explanation of its text as well as the comments of the Assembly
|
||
|
upon it and their objections to parts of it. When recounting the long
|
||
|
struggle for toleration and in detail the persecutions of the Suffield
|
||
|
Separatists, Holly dwells upon the fact that before the recent
|
||
|
legislation of the Assembly, the spirit of fair dealing had in some
|
||
|
communities influenced the members of the Establishment in their
|
||
|
treatment of the Separatists. Holly also enlarges upon the
|
||
|
inconsistency between demanding freedom in temporal affairs from Great
|
||
|
Britain and refusing it in spiritual ones to fellow-citizens. The
|
||
|
"Censured Memorial" closes [162] with an expressed determination on
|
||
|
the part of the Separatists to appeal to tte Continental Congress if
|
||
|
the state continue to refuse to do them justice. Holly, remarking upon
|
||
|
the act of 1777, expresses great dissatisfaction with it as falling
|
||
|
short of the liberty desired, and, particularly, with its retention of
|
||
|
the certificate clause.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such continued agitation of the rights of individuals and of churches
|
||
|
eventually created a broader public opinion, one that, permeating the
|
||
|
Establishment itself, tended to make its ministers resent any great
|
||
|
exercise of authority on the part of those among them who clung to the
|
||
|
strong Presbyterian construction of the Saybrook
|
||
|
Articles. Communications upon the subject of religious liberty were to
|
||
|
be found in many of the newspapers. Two governors of Connecticut wrote
|
||
|
pamphlets that tended to weaken the hold of the Saybrook Platform over
|
||
|
the people. Governor Wolcott in 1761 wrote against it, and in 1765
|
||
|
Governor Fitch (anonymously) explained away its authoritative
|
||
|
interpretation. The term "Presbyterian" came to be applied more
|
||
|
frequently to the conservative churches of the Establishment, and
|
||
|
"Congregational" to those wherein the New Light ideas prevailed. Some
|
||
|
years later, while the two terms were still used interchangeably, the
|
||
|
term "Congregational" rose in favor, and, after the Revolution,
|
||
|
included even the few Separatist churches. As for the latter, they had
|
||
|
by 1770 concluded that with reference "to our Baptist brethren we are
|
||
|
free to hold occasional communion with such as are regular churches
|
||
|
and ... make the Christian profession and acknowledge us to be
|
||
|
baptized." [163] For some years these two religious parties attempted
|
||
|
to unite in associations, but finding that they disagreed too much on
|
||
|
the question of baptism, they mutually decided to give up the attempt,
|
||
|
and separated with the greatest respect and good will toward each
|
||
|
other. In 1783, the Presbyterians refused to meet the Separatists in
|
||
|
the attempt to devise some plan of union between them, but did advance
|
||
|
to the concession "to admit Separatists to Ordination with the
|
||
|
greatest care." [164] The Presbyterians were beginning to realize that
|
||
|
if the Saybrook Platform was to govern the churches of the
|
||
|
Establishment, its old judicial interpretation must give way. An
|
||
|
example of the revolt to be anticipated, if such interpretation were
|
||
|
insisted upon, followed the attempt by the Consociation of Windham in
|
||
|
1780 to discipline Isaac Foster, a Presbyterian minister, for "sundry
|
||
|
doctrines looked upon as dangerous and contrary to the gospel;" [ac]
|
||
|
and a similar attempt to reprove Mr. Sage of West Simsbury drew forth
|
||
|
such stirring retorts from Isaac Foster and from Dan Foster, minister
|
||
|
of Windsor (who defended Mr. Sage), that church after church promptly
|
||
|
renounced the Saybrook Platform. These churches agreed with Isaac
|
||
|
Foster in his declaration of the absolute independence of each church
|
||
|
and that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
no clergyman or number of clergymen or ecclesiastical council of
|
||
|
whatever denomination have right to make religious creeds, canons
|
||
|
or articles of faith and impose them upon any man or church on
|
||
|
earth requiring subscription to them.... A church should be the
|
||
|
sole judge of its pastor's teachings so long as he teaches nothing
|
||
|
_expressly_ contrary to the Bible. ... The Consociation has
|
||
|
no right to pretend that it is a divinely instituted assembly with
|
||
|
the Saybrook Platform for its charter, imposing a tyranny more
|
||
|
intolerable on the people than that from which they are trying to
|
||
|
free themselves. [165]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The result of all this agitation for liberty of conscience, emphasized
|
||
|
by its counterpart in the political life of the state and nation, was
|
||
|
that in the first edition of the "Laws and Acts of the State of
|
||
|
Connecticut in America," [ad] appearing in 1784, all reference to the
|
||
|
Saybrook Platform was omitted, and all ecclesiastical laws were
|
||
|
grouped under the three heads entitled Eights of Conscience,
|
||
|
Regulations of Societies, and the Observation of the Sabbath. [166]
|
||
|
Under the Sunday laws, together with numerous negative commands, was
|
||
|
the positive one that every one, who, for any trivial reason, absented
|
||
|
himself from public worship on the Lord's day should pay a fine of
|
||
|
three shillings, or fifty cents. The society regulations remained much
|
||
|
the same, with the added privilege that to all religious bodies
|
||
|
recognized by law permission was given to manage their, temporal
|
||
|
affairs as freely as did the churches of the Establishment. Dissenters
|
||
|
were even permitted to join themselves to religious societies in
|
||
|
adjoining states, [ae] provided the place of worship was not too far
|
||
|
distant for the Connecticut members to regularly attend services. To
|
||
|
these terms of toleration was affixed the sole condition of presenting
|
||
|
a certificate of membership signed by an officer of the church of
|
||
|
which the dissenter was a member, and that the certificate should be
|
||
|
lodged with the clerk of the Established society wherein the dissenter
|
||
|
dwelt. While legislation still favored the Establishment, toleration
|
||
|
was extended with more honesty and with better grace. All strangers
|
||
|
coming into the state were allowed, a choice of religious
|
||
|
denominations, but while undecided were to pay taxes to the society
|
||
|
lowest on the list. Choice was also given for twelve months to
|
||
|
resident minors upon their coming of age, and also to widows. In any
|
||
|
question, or doubt, the society to which the father, husband, or head
|
||
|
of the household belonged, or had belonged, determined the church home
|
||
|
of members of the household unless the certificates of all dissenting
|
||
|
members were on file. If persons were undecided when the time of
|
||
|
choice had elapsed, and they hadjiot presented certificates, they were
|
||
|
counted members of the Establishment. Thus the Saybrook Platform, no
|
||
|
longer appearing upon the law-book, was quietly relegated to the
|
||
|
status of a voluntarily accepted ecclesiastical constitution which the
|
||
|
different churches might accept, interpreting it with only such
|
||
|
degrees of strictness as they chose. Consequently, all Congregational
|
||
|
and Presbyterian churches drew together and remained intimately
|
||
|
associated with the government as setting forth the form of religion
|
||
|
it approved.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As toleration was more freely extended, oppression quickly ceased. The
|
||
|
smaller and weaker sects [af] that appeared in Connecticut after 1770
|
||
|
received no such persecution as their predecessors. Among them the
|
||
|
Sandemanians [ag] appeared about 1766, and from the first created
|
||
|
considerable interest. The Shakers were permitted to form a settlement
|
||
|
at Enfield in 1780. The Universalists began making converts among the
|
||
|
Separatist churches of Norwich as early as 1772. The year 1784 saw
|
||
|
the organization of the New London Seventh-day Baptist church, the
|
||
|
first of its kind in Connecticut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The abrogation of the Saybrook Platform was implied, not expressed, by
|
||
|
dropping it out of the revised laws of 1784. The force of custom, not
|
||
|
the repeal of the act of establishment, annulled it. As in the
|
||
|
revision of 1750, certain outgrown statutes were quietly sloughed off.
|
||
|
After the abrogation of the Saybrook system, the orthodox dissenters
|
||
|
felt most keenly the humiliation of giving the required certificates,
|
||
|
and the favoritism shown by the government towards Presbyterian or
|
||
|
Congregational churches. This favoritism did not confine itself to
|
||
|
ecclesiastical affairs, but showed itself by the government's
|
||
|
preference for members of the Establishment in all civil, judicial,
|
||
|
and military offices. If immediately after the Revolution this
|
||
|
favoritism was not so marked, it quickly developed out of all
|
||
|
proportion to justice among fellow-citizens.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] As a petition "To the King's Most Excellent Majesty in Council."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] "Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, which
|
||
|
frameth mischief by law?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] The "History" is brief, and the "Vindication" is largely of
|
||
|
President Clap's own reasons for establishing the college church. See
|
||
|
F. B. Dexter, "President Clap and his Writings," in _New Haven
|
||
|
Hist. Soc. Papers_, vol. v, pp. 256-257.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] "Let no man, orders of man, Civil or Ecclesiastical Rulers,
|
||
|
majority, or any whoever pretend they have a right to enjoyn upon me
|
||
|
what I shall believe and practice in matters of Religion, and I bound
|
||
|
to subject to their Injunctions, unless they can convince me, that in
|
||
|
case there should happen to be a mistake, that they will suffer the
|
||
|
consequences, and not I; that they will bear the wrath of God, and
|
||
|
suffer Damnation, in my room and stead. But if they can't do this,
|
||
|
don't let them pretend to a right to determine for me what religion I
|
||
|
shall have. For if I must stand or fall for myself, then, pray let me
|
||
|
judge, and act and choose (in Matters of Religion) for myself
|
||
|
now. Yea, when I view these things in the Light of the Day of Judgment
|
||
|
approaching, I am ready to cry out Hands off! Hands off! Let none
|
||
|
pretend a right to my subjection in matters of Religion, but my Judge
|
||
|
only; or, if any do require it, God strengthen me to refuse to grant
|
||
|
it." _A Word in Zion's Behalf._ Quoted by E. H. Gillett in
|
||
|
_Hist. Magazine,_ 2d series, vol. iv, p. 16.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] _A Key to unlock the Door, that leads in, to take a fair view of
|
||
|
the Religious Constitution Established by Law in the Colony of
|
||
|
Connecticut; With a Short Observation upon the Explanation of the
|
||
|
Say-Brook-Plan; and Mr. Hobart's Attempt to establish the same
|
||
|
Plan,_ by Ebenezer Frothingham.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] Robert Bragge, _Church Discipline_, London, 1738. The author
|
||
|
takes for his text 1 Peter ii, 45, and under ten heads considers the
|
||
|
Congregational church as the true Scriptural church, its rights,
|
||
|
privileges, etc. Under topic four, "The Charter of this House," he
|
||
|
says: "The charter of this house exempts all its inhabitants from
|
||
|
obeying the whole ceremonial law:... from the doctrines of men in
|
||
|
matters of faith,... from man's commands in the worship of God. Man
|
||
|
can no more prescribe how God shall be worshipped, under the new
|
||
|
testament than he could under the old.... He alone who is in the bosom
|
||
|
of the Father hath declared this. To worship God according to the will
|
||
|
and pleasure of men is, in a sense to attempt to dethrone him: for it
|
||
|
is not only to place man's will on a level with God's, but above
|
||
|
it."--_Church Discipline_, p. 39.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] "Now suffer me to say something respecting the unreasonableness of
|
||
|
compelling the people of our persuasion to hear or support the
|
||
|
minister of another. Can a person who has been redeemed, be so
|
||
|
ungrateful as to hire a minister to preach up a doctrine which in his
|
||
|
heart he believes to be directly contrary to the institutions of his
|
||
|
redeemer? How if one of you should happen to be in the company with a
|
||
|
number of Roman Catholicks, who should tell you that if you would not
|
||
|
hire a minister to preach transubstantiation and the worshipping of
|
||
|
images to your children and to an unlearned people, they would cut off
|
||
|
your head; would you do it? Can you any better submit to hire a
|
||
|
minister to preach up a doctrine which you in your heart believe
|
||
|
contrary to the institution of Christ? I do not doubt but that many of
|
||
|
you, and I do not know but that all of you know what it is to
|
||
|
experience redeeming love; and if so, now can you take a person of
|
||
|
another persuasion, and put him in gaol for a trifling sum, destroy
|
||
|
his estate and ruin his family (as you signify the law will bear you
|
||
|
out) and when he is careful to support the religion which he in his
|
||
|
conscience looks upon to be right, who honestly tells you it is
|
||
|
wronging his conscience to pay your minister, and that he may not do
|
||
|
so though he suffer?... Is it not shame? Are we sharers in redemption,
|
||
|
and do we grudge to support religion? No: let us seek for the truth of
|
||
|
the gospel. If we can't think alike, let us not be cruel one to
|
||
|
another."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] _Connecticut Gazette_ (New Haven) April 1755-Apr. 14, 1764;
|
||
|
suspended; revived July 5, 1765-Feb. 19, 1768. The _New London
|
||
|
Gazette_, founded in 1763, was after 1768 known as the _
|
||
|
Connecticut Gazette _, except from Dee. 10, 1773, to May 11, 1787,
|
||
|
when it was called _The Connecticut Gazette and Universal
|
||
|
Intelligencer_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Maryland published her first newspaper in 1727, Khode Island and Sonth
|
||
|
Carolina in 1732, Virginia in 1736, North Carolina in 1755, New
|
||
|
Hampshire in 1756, while Georgia fell into line in 1763.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] Edwards's _Nature of True Virtue_, written about 1755, was
|
||
|
not published until 1765.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] This book, otherwise essentially Edwardean, was second only to
|
||
|
Edwards's _Religious Affections_ in popularity and in its success
|
||
|
in spreading the influence of this school of theology, and it did
|
||
|
much, in Connecticut, to break down the opposition to the New
|
||
|
Divinity. Edwards himself approved its manuscript, and in his writings
|
||
|
recommended it highly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] In 1769-70, Bellamy wrote a series of tracts and dialogues
|
||
|
against this practice. They were very effective in causing its
|
||
|
abandonment by those conservative churches that had so long clung to
|
||
|
its use.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] Experience Mayhew in his _Grace Defended_, of 1744.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lemuel Briant's _The Absurdity and Blasphemy of Depreciating Moral
|
||
|
Virtue_, 1749. This was replied to in Massachusetts, by Rev. John
|
||
|
Porter of North Bridgewater in _The Absurdity and Blasphemy of
|
||
|
Substituting the Personal Righteousness of Men_, etc.; also by a
|
||
|
sermon of Rev. Thomas Foxcroft, Dr. Charles Chauncy's colleague; and
|
||
|
by Rev. Samuel Niles's _Vindication of Divers Important Gospel
|
||
|
Doctrines_. Jonathan Mayhew, son of Experience, wrote his
|
||
|
_Sermons_ (pronouncedly Arian) in 1755, and in 1761 two sermons,
|
||
|
_Striving to Enter at the Strait Gate_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Other ministers were affected by these unorthodox views, notably
|
||
|
Ebenezer Gay, Daniel Shute, and John Rogers. This religious
|
||
|
development was cut short by the early death of the leaders and by the
|
||
|
Revolutionary contest. Briant died in 1754, Jonathan Mayhew in 1766,
|
||
|
and his father in 1758.--See W. Walker, _Hist. of the Congregational
|
||
|
Churches in the United States_, chap. viii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] Hopkins replied in 1765 to Jonathan Mayhew's sermons of
|
||
|
1761. Mayhew died before he could answer, but Moses Hemenway of Wells,
|
||
|
Maine, and also Jedediah Mills of Huntington, Conn, (a New Light
|
||
|
sympathizer), answered Hopkins's extreme views in 1767 in _An
|
||
|
Inquiry concerning the State of the Unregenerate under the
|
||
|
Gospel_. This involved Hopkins in further argumentation in 1769,
|
||
|
and drew into the discussion William Hart (Old Light) of Saybrook, and
|
||
|
also Moses Mather of Darien, Conn, (also Old Light). This attack upon
|
||
|
Hopkins resulted in 1773 in his greatest work, _An Inquiry into the
|
||
|
Nature of True Holiness_. The whole question at stake between the
|
||
|
Old Calvinists and the followers of the New Divinity was how to class
|
||
|
men, morally upright, who made no pretensions to religious experience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] West, in his _Essay on Moral Agency_, defended Edwards's
|
||
|
_Freedom of the Will_ against the Rev. James Dana of New Haven in
|
||
|
1772, but his _Scripture Doctrine of Atonement_, published in
|
||
|
1785, was his best-known work. In his doctrinal views, he was greatly
|
||
|
influenced by Hopkins. Both West and Smalley trained students for the
|
||
|
ministry. The latter was the teacher of Nathaniel Emmons. Smalley was
|
||
|
settled in what is now New Britain, Conn., from 1757-1820.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[o] Emmons died there, in 1840, at the age of ninety-five. Apart from
|
||
|
his influence upon the development of doctrine, he did more than any
|
||
|
other man to bring back the early independence of the churches and to
|
||
|
create the Congregational polity of the present day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[p] To fortify their position, this party cited various acts of
|
||
|
Parliament and the Act of Union, 1707, wherein Scotland is distinctly
|
||
|
released from subjection to the Church of England,--an exemption,
|
||
|
they maintained, that had never formally been extended to the
|
||
|
colonies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[q] On January 30, 1750, Jonathan Mayhew preached a forceful sermon
|
||
|
upon the danger of being "unmercifully priest-ridden."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[r] Rev. East Apthorpe, S. P. G. missionary at Cambridge, Mass., had
|
||
|
replied to a newspaper criticism upon the policy of the Society for
|
||
|
Propagating the Gospel in New England, in his _Considerations on the
|
||
|
Institutions and Conduct of the Society for the Propagation of the
|
||
|
Gospel in Foreign Parts_. Jonathan Mayhew published in answer his
|
||
|
_Observations on the Character and Conduct of the Society_,
|
||
|
censuring the Society not only for intruding itself into New England,
|
||
|
but for being the champion of the proposed episcopate, which he
|
||
|
denounced. This was in 1763. For two years the controversy
|
||
|
raged. There were four replies to Mayhew. Two were unimportant, a
|
||
|
third presumably from Rev. Henry Caner, and the fourth, _Answer to
|
||
|
the Observations_, an anonymous English production, really by
|
||
|
Archbishop Seeker. Mayhew wrote a _Defense_, and Apthorpe summed
|
||
|
up the whole controversy in his _Review_.--A. L. Cross,
|
||
|
_Anglican Episcopate_, p. 145 _et seq._; footnote 1, p. 147.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[s] John Adams's _Works_, x, 288.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[t] Dr. Charles Chauney attacked the S. P. G. as endeavoring to
|
||
|
increase their power, not to proselytize among the Indians, but to
|
||
|
episcopize the colonists. Dr. Chandler, of Elizabethtown, N. J.,
|
||
|
replied in _An Appeal to the Public_. Chauney retorted with
|
||
|
_The Appeal Answered_, and Chandler with _The Appeal
|
||
|
Defended_. The newspapers of 1768-69 took up the controversy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[u] In 1767, Dr. Johnson in a letter to Governor Trumbull assured him
|
||
|
that "It is not intended, at present, to send any Bishops into the
|
||
|
American Colonies,... and should it be done at all, you may be assured
|
||
|
that it will be done in such manner as in no degree to prejudice, nor
|
||
|
if possible even give the least offense to any denomination of
|
||
|
Protestants."--E. E. Beardsley, _Hist, of the Epis. Church in
|
||
|
Conn._, i, 265.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[v] There were nine clergymen from Connecticut, and twenty-five from
|
||
|
New York and vicinity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[w] The Association had sent petitions in behalf of the Baptists to
|
||
|
the legislatures of Massachusetts and Connecticut. Both were
|
||
|
refused. For its Circular Letter of 1776, see Hovey's _Life of
|
||
|
Backus_, p. 289; also p. 155.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[x] This year the Royal Society awarded him the Copley medal for his
|
||
|
discovery that lightning was a discharge of electricity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1761 the medal of the Royal Society was also awarded to the
|
||
|
Rev. Jared Eliot of Killingworth, Conn., for making iron and steel
|
||
|
from black ferruginous sand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[y] John Trumbull, b. 1750, d. in Michigan, 1831; Joel Barlow,
|
||
|
b. 1754, d. in Poland, 1812; Gen. David Humphreys, b. 1752, d. in New
|
||
|
Haven, 1818. These Yale men, together with Dr. Lemuel Hopkins, were
|
||
|
the leadjng spirits in the club known as "The Hartford Wits."
|
||
|
Dr. Dwight was a fellow collegian with them. Trumbull and Dwight did
|
||
|
much to interest the students in literature. The latter was also tutor
|
||
|
in rhetoric and professor of belles-lettres and oratory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[z] Conn. Col. Rec. xii, Appendix. This was drawn up by the Governor
|
||
|
and three members of the General Assembly, May, 1761.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[aa] With grim humor, he turned to one of his escort, saying that he
|
||
|
at last realized the description in Revelation of "Death riding a
|
||
|
white horse and hell following behind."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ab] The latter half of the title was omitted about 1775.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ac] Foster replied: "One man is not to be called a 'heretick,' purely
|
||
|
because he differs from another, as to the articles of faith. For
|
||
|
either we should all be 'hereticks' or there would be no 'heresy'
|
||
|
among us.... Heresy does not consist in opinion or sentiments: it is
|
||
|
not an error of head but of will."--Foster, _A Defense of Religious
|
||
|
Liberty_, p. 47.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ad] This revision of the laws was in charge of Roger Sherman and
|
||
|
Richard Law.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ae] Quakers and Baptists frequently crossed the state line to attend
|
||
|
services in Rhode Island.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[af] There was only an occasional Romanist; Unitarians first took
|
||
|
their sectarian name in 1815; Universalists were few in number until
|
||
|
the second quarter of the new century.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ag] This sect received its name from Robert Sandeman, the son-in-law
|
||
|
of its founder, the Rev. John Glass of Scotland. Sandeman published
|
||
|
their doctrines about 1757. In 1764, he left Scotland and came to
|
||
|
America, where he began making converts near Boston, in other parts of
|
||
|
New England, and in Nova Scotia. He died at Danbury, Connecticut,
|
||
|
1771. The members of the sect are called Glassites in Scotland, where
|
||
|
the Rev. John Glass labored. He died there in 1773. See W. Walker, in
|
||
|
_American Hist. Assoc. Annual Report_, 1901, vol. i.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XII
|
||
|
|
||
|
CONNECTICUT AT THE CLOSE OF THE REVOLUTION
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The piping times of peace.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the fifteen years following the ratification of the
|
||
|
Constitution of the United States by Connecticut, January 9, 1788, no
|
||
|
conspicuous events mark her history. These years were for the most
|
||
|
part years of quiet growth and of expansion in all directions, and,
|
||
|
because of this steady advancement, she was soon known as "the land of
|
||
|
steady habits" and of general prosperity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even in the dark days of the Revolution, Connecticut's energetic
|
||
|
people had continued to populate her waste places, and had carved out
|
||
|
new towns from old townships,--for the last of the original plats had
|
||
|
been marked off in 1763. In 1779-80, the state laid out five towns;
|
||
|
from 1784 to 1787, twenty-one,--twelve of them in one year, 1786. [a]
|
||
|
Tolland County was divided off in 1786 as Windham had been in 1726,
|
||
|
Litchfield in 1751, and Middlesex in 1765. These, with, the four
|
||
|
original counties of Fairfield, New Haven, Hartford, and New London,
|
||
|
made the present eight counties of the state. The cities of Hartford,
|
||
|
New Haven, New London, Middletown, and Norwich were incorporated in
|
||
|
1784. They were scarcely more than villages of to-day, for New Haven
|
||
|
approximated 3,000 inhabitants, and Hartford, as late as 1810, only
|
||
|
4,000. The Litchfield of the post-Revolutionary days, ranking, as a
|
||
|
trade-centre, fourth in the state, was as familiar with Indians in her
|
||
|
streets as the Milwaukee of the late fifties, and "out west" was no
|
||
|
farther in miles than the Connecticut Reserve of 3,800,000 acres in
|
||
|
Ohio which, in 1786, the state had reserved, when ceding her western
|
||
|
lands to the new nation. Thither emigration was turning, since its
|
||
|
check on the Susquehanna and Delaware by the award, in 1782, to
|
||
|
Pennsylvania of the contested jurisdiction over those lands, and of
|
||
|
the little town of Westmoreland, which the Yankees had built
|
||
|
there. [b] After the decision new settlements were discouraged by the
|
||
|
bitter feuds between the Connecticut and Pennsylvanian claimants to
|
||
|
the land.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Revolution had left Connecticut exhausted in men and in means. Her
|
||
|
largest seaboard towns had suffered severely. With her commerce and
|
||
|
coasting trade almost destroyed, she found herself, during the period
|
||
|
preceding the adoption of the national Constitution and the
|
||
|
establishment of the revenue system, a prey to New York's need on the
|
||
|
one hand and to Massachusetts' sense of impoverishment on the other;
|
||
|
and thus, for every article imported through either state, Connecticut
|
||
|
paid an impost tax. It was estimated that she thus provided one third
|
||
|
of the cost of government for each of her neighbors. Consequently she
|
||
|
attempted to reinstate and to enlarge her early though limited
|
||
|
commerce, and was soon sending cargoes, preeminently of the field and
|
||
|
pasture, [c] to exchange for West India commodities, while with her
|
||
|
larger vessels she developed an East Indian trade. As another means to
|
||
|
wealth, the state, in 1791, passed laws for the encouragement of the
|
||
|
small factories [d] that the necessity of the war had created; but it
|
||
|
was not until after the act of 1833, creating the joint-stock
|
||
|
companies, that Connecticut turned from a purely agricultural
|
||
|
community to the great manufacturing state we know to-day. She shared
|
||
|
in the national prosperity, which, as early as 1792, proved the wisdom
|
||
|
of Hamilton's financial policy, and about 1795 her citizens wisely
|
||
|
bent themselves to the improvement of internal communication. This was
|
||
|
the era of the development of the turnpike and of the multiplicity of
|
||
|
stage-lines. Kegular stages plied between the larger cities. Yet up to
|
||
|
1789 there was not a post-office or a mail route in Litchfield county,
|
||
|
and the "Monitor" was started as a weekly paper to circulate the
|
||
|
news. In 1790 Litchfield had a fortnightly carrier to New York and a
|
||
|
weekly one to Hartford, while communication with the second capital
|
||
|
[e] of the state was frequent. From 1800, there was a daily stage to
|
||
|
Hartford, New Haven, Norwalk, Poughkeepsie, and Albany. [167] Wagons
|
||
|
and carriages began to multiply and to replace saddle-bags and
|
||
|
pillions, yet as late as 1815 Litchfield town had only "one phaeton,
|
||
|
one coachee, and forty-six two-wheeled pleasure-wagons." [168]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Towns continued to commend and encourage good public schools. Every
|
||
|
town or parish of seventy families had to keep school eleven months of
|
||
|
the year, and those of less population for at least six
|
||
|
months. Private schools and academies sprang up. [f] Harvard and Yale,
|
||
|
as the best equipped of the New England colleges, competed for its
|
||
|
young men, and drew others from the central and southern sections of
|
||
|
the nation. Neither had either Divinity or Law School. [g] Young men
|
||
|
after completing their college course usually went to some famous
|
||
|
minister for graduate training. Rev. Joseph Bellamy, John Smalley, and
|
||
|
Jonathan Edwards, Junior, were the foremost teachers in Connecticut,
|
||
|
though the first-named had ceased his active work in 1787. [h] The New
|
||
|
Divinity was very slowly spreading. Even as late as 1792, President
|
||
|
Stiles of Yale declared that none of the churches had accepted it. [i]
|
||
|
This versatile minister interested himself in languages, literatures,
|
||
|
natural science, and in all religions, as well as in the phases of New
|
||
|
England theology. He esteemed piety and sound doctrine, whether in
|
||
|
Old or New Divinity men, and welcomed to his communion all of good
|
||
|
conscience who belonged to any Christian Protestant sect. He was
|
||
|
liberal-minded and tolerant beyond the average of his colleagues. His
|
||
|
tolerance, however, was more for the old Calvinistic principles in the
|
||
|
New Divinity, and not for its advanced features, for which he had
|
||
|
little regard. President Stiles held very firmly to the belief that
|
||
|
his ministerial privileges and authority remained with him after he
|
||
|
became president of the college, although he was no longer pastor by
|
||
|
the election of a particular church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first law school in America was established in Litchfield in 1784
|
||
|
by Judge Tappan Reeve, later chief justice of Connecticut. He
|
||
|
associated with him in 1798 Judge James Gould. "Judge Keeve loved law
|
||
|
as a science and studied it philosophically." He wished "to reduce it
|
||
|
to a system, for he considered it as a practical application of moral
|
||
|
and religious principles to business life." His students were drilled
|
||
|
in the study of the Constitution of the United States and on the
|
||
|
current legislation in Congress. Under Judge Gould, the common law was
|
||
|
expounded methodically and lucidly, as it could be only by one who
|
||
|
knew its principles and their underlying reasons from _a_ to
|
||
|
_z_. [169] In 1789, Ephraim Kirby of Litchfield published the
|
||
|
first law reports ever issued in the United States. [j] Law students
|
||
|
from many states were attracted to the town. The roll of the school,
|
||
|
kept regularly only after 1798, included over one thousand lawyers,
|
||
|
among them one vice-president of the United States, several foreign
|
||
|
ministers, five cabinet ministers, [k] two justices of the United
|
||
|
States Supreme Court, ten governors of states, sixteen United States
|
||
|
senators, fifty members of Congress, forty judges of the higher state
|
||
|
courts, and eight chief justices of the state. [170]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among Connecticut towns, the two capitals of the state were also
|
||
|
literary centres, while Norwich, New Haven, and New London were fast
|
||
|
becoming commercial ports. Middletown soon had considerable coasting
|
||
|
trade. Wethersfield had vessels of her own. Even Saybrook and Milford
|
||
|
sent a few vessels to the West and East Indies. Farmington was a big
|
||
|
trading centre, shipping produce abroad and importing in vessels of
|
||
|
her own that sailed from Wethersfield or New Haven. Some few towns
|
||
|
developed a special industry, like Berlin and New Britain, that made
|
||
|
the Connecticut tin-peddler a familiar figure even in the Middle and
|
||
|
Southern states. There were also several towns with large shipyards,
|
||
|
where some of the largest ships were built. But back of all such
|
||
|
centres of activity, the whole state was solidly agricultural.
|
||
|
Connecticut's commerce was an import commerce exchanging natural
|
||
|
products for foreign ones, such as sugar, coffee, and molasses from
|
||
|
the West Indies; tea and luxuries from the East; and obtaining, either
|
||
|
directly or indirectly, from Europe, all the fine manufactured
|
||
|
products, whether stuffs for personal use or tools for labor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In measuring the prosperity and intelligence of the Connecticut people
|
||
|
neither the parish library nor the newspaper must be overlooked. "I
|
||
|
am acquainted," wrote Noah Webster in 1790, "with parishes where
|
||
|
almost every householder, has read the works of Addison, Sherlock,
|
||
|
Atterbury, Watts, Young, and other familiar writings: and will
|
||
|
conversely handsomely on the subjects of which they treat." [171] "By
|
||
|
means of the general circulation of the public papers," wrote the same
|
||
|
author, "the people are informed of all political affairs; and their
|
||
|
representatives are often prepared to debate upon propositions made in
|
||
|
the legislature." [172]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Through the agricultural communities of Connecticut, as well as in the
|
||
|
towns, the weekly newspapers of the state began to circulate freely as
|
||
|
soon as carriers or mail routes were established. Even by 1785 there
|
||
|
was in Connecticut a newspaper circulation of over 8000 weekly copies,
|
||
|
which was equal to that published in the whole territory south of
|
||
|
Philadelphia. [173] These papers lacked locals and leaders, leaving
|
||
|
the former to current gossip, and for the latter substituting, to some
|
||
|
extent, letters and correspondence. The newspapers gave foreign news
|
||
|
three months old, the proceedings of Congress in from ten to twelve
|
||
|
days after their occurrence, and news from the Connecticut elections
|
||
|
three weeks late. Subjects relating to religion and politics were
|
||
|
heard _pro_ and _con_ in articles, or rather letters, signed
|
||
|
with grandiloquent pseudonyms and frequently marked "Papers, please
|
||
|
copy" in order to secure for them a larger public. Fantastic bits of
|
||
|
natural science, or what purported to be such, and stilted admonitions
|
||
|
to virtue, as well as poems, eulogies, and obituaries, were admitted
|
||
|
to the columns of these colonial papers. In 1786, the "Connecticut
|
||
|
Courant" apologized for its meagre reports of legislative proceedings,
|
||
|
especially of those of the Upper House, Council, or Senate, and
|
||
|
promised to give full details. This reporting was a new thing, and it
|
||
|
was fully five years more before the practice became general among the
|
||
|
half dozen papers published in Connecticut. [l] Space was also given
|
||
|
in the papers to the reproduction of selections, even whole chapters,
|
||
|
from current and popular writers. Among such letters was a series on
|
||
|
"the Establishment of the Worship of the Deity essential to National
|
||
|
Happiness." In one of the letters, the author suggests:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
To secure the advantages ... allow me to propose _a general and
|
||
|
equitable tax collected from all the rateable members of a state,
|
||
|
for the support of the public teachers of religion, of all
|
||
|
denominations, within the state...._ Let a moderate poll tax be
|
||
|
added to a tax of a specified sum on the pound, and levied on all
|
||
|
the subjects of a state and collected with the public tax, and
|
||
|
paid out to the public teachers of religion of the several
|
||
|
denominations in proportion to the number of polls or families,
|
||
|
belonging to each respectively; or according to their
|
||
|
estimates. [For]
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. It would be equitable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. It would be for the good order of the civil state.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3. All ought to contribute to such a religious education of the
|
||
|
people as would conduce to civil order.
|
||
|
|
||
|
4. It would promote the peace in towns and societies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. It would do away with the legal expenses consequent upon
|
||
|
difficulties in collecting rates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
6. It would "extinguish the ardor of the founders of new delusions
|
||
|
and their weak and mercenary abettors."
|
||
|
|
||
|
7. It would prevent separation except upon the firmest principles;
|
||
|
"the powerful motive of saving a penny or two in the pound, would
|
||
|
cease to operate, because their tax would continue still the same,
|
||
|
go where they will." [174]
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was also suggested that the Assembly should fix ministers' salaries
|
||
|
at so much per hundred families, and that congregations should be
|
||
|
permitted to add to the annual grant by voluntary contributions. These
|
||
|
are but examples of the reaching out of the public mind for some
|
||
|
equitable method of enforcing the support of public worship,--a
|
||
|
principle to which the majority still adhered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Laws of the State of Connecticut, under which after the Revolution
|
||
|
parishes were organized, contained no reference to the Episcopal
|
||
|
church as such. All societies and congregations were placed on the
|
||
|
same footing precisely, _i.e._, they "had power to provide for
|
||
|
the support of public worship by the rent or sale of pews or slips in
|
||
|
the meeting-house, by the establishment of funds, or in any other way
|
||
|
they might deem expedient." With this amount of freedom Episcopalians
|
||
|
were content, since by the consecration, in 1784, of Samuel Seabury,
|
||
|
Bishop of Connecticut, their ecclesiastical equipment was complete.[m]
|
||
|
Further, many of them had been Tories, and, satisfied with the
|
||
|
clemency shown them at the close of the war by the authorities, they
|
||
|
gladly affiliated with them in all Federal measures of national
|
||
|
importance, and also, for over thirty years, in all local issues.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From 1783 to 1787 there was throughout the United States a general
|
||
|
disintegration of political parties. [175] Federalists and nascent
|
||
|
Anti-Federalists were alike seeking some basis for a safe national
|
||
|
existence. The Constitution once established, political parties
|
||
|
differentiated themselves as the party in power and the "out-party"
|
||
|
developed their respective interpretations of the Constitution and of
|
||
|
measures permitted under it. The Anti-Federalist party in Connecticut
|
||
|
is sometimes said to have been born in 1783 out of opposition both to
|
||
|
the Commutation Act of the Continental Congress, voting five years'
|
||
|
full pay instead of half-pay for life to the Revolutionary officers,
|
||
|
and to the formation of the Cincinnati. Both of these measures touched
|
||
|
the main spring of party difference. America had caste as well as
|
||
|
Europe. Though of a different type, it existed in every town and
|
||
|
county. There were the people of position, attained by family
|
||
|
standing, professional prominence, superior intelligence (rarely by
|
||
|
wealth alone), and then, as now, by natural leadership. There were the
|
||
|
common people of ordinary abilities and meagre possessions, who looked
|
||
|
up to this first class. Between the two there was an invisible
|
||
|
barrier. The customs of the day emphasized it. Yet the institutions
|
||
|
of the land and its democracy demanded that this barrier, not
|
||
|
impassable to men of parts and character who could push up from the
|
||
|
masses, should never become insurmountable, as it often did under a
|
||
|
monarchy; that it should be steadily leveled by intrusting the
|
||
|
governing power more and more to the whole people, rather than to a
|
||
|
few leaders; and by educating the masses up to their responsibilities.
|
||
|
But many of the leading Federalists preferred to concentrate power in
|
||
|
the hands of the few, hesitating to trust the judgment of the great
|
||
|
body of citizens with the new and novel government. And to the people
|
||
|
at large any measure that bore a remote resemblance to monarchical
|
||
|
institutions or monarchical aspirations--however far remote from
|
||
|
either--was subject to suspicion and antagonism. The Cincinnati might
|
||
|
be the beginning of a nobility, and half-pay or five years' full pay
|
||
|
to the officers ignored the common soldiery who had done most of the
|
||
|
fighting, and who had suffered even more severely in their
|
||
|
fortunes.[n] When the measures of the first Congress pressed hardest
|
||
|
upon the impoverished landed proprietors of the South and upon the
|
||
|
small farmers in other sections, of the country, they welded the
|
||
|
landed aristocracy of the South and the democracy of the North into
|
||
|
the Anti-Federal party. Add to their sense of impoverishment, their
|
||
|
common hatred of England, and these classes would hold their prejudice
|
||
|
longer than the merchants, the lawyers, and the clergy, whose
|
||
|
business, studies, and labors would tend to soften the antagonism
|
||
|
created by the war. New England, however, was largely Federal, and
|
||
|
Connecticut was one of the strongholds of that party, priding herself
|
||
|
upon returning Federal electors as long as there was the shadow of the
|
||
|
Federal name to vote for. Moreover, the "Presbyterian Consociated
|
||
|
Congregational Church" and the Federalists were so closely allied that
|
||
|
the party of the government and the party of the Establishment were
|
||
|
familiarly and collectively known as the "Standing Order." During the
|
||
|
early years of statehood, by far the larger number of the dissenters
|
||
|
were also good Federalists. But they drew away from the party at a
|
||
|
later date, when the Democratic-Republicans began, in their
|
||
|
Connecticut state politics, to call for a broader suffrage and full
|
||
|
religious liberty, while the Federal Standing Order still continued to
|
||
|
claim, as within its patronage, legal favors, political office, and
|
||
|
the honors of judicial, military, and civil life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the Revolution, the rapidly increasing Baptists continued their
|
||
|
warfare waged against certificates and in behalf of religious liberty.
|
||
|
Methodists soon sympathized, for Methodist itinerants, entering
|
||
|
Connecticut in 1789, gained a footing, in spite of much opposition and
|
||
|
real oppression through fines and imprisonments, [o] and quickly made
|
||
|
many converts. Their preachers urged upon penurious and backward
|
||
|
members the importance of voluntary support of the gospel in almost
|
||
|
the same words as those of the Baptist leader: "It is as real
|
||
|
_robbery_ to neglect the _ordinances_ of God, as it is to
|
||
|
force people to support preachers who will not trust his influence for
|
||
|
a temporal living." [176] Baptists, Methodists, and many other
|
||
|
dissenters were far from satisfied with their status, and the
|
||
|
government from time to time was forced to take notice of the
|
||
|
dissatisfaction. Temporary legislation was enacted to allay the
|
||
|
unrest, but, as there was a settled determination to protect the
|
||
|
Establishment and to keep the political leadership among its friends,
|
||
|
the various measures were not successful. For instance, the
|
||
|
legislature in 1785-86 had arranged for the sale of the Western Lands
|
||
|
and for the money expected from their sale to be divided among the
|
||
|
various Christian bodies, and it had also enacted--
|
||
|
|
||
|
that there shall be reserved to the public five hundred acres of
|
||
|
land in each township for the support of the gospel ministry and
|
||
|
five hundred acres more for the support of schools in such towns
|
||
|
forever; and two hundred and forty acres of good ground in each
|
||
|
town to be granted in fee simple to the first gospel minister who
|
||
|
shall settle in such town. [177]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nothing is here said of the Presbyterians, or of any other sect, yet
|
||
|
that denomination was sure to receive the greater benefit under the
|
||
|
working of the law. They were a wealthy body, and in the next year,
|
||
|
they began, under the General Association of Connecticut, to renew
|
||
|
their earlier efforts for an organized planting of missions. Attempts
|
||
|
to establish missionary posts were begun as early as 1774, but they
|
||
|
had been interrupted by the war, and were not revived until 1780, when
|
||
|
two missionaries were sent to Vermont. After a little, the missionary
|
||
|
spirit languished through lack of support; but interest had been
|
||
|
roused again by the promised lands and money from the sales in the
|
||
|
Western Reserve, and by the contributions that, flowing in from 1788
|
||
|
to 1791, warranted the dispatch of missionaries into the western field
|
||
|
in 1792, and regularly thereafter. [178]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Turning to the religious and more strictly theological side of the
|
||
|
development of toleration, there was within the Establishment itself a
|
||
|
gradual modification of opinion concerning membership. It was
|
||
|
witnessed to by the contents of a book entitled "Christian Forbearance
|
||
|
to Weak Consciences a Duty of the Gospel," by John Lewis of Stepney
|
||
|
parish, Wethersfield. It was sent out in 1789 for the purpose of
|
||
|
"Attempting to prove that Persons, absenting themselves from the
|
||
|
Lord's Table, through honest scruples of Conscience, is not such a
|
||
|
breach of Covenant but that they partake other Privileges." One may
|
||
|
recall that twenty years previous, 1769-71, Dr. Bellamy was thundering
|
||
|
not only against the Half-Way Covenant, but also against the
|
||
|
Stoddardean view of the Lord's Supper as a "means" of grace,--as a
|
||
|
sacrament the partaking of which would help unworthy or unconverted
|
||
|
men to conversion and to the leading of moral and holy lives. One
|
||
|
might, for a moment, anticipate that the Wethersfield pastor was
|
||
|
harking back to the old idea. But this was not his point of view. "I
|
||
|
reprobate," he writes,"the idea of a Half-Way Covenant, or sealing of
|
||
|
such a covenant." [179] Lewis contended that all seekers after
|
||
|
holiness were to enter the church through the "very same covenant,"
|
||
|
but that to all of them were to be extended the same and all church
|
||
|
privileges, and that they were to accept them "as far as in their
|
||
|
conscience they can see their way clear, hoping for further light." If
|
||
|
they could accept baptism and church oversight, and could not, because
|
||
|
of honest scruples of conscience (lest they were not worthy), approach
|
||
|
the Lord's Table, they were not for that reason to be considered
|
||
|
reprobates. As to such charity opening a way for persons of immoral
|
||
|
lives to creep into the churches or to put off willfully the partaking
|
||
|
of communion, the author's experience of many years had proved the
|
||
|
contrary, though he could not deny that the possibility of hypocrisy
|
||
|
and backsliding might exist under any form of membership.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a side light upon the growth of toleration during twenty years
|
||
|
within the churches of the Establishment, two entries in President
|
||
|
Stiles's diary may be quoted. Writing in 1769, to the Rev. Noah Wells
|
||
|
of Stamford, Conn., with reference to the call of the Rev. Samuel
|
||
|
Hopkins to a pastorate in Newport, R. I., where Dr. Stiles was then
|
||
|
preaching, the latter says: "If I find him (Hopkins) of a Disposition
|
||
|
to live in an honorable Friendship, I shall gladly cultivate it. But
|
||
|
he must not expect that I recede from my Sentiments both in Theology
|
||
|
and ecclesiastical Polity more than he from his, in which I presume he
|
||
|
is immovably fixed. We shall certainly differ in some things. I shall
|
||
|
endeavor to my utmost to live with him as a Brother; as I think (it)
|
||
|
dishonorable that in almost every populous place on this Continent,
|
||
|
where there are two or more Presb.[yterian] or Cong.[regational] Chhs.
|
||
|
[churches], they should be at greater variance than Prot. [estants]
|
||
|
and Romanists: witness every city or Town from Georgia to Nova Scotia
|
||
|
(except Portsm'th) [p] where there are more Presb. chhs than one. The
|
||
|
Wound is well nigh healed here, may it not break out again." [180]
|
||
|
Writing some two years after the appearance of Lewis's book, President
|
||
|
Stiles, commenting upon the fact that each dissenting sect was so
|
||
|
absolutely sure that it alone had the only perfect type of faith and
|
||
|
polity, notes the greater tolerance among the Congregational churches,
|
||
|
for the latter were not as a rule close communion churches, as were
|
||
|
those of the dissenting sects.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Indeed, the intolerance shown towards dissenters was by this time not
|
||
|
so much sectarian, not so much a lack of tolerance toward slightly
|
||
|
varying fundamentals of faith, form of worship, and organization, as
|
||
|
an intolerance based upon the conviction that the body politic must be
|
||
|
protected by a state church. There was, of course, a little of the
|
||
|
exasperating sense of superiority in belonging to the favored
|
||
|
Establishment. The old objection to dissent as heresy--as a sin for
|
||
|
which the community was responsible--had for the most part given way
|
||
|
to opposition to it as introducing a system of voluntary contributions
|
||
|
for the support of religion. And there was a very general and
|
||
|
well-defined fear that such a support would prove inadequate. If so,
|
||
|
deterioration of the state and of its people would follow. For
|
||
|
individual worth and character, many among the dissenters were highly
|
||
|
respected, and the great body of them were esteemed good citizens.
|
||
|
Among the churches, some few of the established ones were beginning to
|
||
|
have their own services occasionally conducted by dissenting
|
||
|
ministers. The First Society of Canterbury entered a vote to this
|
||
|
effect in 1791. As the churches translated more liberally the Articles
|
||
|
of the Saybrook Platform, they approached a polity more in common with
|
||
|
that of Separatist and Baptist. By 1800, the teachings of John Wise of
|
||
|
Ipswich, reinforced by those of Nathaniel Emmons, "the father of
|
||
|
modern Congregationalism," had permeated all New England. Wise, in his
|
||
|
efforts to revive the independence of the single churches, had
|
||
|
exploded the Barrowism which New England usage had introduced into
|
||
|
original Congregationalism, and the rebound had carried the churches
|
||
|
as far beyond the Cambridge Platform towards original Brownism as the
|
||
|
Presbyterian movement had carried their polity away from the Cambridge
|
||
|
instrument. The later Edwardean school had devoted itself to the
|
||
|
discussion of doctrine rather than to polity, and, in the alliance
|
||
|
with Presbyterianism outside of Connecticut, it had affiliated without
|
||
|
attaching much weight to differences in church government. Their
|
||
|
common interest, at first, was to unite against a possible supremacy
|
||
|
of the Church of England, and against the danger to their own churches
|
||
|
and to good government from the increase of dissenters. Later, their
|
||
|
united efforts were directed to forwarding Christian missions in order
|
||
|
that the gospel might not be left out of the civilization on the
|
||
|
frontier. In this later work, they had competitors as soon as the
|
||
|
Baptists and Methodists became strongly organized bodies. Accordingly
|
||
|
Presbyterians and Congregationalists still further sank their
|
||
|
differences of discipline in the Plan of Union of 1801, formed for the
|
||
|
furtherance of the mission work. Thus it was many years before
|
||
|
questions of polity again took front rank in the Congregational
|
||
|
churches. Already their very indifference to it, the long years of the
|
||
|
gradual abandonment of the Saybrook system, together with the
|
||
|
development in civil life of a broader conception of humanity, had
|
||
|
tended to bring back the independence of the individual church, while
|
||
|
custom had preserved the inroojted principle of church-fellowship. It
|
||
|
needed only Nathaniel Emmons to embody practice and opinion in a
|
||
|
system that should break away from the aristocratic Congregationalism,
|
||
|
the semi-Presbyterianized Congregationalism of the eighteenth century,
|
||
|
and give to the nineteenth a democracy in the Church equivalent to
|
||
|
that in the State. Emmons, however, carried his theory to extremes
|
||
|
[q] when opposing ministerial associations; yet with some
|
||
|
modifications modern Congregationalism is essentially that of his
|
||
|
school. Church polity, however, did not become a topic of general
|
||
|
interest for at least half a century more, nor was it formulated anew
|
||
|
until the Albany Convention of 1862 passed "upon the local work and
|
||
|
responsibility of a Congregational Church."
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the politico-ecclesiastical point of view, the legislative
|
||
|
measures in the history of Connecticut, during the fifteen years after
|
||
|
the colony became a state, that are of chief importance are the
|
||
|
Certificate Laws and Western Land bills. In order to properly
|
||
|
appreciate their significance this summary of the industrial, social,
|
||
|
and religious life of the Connecticut people during the years
|
||
|
following the Revolution was necessary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] Five towns were laid out in 1785; from 1784 to 1787, twenty-one in
|
||
|
all; from 1787 to 1800, ten; and from 1800 to 1818,
|
||
|
eleven.--Hollister, _Hist, of Connecticut_, pp. 469-70.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] Of the seven hundred members of the Susquehanna Land Company,
|
||
|
formed in 1754, six hundred and thirty-eight were Connecticut men. A
|
||
|
summer settlement was made on the Delaware in 1757 and on the
|
||
|
Susquehanna in 1762. The first permanent settlement was in 1769. At
|
||
|
the close of the Revolution, renewed attempts to colonize resulted in
|
||
|
a reign of lawlessness and bloodshed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] Horses, cattle, beef, pork, stages, flour, grain. During the
|
||
|
European wars, the United States exported foodstuffs in great
|
||
|
quantities, to feed both French and English armies, amounting to over
|
||
|
100,000 men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] President Stiles was interested in silk culture and in the
|
||
|
manufacture of silk. His commencement gown in 1789 was of Connecticut
|
||
|
make. Through the efforts of General Humphreys (1784-94) attempts were
|
||
|
made to introduce the Spanish merino sheep and to establish factories
|
||
|
for fine broadcloth. Iron works were set up in different parts of the
|
||
|
state. The earliest cotton factories centred about Pomfret. Clocks,
|
||
|
watches, cut shingle-nails, paper, stone, and earthenware pottery,
|
||
|
were among the manufactures started in Norwalk between 1767 and 1773,
|
||
|
while in Windham, hosiery, silk and tacks were manufactured.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] In 1701 the General Court enacted that the May session of the
|
||
|
Legislature should be held at New Haven, and the October one at
|
||
|
Hartford. This was a concession to the former sovereignty of the New
|
||
|
Haven Colony. The arrangement continued until 1873. The biennial
|
||
|
sessions, introduced by the constitution of 1818, alternated between
|
||
|
the two capitols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] "Mr. Dwight is enlarging hia School to comprehend the Ladies,
|
||
|
... promising to carry them through a course of belles Lettres,
|
||
|
Geography, Philosophy, and Astronomy. The spirit for Academy making is
|
||
|
vigorous."--_Stiles Diary_, iii, 247.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of the academies, the more famous were Lebanon, Plainfield, Greenfield
|
||
|
(under Dr. Dwight), Norwich, Windham, Waterbury (for both sexes), and
|
||
|
Stratfield from 1783 to 1786. There was also a second school in
|
||
|
Norwich from 1783 to 1786. See _Stiles Diary_, iii, 248.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Harvard Divinity School was established 1815; Yale, 1822.
|
||
|
Previously both universities had each a professor of divinity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] "For three years and three months before his [Bellamy's] death he
|
||
|
was disabled by a paralytic Shock, we impaired his Intellect as well
|
||
|
as debilitated his Body. Few were equal to him in the Desk & he was
|
||
|
Communicative and instructive in Conversation upon religious
|
||
|
Subjects." The passage closes with the prophecy, "His numerous noisy
|
||
|
Writings have blazed their day, and one Generation more will put them
|
||
|
to sleep."--_Stiles Diary_, March 16, 1790 (on hearing the news
|
||
|
of Bellamy's death). See vol. iii, pp. 384-385. See Trumbull, ii, 159,
|
||
|
for a more favorable opinion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] Referring to the successor of Dr. Wales in the Yale chair of
|
||
|
divinity, Pres. Stiles wrote, "An Old Divinity man will be acceptable
|
||
|
to all the Old Divy. _Ministers & to all the Churches_: a New
|
||
|
Divt man will be acceptable to all the New Divy. Ministers and to
|
||
|
_None of the Churches_, as none of the Chhs. in New Engl. are New
|
||
|
Divt."--_Stiles Diary_, iii, 506, note (Sept. 8, 1793). See also
|
||
|
under date of Nov. 16, 1786, where churches are said to take New
|
||
|
Divinity pastors "because they can get no others, but persons in the
|
||
|
parish know nothing of the New Theology."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] "Law Reports of the Superior and Supreme Courts, 1785-1788, by
|
||
|
E. Kirby. Just published at this office and ready for subscribers and
|
||
|
gentlemen disposed to purchase, for which most kinds of country
|
||
|
produce will be received."--Advertisement in _Litchfield Monitor_
|
||
|
of Apr. 13, 1789.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] Calhoun, Woodbury, Mason, Clayton, and Hubbard. Judge Reeve
|
||
|
retired in 1820; Judge Gould in 1833.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] Reporters were admitted to the national House of Representatives
|
||
|
in 1790 and to the Senate in 1802.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] Bishop Seabnry was consecrated by the Scotch non-juring bishops,
|
||
|
Nov. 14, 1786. The latter, about four years later, were restored to
|
||
|
their position as an integral part of the Anglican
|
||
|
hierarchy. Meanwhile, Dr. Samuel Provoost of New York and Dr. William
|
||
|
White of Pennsylvania, on Feb. 4, 1787, were consecrated by the
|
||
|
Archbishops of Canterbury and York, assisted by the Bishops of Wells
|
||
|
and Peterborough, after a special Act of Parliament permitting the
|
||
|
consecration to take place without the usual oaths of allegiance to
|
||
|
the King as head of the church. In 1789, Bishop Seabury became
|
||
|
president of the House of Bishops thus formed in America. The
|
||
|
following year, James Madison of Virginia was consecrated by the
|
||
|
English bishops, thus giving to the United States three bishops after
|
||
|
the English succession, so that the validity of the Scottish rite
|
||
|
should hot be questioned in the consecration of future American
|
||
|
bishops.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] The eighty dollars proposed for privates would not go far toward
|
||
|
mending broken fortunes, or care for broken constitutions and crippled
|
||
|
bodies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the Middletown Convention, Sept. 3, 1783, delegates from Hartford,
|
||
|
Wethersfield, and Glastonbury met to denounce the Commutation Act. At
|
||
|
its adjourned meeting on Sept. 30 fifty towns, a majority in the
|
||
|
state, disapproved the Act in an address to the General Assembly, and
|
||
|
called attention to the Society of the Cincinnati. At the last
|
||
|
meeting, March, 1784, an address to the people of the state was framed
|
||
|
which condemned both the Commutation Act and the Cincinnati.--
|
||
|
J. H. Trumbull, _Notes on the Constitution_, p. 18. Noah Webster,
|
||
|
_History of the Parties in the United States_, pp. 317-320.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[o] Methodism was twenty-eight years old, when, in 1766, Robert
|
||
|
Strawbridge introduced it into New York, and Philip Embury preached
|
||
|
his first sermon in a sail-loft. In 1771, Francis Asbury, later Bishop
|
||
|
Asbury, was appointed John Wesley's "Assistant" in America. In 1773,
|
||
|
the first Annual Conference was held. Methodism rapidly spread in the
|
||
|
Middle and Southern states. By the year 1773-74, the year's increase
|
||
|
in members was nine hundred and thirteen; in 1774-75, ten hundred and
|
||
|
seventy-three. The preachers traveled on foot or on horseback,
|
||
|
preaching as they went; living on the smallest allowance; sleeping
|
||
|
where night overtook them; and meeting often with grudging
|
||
|
hospitality, suspicion, and, sometimes, open violence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Methodism "began when Episcopacy was at its lowest point, both in
|
||
|
efficiency, and in the good-will of the people." It agreed with
|
||
|
Jonathan Edwards on the nature of personal religion, and separated
|
||
|
from the Church of England in this, the Methodist's central principle
|
||
|
of "conscious conversion" or "emotional experience." Later in New
|
||
|
England, Wesley's missionaries united in Methodist societies many of
|
||
|
the converts to the Edwardean theology.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the opening of the Revolution, the whole body of Methodists were
|
||
|
within the Church of England. Of the English missionaries only Asbury,
|
||
|
Dempster, and Wharcott remained in America to carry on, with native
|
||
|
preachers, the work of proselytizing. It was "the only form of
|
||
|
religion that advanced in America during that dark period, and during
|
||
|
the war, it more than quadrupled both its ministry and members." At
|
||
|
the beginning of the war, it had eighty traveling preachers, beside
|
||
|
local preachers and exhorters; a membership of one thousand, and
|
||
|
auditors ten thousand. In 1784, there was a year's increase of
|
||
|
fourteen thousand nine hundred and eighty-eight members, and of one
|
||
|
hundred and four preachers to rejoice in the consecration of Bishop
|
||
|
Asbury. In the November of that year, Bishops Coke and Asbury,
|
||
|
organizing the "American Episcopal Church," in spite of Wesley's
|
||
|
anathemas probably led out one hundred thousand souls as the nucleus
|
||
|
of the new church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a while the Connecticut authorities refused to recognize "as sober
|
||
|
Dissenters" any converts other than the stationed preachers and their
|
||
|
charges. The persecutions which the Methodists suffered were those of
|
||
|
slander, the refusal to them of halls, churches, or public buildings;
|
||
|
the refusal to permit their ministers, unless located, to perform the
|
||
|
marriage ceremony; and petty fines, with occasional unjust
|
||
|
imprisonment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[p] Portsmouth, N. H.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[q] "A pure democracy which places every member of the church upon a
|
||
|
level and gives him perfect liberty with order." Under such a
|
||
|
definition of a church as this, its pastor becomes only a moderator at
|
||
|
its meetings, and every church is absolutely independent. It would
|
||
|
follow that from its decisions there could be no appeal. Emmons was
|
||
|
fond of declaring that "Association leads to Consociation;
|
||
|
Consociation leads to Presbyterianism; Presbyterianism leads to
|
||
|
Episcopacy; Episcopacy to Roman Catholicism, and Roman Catholicism is
|
||
|
an ultimate fact."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In spite of his teaching as to democracy, Emmons was as intolerant of
|
||
|
it in the State as he was earnest for it in the Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
CERTIFICATE LAWS AND WESTERN LAND BILLS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
And make the bounds of Freedom wider yet.--Alfred Tennyson.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The legal recognition of conscience, the acknowledgment of fundamental
|
||
|
dogmas held in common, the gradual approachment of the various
|
||
|
religious organizations in polity, their common interest in education
|
||
|
and good government, would seem to furnish grounds for such mutual
|
||
|
esteem that the government would willingly do away with the
|
||
|
objectionable certificates. On the contrary, the old conception of a
|
||
|
state church, and of its value to the body politic, was so strongly
|
||
|
intrenched in the hearts of the majority of the people that they felt
|
||
|
it incumbent upon them to require the certificates as guarantees that
|
||
|
those who were without the Establishment were fulfilling their
|
||
|
religious duties. Particularly was this the case when new sects
|
||
|
continued to increase and radical opinions to spread among the
|
||
|
masses. And as the government saw these apparently destructive ideas
|
||
|
permeating the people, it endeavored, rather unwisely, to hem dissent
|
||
|
in closer bounds, and to favor still more Cougregationalists and
|
||
|
Presbyterian-Congregationalists.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The aggressively successful proselytizing by the Methodists revived
|
||
|
the old dislike of rash exhorters and itinerant preachers, and the old
|
||
|
contempt for an ignorant and unlearned ministry. The proselytizing
|
||
|
movement had also created a suspicion that it was hypocritical, and
|
||
|
that it was masking a deliberate attempt to undermine the
|
||
|
Establishment. Outside this Methodist propaganda there were also all
|
||
|
sorts of unorthodox ideas that were spreading notions of Universalism,
|
||
|
Arianism, deism, atheism, and freethinking, and making many
|
||
|
converts. These proselytes were frequent among the untutored and
|
||
|
irresponsible members of society who caught at the doctrines of
|
||
|
greater freedom, and sometimes translated them, theoretically at least,
|
||
|
into principles of greater personal license; and where they did not do
|
||
|
this, the authorities felt sure that they would soon, and if
|
||
|
unrestrained by ecclesiastical law, would quickly become lawless,
|
||
|
first in religious affairs and then, as a consequence, in moral
|
||
|
ones. Not only in this radical class, but among the recognized
|
||
|
dissenters and among a minority of other, religious folk, there was a
|
||
|
tendency to question both the authority and the justice of the
|
||
|
government in its restrictive religious laws, its ecclesiastical
|
||
|
taxation, and its Sabbath-day legislation. Particularly was there
|
||
|
opposition to the fine for absence from public worship on Sunday,
|
||
|
unless excused by weighty reasons, and to the assessment upon every
|
||
|
one of a tax for the support of some form of recognized public
|
||
|
worship, even though the tax-payer had no personal interest or liking
|
||
|
for that which he was obliged to support. The feeling that such
|
||
|
injustice ought not to continue was strong among some members of the
|
||
|
Establishment. They found a powerful advocate in Judge Zephaniah Swift
|
||
|
of Windham, the author of the "System of the Laws of the State of
|
||
|
Connecticut."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Judge Swift was a thorough-going Federalist, but so bitter an opponent
|
||
|
of the union of Church and State that his enemies, and even members of
|
||
|
his own party, taunted him with being a freethinker,--a serious charge
|
||
|
in those days. Nevertheless, Judge Swift held the loyalty of a county
|
||
|
and of one rather tolerant of dissent. "The Phenix or Windham Herald,"
|
||
|
founded in 1790, though Federal in politics, became Judge Swift's
|
||
|
organ; and so acceptable were his opinions, taken all in all, to the
|
||
|
community, that from 1787 to 1793 it returned this arch-enemy of the
|
||
|
Establishment as its deputy to the House, and then his congressional
|
||
|
district honored him with a seat in the national council until
|
||
|
1799. He became chief justice in 1806, and died in 1819, having lived
|
||
|
to see the charter constitution set aside and Church and State
|
||
|
divorced.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The small Anti-Federal party in the state, though making but very few
|
||
|
converts at this time, and though of very little importance
|
||
|
politically, were the pronounced advocates of a wider suffrage, a
|
||
|
larger tolerance, and of radical changes in the method of
|
||
|
government. The last they believed necessary before any great
|
||
|
improvement in the terms of the franchise or in those of religious
|
||
|
toleration could be secured. "An Address to the Baptists, Quakers,
|
||
|
Rogerines, and all other denominations of Christians in Connecticut,
|
||
|
freed by law from supporting what has been called the 'Established
|
||
|
Religion,'" went the rounds of the newspapers urging continued
|
||
|
resistance to the support of any religious system that enforced a
|
||
|
tax. The "Address" closed with the cheerful prediction that, as their
|
||
|
numbers were increasing very rapidly, they might hope yet "to carry
|
||
|
the vote against those who have put on haughty airs and affected to
|
||
|
treat us as their inferiors."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such seething opposition among various classes induced the government
|
||
|
to enact some special legislation; but it was unfortunately not of a
|
||
|
conciliatory character. In May, 1791, a law was passed varying the old
|
||
|
requirement that certificates, after being signed by a church officer,
|
||
|
should be lodged with the Society clerk, to the demand that they be
|
||
|
signed by two civil officers, or, where there was only one, by the
|
||
|
justice of the peace of the town in which the dissenter
|
||
|
lived. Considering that the justices were mostly Congregationalists,
|
||
|
the enactment amounted to an intrenchment of the Standing Order at the
|
||
|
expense of the dissenters. With these officers lay full power to pass
|
||
|
upon the validity of the certificates and upon the honesty of intent
|
||
|
on the part of the persons presenting them. The certificates read:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
We have examined the claim of ---- who says he is a Dissenter from
|
||
|
the Established Society of ---- and hath joined himself to a
|
||
|
church or Congregation of the name of ----; and that he ordinarily
|
||
|
attends upon the public worship of such Church or Congregation;
|
||
|
and that he contributes his share and proportion toward supporting
|
||
|
the public worship and ministry thereof, do upon examination find
|
||
|
that the above facts are true.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dated
|
||
|
|
||
|
Justice of the Peace. [182]
|
||
|
|
||
|
A veritable doubt, spite, malice, prejudice, or mistaken zeal, might
|
||
|
determine the granting of the certificate to the dissenter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The authorities defended this measure upon the ground that it was the
|
||
|
_civil_ effect of preaching that gives the _civil_
|
||
|
magistrate jurisdiction. "The law," they said, "has nothing to do
|
||
|
with _conscience_ and _principles_." [183] They further
|
||
|
declared that there were persons who were taking undue advantage of
|
||
|
the certificate exemptions, and that there were good reasons, to doubt
|
||
|
the validity of many of the certificates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This Certificate Act roused the dissenters throughout the state. "In
|
||
|
public society meetings and in speaking universal abroad, sensible
|
||
|
that their numbers though scattered were large," they strove to create
|
||
|
a sentiment that should send to the next legislature a "body of
|
||
|
representatives who would remember their petition and see that equal
|
||
|
religious liberty should be established."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In regard to the certificates, a writer in the "Courant" exclaims:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is sometimes said that the giving of a certificate once a year
|
||
|
or once in a man's life is but a trifle, and none but the
|
||
|
obstinate will refuse it as none but the covetous desire it. True
|
||
|
it is but a trifle--ten times as much would be but a trifle if it
|
||
|
was right. If it must be done, let them who plead for it do the
|
||
|
little trifle; they have no scruples of conscience about
|
||
|
it.... The certificate law is as much worse than the tax on tea as
|
||
|
religious fetters are worse than civil. [184]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Rev. John Leland's "The Rights of Conscience inalienable;
|
||
|
therefore Religious Opinions not cognizable by Law; Or The High flying
|
||
|
Churchman, stript of his legal Robe appears a yaho" was a powerful
|
||
|
arraignment of the government and defense of the right of all to
|
||
|
worship as conscience bade them. Leland had recently come from
|
||
|
Virginia and settled in New London. In the southern state he had been
|
||
|
one of the most influential among the Baptist ministers and a great
|
||
|
power in politics. In Virginia he had seen the separation of Church
|
||
|
and State in 1785, and had witnessed the benefits following that
|
||
|
policy. After the publication of his "Rights of Conscience" the
|
||
|
question before the Connecticut people became one of establishment or
|
||
|
disestablishment, because Leland, not content with showing the falsity
|
||
|
of the position that civil necessities required an established church,
|
||
|
or with a logical demonstration of the inalienable rights of
|
||
|
conscience, proceeded to boldly attack the Charter of Charles II as
|
||
|
being in no rightful sense the constitution of the state of
|
||
|
Connecticut. He maintained that, "Constitution" though it was called,
|
||
|
it was not such, because it had been enforced upon the people by a
|
||
|
mere vote of the legislature [a] and was a "constitution" never
|
||
|
"assented to further than passive obedience and non resistance" by the
|
||
|
people at large; a constitution--
|
||
|
|
||
|
contrary to the known sentiments of a far greater part of the
|
||
|
States in the Union; and inconsistent with the clear light of
|
||
|
liberty, which is spreading over the world in meridian splendor,
|
||
|
and dissipating those antique glooms of tyrannical darkness which
|
||
|
were ever opposed to free, equal, religious liberty among men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Leland arraigns a union of Church and State that presupposes a need of
|
||
|
legislative support for religion, which the example of other states
|
||
|
has proved unnecessary; and which the experience of communities,
|
||
|
persisting in such union, has shown to be productive of evil, of
|
||
|
ignorance, superstition, persecution, lying and hypocrisy, a weakness
|
||
|
to the civil state, and a conversion of the Bible and of religion to
|
||
|
tools of statecraft and political trickery.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Government has no more to do with religious opinions of men than
|
||
|
it has with the principles of mathematics.... Truth disdains the
|
||
|
aid of law for its defence, ... it will stand upon its own
|
||
|
merit.... Is it just to balance the Establishment against the
|
||
|
rights guaranteed in the charter, and to enact a law which has no
|
||
|
saving clause to prevent taxation of Jew, Turk, Papist, Deist,
|
||
|
Atheist, for the support of a ministry in which they would not
|
||
|
share and which violated their conscience? [185]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many Federalists of Judge Swift's type sympathized with Leland's bold
|
||
|
arraignment of the Establishment, if not with his view of the
|
||
|
unconstitutionality of the charter government. These men repudiated
|
||
|
the new certificate law.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The authorities felt that they had gone too far, and in October, 1791,
|
||
|
after an existence of only six months, they repealed the certificate
|
||
|
law by one hundred and five yeas to fifty-seven nays. The new law
|
||
|
that was substituted permitted each dissenter to write his own
|
||
|
certificate, release, or "sign-off," as the papers were colloquially
|
||
|
called, and required him to file it with the clerk of the Established
|
||
|
Society wherein he dwelt. [186] This favor was not so great a
|
||
|
privilege as it seemed. It bore hard upon the dissenters in two
|
||
|
ways. It created "Neuters," people who wished to be relieved from the
|
||
|
ecclesiastical taxes, but who were too indifferent to the principles
|
||
|
and welfare of the churches to which they allied themselves to
|
||
|
faithfully support them. For their churches to complain of such
|
||
|
persons to the authorities would only give the latter reasons for
|
||
|
enforcing the laws for the support of the Establishment. Then again,
|
||
|
the new certificate law did not relieve the dissenters who lived too
|
||
|
far from their churches to ordinarily attend them from petty fines and
|
||
|
from court wrangles as to the justice of them, for with the judges lay
|
||
|
the determination of what the words "far" and "near" and "ordinarily
|
||
|
do attend" in the laws meant. [b] The important question of how many
|
||
|
absences from church would prevent a man from claiming that he was a
|
||
|
regular attendant was thus left in the hands of judges, who were for
|
||
|
the most part prejudiced or partial. Many amusing and exasperating
|
||
|
legal quibbles occurred in the courts between judges, who were
|
||
|
determined to sentence for neglect of public worship, and defendants,
|
||
|
who were equally positive of their rights. Many dissenters attempted
|
||
|
later to ridicule the law out of existence by substituting for the
|
||
|
formal--
|
||
|
|
||
|
I certify that I differ in sentiment from the worship and ministry
|
||
|
in the ecclesiastical society of ---- in the town of ----
|
||
|
constituted bylaw within certain local bounds, and have chosen to
|
||
|
join myself to the (Insert here the name of society you have
|
||
|
joined) in the town of ----.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dated at ---- this ---- day of ---- A. D.
|
||
|
|
||
|
declarations, undignified in wording and sometimes written in doggerel
|
||
|
rhyme. While granting the new certificate law, the Assembly were
|
||
|
careful to pass a minor ecclesiastical statute enforcing a fine of
|
||
|
from six to twelve shillings upon all who should neglect to observe
|
||
|
all public fasts and thanksgivings. [187] This law at times proved
|
||
|
unsatisfactory to the Episcopalians, for the Congregational fasts and
|
||
|
feasts were appointed by the authorities, who naturally did not
|
||
|
consider the Churchman's feeling when called upon to celebrate a feast
|
||
|
or thanksgiving during an Episcopalian season of fasting, or to
|
||
|
observe a public fast, to go in sackcloth, upon an anniversary that
|
||
|
should be marked by joy and praise.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1792, the year following the attempt to remodel the certificate
|
||
|
laws, certain legislative measures with reference to Yale College fed
|
||
|
the discontent among the dissenting sects. For some years there had
|
||
|
been an increasing dissatisfaction with the management of the
|
||
|
college. It culminated in 1792 in the reorganization of the governing
|
||
|
board, to which were added eight civilians, including the governor,
|
||
|
lieutenant-governor, and the six senior councilors or state
|
||
|
senators. At the same time, and in consideration of the admission of
|
||
|
laymen to the board, $40,000 was given to the college. [c] This money
|
||
|
was a part of the taxes which had been collected to meet the expenses
|
||
|
of the Revolutionary war, and which were in the state treasury when
|
||
|
the United States government offered to refund the state for such
|
||
|
expense. It was granted to the college on condition that she should
|
||
|
invest it in the new United States bonds, and that half the profits of
|
||
|
the investment should be at the disposal of the state. This
|
||
|
arrangement relieved the crippled finances of the college and
|
||
|
gratified many of its friends. But there were many who regarded the
|
||
|
measure as out-and-out favoritism to a Congregational college, and who
|
||
|
put no faith in the proposed half-sharing of profits. They maintained
|
||
|
that eventually the college would get the whole benefit of the money
|
||
|
that had been collected for other purposes, and from many persons who
|
||
|
could derive no benefit from such a disposal of it. These prophets
|
||
|
were not far wrong, for after Yale had paid into the state treasury a
|
||
|
little more than $13,000 she was relieved from further payments by a
|
||
|
repeal, in 1796, of the conditional clause of the grant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This favoritism to Yale was not the only legislation to anger the
|
||
|
dissenters, and especially the Baptists. Another measure, mooted at
|
||
|
the same time as the certificate acts and the special grant to the
|
||
|
college, was accepted as a further mark of the government's
|
||
|
determination to ignore the rights of dissenters. In 1785-86 the
|
||
|
Assembly had granted lands for the support of the Gospel ministry, for
|
||
|
schools, and to the first minister to settle in each township of the
|
||
|
Western Reserve. This act, as has been shown, was considered to unduly
|
||
|
favor the Presbyterians. But little had come of this legislation
|
||
|
beyond the survey of the land and the opening of a land office there
|
||
|
for its sale. Five years later, in 1791, even though no part of the
|
||
|
tract had been sold, the Assembly introduced a new bill appropriating
|
||
|
the anticipated proceeds from the sale of the land to the several
|
||
|
ecclesiastical societies as a fund with which to pay their ministers
|
||
|
so as to enable them to do away with the tax for salaries. But the
|
||
|
excitement roused by the first certificate law--of 1791--was so great
|
||
|
that it was deemed prudent to continue this Western Land bill over to
|
||
|
the next session of the legislature, and there it was lost. The
|
||
|
session of May, 1792, contented itself with only such legislation in
|
||
|
regard to the Western Reserve as that by which it granted the "Fire
|
||
|
Lands," so called, a grant of 500,000 acres as indemnity to the
|
||
|
citizens of New London, Groton, Fairfield, Norwalk, and Danbury, for
|
||
|
the destruction of their property in the burning of their towns by
|
||
|
British troops.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the lands of the Western Reserve did not sell well, [d] the
|
||
|
Assembly, in 1793, appointed a committee to dispose of the tract to
|
||
|
the highest bidder if the amount offered should be duly guaranteed
|
||
|
with interest; principal and interest payable to the state within four
|
||
|
or six years, whether paid in lump sum on demand, or by installments.
|
||
|
The sale was widely advertised both within and without the state. It
|
||
|
was now calculated that the amount realized from the sale of the lands
|
||
|
would be a sum yielding an annual interest of $60,000, or an average
|
||
|
of $600 to a town, beside a bonus to Yale of $8000. Therefore, the
|
||
|
Assembly, in October, 1793, voted that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
moneys arising from the sale of the territory belonging to the
|
||
|
State, lying west of the state of Pennsylvania, be, and the same
|
||
|
is hereby established a perpetual fund, the interest whereof is
|
||
|
granted, and shall be appropriated to the use and benefit of the
|
||
|
several ecclesiastical societies, churches, congregations of all
|
||
|
_denominations_ in this State, to be by them applied to the
|
||
|
support of their respective ministers or preachers of the Gospel,
|
||
|
and schools of education, under such rules and regulations as
|
||
|
shall be adopted by this or some future session of the General
|
||
|
Assembly. [188]
|
||
|
|
||
|
An earlier bill had been proposed, discussed, and tabled. This act was
|
||
|
originally a resolution framed by a large committee whose members
|
||
|
represented both the friends and opponents of the proposal for the
|
||
|
immediate sale of the lands. When the vote passed, it was by
|
||
|
eighty-three yeas to seventy nays in the House and by a large and
|
||
|
favorable majority in the Council.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One fault that the dissenters found with the law was that, under the
|
||
|
rules and regulations adopted by the Assembly, they believed that the
|
||
|
alternative which the law allowed of voting the money to the
|
||
|
ministerial fund, or to the school, would work to their
|
||
|
disadvantage. Where there were few dissenters, the Presbyterian vote
|
||
|
would carry the money over to the minister's use, and where there were
|
||
|
many, the same vote would be sufficient, if thrown, as it probably
|
||
|
would be, to direct the money to the school appropriation. It would
|
||
|
follow that the dissenters might never have the use of the money for
|
||
|
the support of their own worship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Baptists voiced the general opposition among the dissenters,--an
|
||
|
opposition so strong that it appealed to some of the conservatives as
|
||
|
sufficient reason in itself to condemn the law. "A Friend to Society"
|
||
|
wrote to the "Hartford Courant" that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
if a religion whose principles are universal love and harmony is
|
||
|
to be supported and promoted by a means which will blow up the
|
||
|
sparks of faction and party strife into a violent flame, it is a
|
||
|
new way of promoting religion. Much better would it be for the
|
||
|
State of Connecticut that their Western Lands should be sunk by an
|
||
|
earthquake and form part of the adjoining lake than that they
|
||
|
should be transplanted hither for a bone of contention.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Apart from sectarian interests, the law met with hostility. There were
|
||
|
those who thought that the money ought to be applied at once to the
|
||
|
remaining indebtedness of the state, rather than for it to wait for
|
||
|
another installment on the Revolutionary debt that was still due from
|
||
|
the national government. There were more who thought that the money
|
||
|
ought to go for the expenses of government, or for direct advantages,
|
||
|
such as the repair of bridges and highways. But the expenses of
|
||
|
government were light, [e] and, as a rule, the people were willing to
|
||
|
keep the highways in repair. There was still another party who
|
||
|
contended that the money should go for schools, both because they were
|
||
|
needed in larger numbers, and because they ought to be able to pay
|
||
|
larger salaries and not ones so small as to tempt only the farmer lad,
|
||
|
or the ambitious student, to keep a country school for a few months in
|
||
|
winter, or a somewhat similarly equipped woman to teach in summer. And
|
||
|
there was yet another party who were convinced that the money should
|
||
|
go to the support of the ministry, for they believed that morality
|
||
|
could be taught only by religion, and that the people were losing
|
||
|
interest in the latter because of the inferiority of the preachers
|
||
|
whom the small salaries and insecure support kept in the field. [189]
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
While this discussion of certificate laws, of grants to Yale, and of
|
||
|
grants of land and money to the ecclesiastical societies had been
|
||
|
constantly before the public, there had also been present a minor
|
||
|
grievance due to the Assembly's interest in the missionary work that
|
||
|
the General Association had extended to include parts of Vermont,
|
||
|
western New York, Pennsylvania, and the outlying settlements in
|
||
|
Ohio. In the western field the missionaries sent by Connecticut
|
||
|
frequently met those sent out by the Presbyterian General
|
||
|
Assembly. Drawn together by their interests in these missions in 1794,
|
||
|
the practice was begun of having three delegates from the General
|
||
|
Association meet with the Presbyterian General Assembly in their
|
||
|
annual convention, and three delegates from the General Assembly take
|
||
|
their seats in the yearly convocation of the General Association of
|
||
|
Connecticut. So long as the Connecticut churches were strongly
|
||
|
Presbyterian in sentiment, there was no clashing of interests among
|
||
|
the workers in the mission field. Naturally, Connecticut wanted to do
|
||
|
her full share of missionary work; and feeling the need of more money
|
||
|
for the purpose, the General Association, in 1792, appealed to the
|
||
|
legislature for permission to take up an annual collection for three
|
||
|
years. The Association hesitated to take up such a collection in all
|
||
|
the churches, dissenting or Established, without such permission. The
|
||
|
Baptists expressed their indignation at the wording of Governor
|
||
|
Huntington's proclamation, "that there be a contribution taken up in
|
||
|
every congregation for the support of the Presbyterian Missions in the
|
||
|
western territory." More than that, they refused to contribute, on the
|
||
|
ground that if the collection had been "recommended" they would gladly
|
||
|
have helped a Christian cause, but that it was inexpedient to yield to
|
||
|
a demand that all societies should contribute to the support of
|
||
|
missions that were entirely under the control of one religious
|
||
|
body. Furthermore, with reference to the appropriation of money from
|
||
|
the Western Lands, they would join with other dissenters in opposing
|
||
|
it, on the ground that, in order to obtain their share of the money,
|
||
|
they would have to admit their inferiority through the showing of the
|
||
|
compulsory certificates. Moreover, even the scant favor secured
|
||
|
through these was in danger from the continual favoritism of the
|
||
|
legislature, with its treasury open at all times to its Congregational
|
||
|
college, and with its enactments in favor of the Established Churches.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the May session of the Assembly, 1794, the Baptists from all over
|
||
|
the state thronged the steps of the capitol at Hartford, angered
|
||
|
almost to the point of precipitating civil war. There John Leland
|
||
|
addressed them, urging the necessity of government; the power of
|
||
|
constitutional reform; arguing for rights of conscience, citing both
|
||
|
European and colonial history to prove their reasonableness and their
|
||
|
value to the body politic; and setting forth Connecticut's departure
|
||
|
from the glorious freedom mapped out by her founders. He declared to
|
||
|
that great and angry crowd:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Government is a necessary evil and so a chosen good. Its business
|
||
|
is to preserve the life, liberty and property of the many units
|
||
|
that form the body politic.... When a constitution of government
|
||
|
is formed, it should be simple and explicit; the powers that are
|
||
|
vested in, and work to be performed by each department should be
|
||
|
defined with the utmost perspicuity; and this constitution should
|
||
|
be attended to as scrupulously by men in office as the Bible
|
||
|
should be by all religionists.... Let the people first be
|
||
|
convinced of the deficiency of the constitution, and remove the
|
||
|
defects thereof, and then, those in office can change the
|
||
|
administration upon constitutional grounds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
[The right to worship] God according to the dictates of
|
||
|
conscience, without being prohibited, directed or controlled
|
||
|
therein by human law, either in _time, place or manner_,
|
||
|
cannot be surrendered up to the general government for an
|
||
|
equivalent. [190]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Had not Governor Haynes said to Roger Williams, "The Most High God
|
||
|
hath provided and cut out this part of the world for a refuge and
|
||
|
receptacle for all sorts of consciences?" How had not Connecticut
|
||
|
fallen? How passed her ancient glory, how ignored her charter's
|
||
|
rights? How firm a grip upon her had that incubus of her own raising,
|
||
|
the pernicious union of Church and State? Break that, as elsewhere it
|
||
|
had been broken, and then as freemen demand a constitution
|
||
|
guaranteeing both civil and religious liberty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The result of the widespread hostility was the attempt at the May
|
||
|
session of 1794 to repeal the offensive law. The Lower House did
|
||
|
repeal it, after a lively debate, by a vote of 109 yeas to 58 nays,
|
||
|
but the Council, or Upper House, where the conservatives were
|
||
|
intrenched, refused to pass the bill. However, they were induced to
|
||
|
pass a resolution suspending the sale of the lands. The debate in the
|
||
|
House was published verbatim in the "Hartford Gazette" of May 19,
|
||
|
1794, and was copied by the papers throughout the state. In the
|
||
|
following October a bill was passed by the Council, but continued over
|
||
|
by the House and ordered to be printed in all the papers, that the
|
||
|
people might have opportunity to consider it before it should come up
|
||
|
to be passed upon by their representatives in the May session of
|
||
|
1795. [191] The terms of the bill were that the principal sum of money
|
||
|
received from the sale of the Western Lands should be apportioned
|
||
|
among the several school societies according to the list of polls and
|
||
|
rateable estates, and that the interest arising from the money so
|
||
|
divided should be appropriated to the support of schools that were
|
||
|
kept according to the law, or to the support of the public worship of
|
||
|
God and the Christian ministry, "as the majority of the legal voters
|
||
|
should annually determine." [192]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The proposed law was subjected to public scrutiny of all sorts. It was
|
||
|
agitated in town meetings, and the discussions for and against it were
|
||
|
noticed in the newspapers, where much space was given to its
|
||
|
consideration. Ministers made it the subject of their
|
||
|
sermons. Dr. Dwight discoursed upon the subject in his Thanksgiving
|
||
|
sermon. [193] When the proposed bill came up before the legislature,
|
||
|
it encountered considerable opposition, but after some modifications
|
||
|
it became a law. As in school societies the dissenters had an equal
|
||
|
vote, and in all town affairs were worth conciliating, there was more
|
||
|
justice in the new law than in the old, where the ecclesiastical
|
||
|
society was made the unit of division. From 1717 to 1793 the towns,
|
||
|
parishes, and occasionally the ecclesiastical societies had charge of
|
||
|
the schools. [194] But in 1794 school districts were authorized and
|
||
|
the change to them begun. Such districts could, upon the vote of two
|
||
|
thirds of all the qualified voters, locate schools, lay taxes to build
|
||
|
and repair them, and appoint a collector to gather such rates. The act
|
||
|
of May, 1795, appropriating the money from the Western Lands to the
|
||
|
schools, provided also that the school districts should be erected
|
||
|
into school societies to whom the money should be distributed, and by
|
||
|
whom the interest thereon should be expended; and that it should go
|
||
|
"to no other Use or Purpose whatsoever; except in the Case and under
|
||
|
the circumstances hereafter mentioned." The circumstances here
|
||
|
referred to were in cases where two thirds of the legal voters in a
|
||
|
school society meeting, legally warned, voted to use the interest
|
||
|
money for the support of the ministry in that Society, and appealed to
|
||
|
the General Assembly for permission to so use the money. Upon such an
|
||
|
expression of the wish of voters, the General Assembly was empowered
|
||
|
to answer in the affirmative. The act also repealed that of 1793. The
|
||
|
legislature appointed another commission for the sale of the
|
||
|
lands. They were sold in the following October for $1,200,000. By this
|
||
|
legislation was laid the foundation of Connecticut's School Fund. The
|
||
|
Connecticut Land Company, which had made the purchase, petitioned the
|
||
|
legislature in 1797 that Connecticut should surrender her jurisdiction
|
||
|
over the lands to the United States. The state complied. In 1798 the
|
||
|
organization of the new school societies was perfected, and the
|
||
|
control of the schools passed entirely into their hands until the
|
||
|
district system of 1856 was adopted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Western Land bills had resulted in the establishment of a public
|
||
|
school fund and in its just distribution, without reference to
|
||
|
sectarianism, among the people. All the agitation attending both the
|
||
|
certificate acts and Western Land bills had demonstrated the intense
|
||
|
opposition of the dissenting minority, and that they were beginning to
|
||
|
look to the increase of their numbers and the power of the ballot as
|
||
|
the only means of changing the vexatious laws under which they were
|
||
|
treated as inferiors. To the Congregationalists, strong both as the
|
||
|
Established Church and as members of the Federal party, which counted
|
||
|
many adherents among all the dissenting sects, the possibility that
|
||
|
any voting strength could be brought against them, adequate to oppose
|
||
|
their party measures, seemed improbable. Such a possibility must be
|
||
|
very remote. Yet within twenty years, they were to see the downfall of
|
||
|
the Federal party, of the Established Church, and of Connecticut's
|
||
|
charter government.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] The vote of the Assembly was: "That the ancient form of civil
|
||
|
government, containing the charter from Charles the Second, King of
|
||
|
England, and adopted by the people of this State, shall be and remain
|
||
|
the Civil Constitution of the State under the sole authority of the
|
||
|
people thereof, independent of any King, or ftince whatever. And that
|
||
|
this Republic is and shall forever be and remain a free, sovereign,
|
||
|
and independent State, by the name of the State of
|
||
|
Connecticut."--Revision of Acts and Laws, Ed. 1784, p. 1.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] "Courts and juries had usually been composed of what was
|
||
|
considered the standing church, and they had frequently practiced such
|
||
|
quibbles and finesse with respect to the forms of certificates and the
|
||
|
nature of dissenting congregations as to defeat the benevolent
|
||
|
intentions of the law."--Swift's _System of Laws_, pp. 146, 147.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] Yale received in all $40,629.80. In 1871, six alumni replaced the
|
||
|
six senior councilors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] So far the highest bid for the tract of land had been $350,000.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] The annual expenses were estimated to be approximately $90,000. In
|
||
|
_Advice to Connecticut Folks_, 1786, occurs the following
|
||
|
estimate:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
===================================================================
|
||
|
Necessary Unneces'y
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Governor's salary, L300 L300
|
||
|
Lieutenant-Governor's, 100 100
|
||
|
Upper House attendance and travel
|
||
|
60 days at L10 per day, 600 600
|
||
|
Lower House attendance and travel
|
||
|
170 members at 6s. a day, 60 days, 3,060 1,530 L1,530
|
||
|
Five Judges of the Superior Court at
|
||
|
24s. a day, suppose 150 days, 900 900
|
||
|
Forty Judges of Inferior Court at
|
||
|
9s. a day, suppose 40 days, 720 720
|
||
|
Six thousand actions in the year, the
|
||
|
legal expenses of each, suppose L3, 18,000 1,000 17,000
|
||
|
Gratuities to 120 lawyers, suppose
|
||
|
L50 each, 6,000 1,000 5,000
|
||
|
Two hundred clergymen at L100 each, 20,000 20,000
|
||
|
Five hundred schools at L20 a year, 10,000 10,000
|
||
|
Support of poor, 10,000 10,000
|
||
|
Bridges and other town expenses, 10,000 10,000
|
||
|
Contingencies and articles not
|
||
|
enumerated, 10,000 10,000
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Total, L89,680 L66,150 L23,530
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a glimpse at society, it may be added that the _Advice_ itself
|
||
|
is an energetic and statistical condemnation of the prevalent use of
|
||
|
"Rum," estimated at L90,000 or "ninety-nine hundredths unnecessary
|
||
|
expense" in living. "Deny it if you can, good folks. Now say not a
|
||
|
word about taxes, Judges, lawyers, courts and women's extravagances.
|
||
|
Your government, your courts, your lawyers, your clergymen, your
|
||
|
schools and your poor, do not all cost you so much as one paltry
|
||
|
article which does you little or no good but is as destructive of your
|
||
|
lives as fire and brimstone."--Noah Webster's _Collection of
|
||
|
Essays,_ pp. 137-139.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The evil was beginning to be recognized in all its danger. Here and
|
||
|
there voluntary temperance clubs were beginning to be formed among the
|
||
|
better classes, but it was a time when hardly a contract was closed
|
||
|
without a stipulation of a certain quantity of rum for each workman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
||
|
|
||
|
POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONNECTICUT AT THE BEGINNING OF THE NINETEENTH
|
||
|
CENTURY
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
As well dam up the waters of the Nile with Bullrushes as to fetter
|
||
|
the steps of Freedom.--L. M. Child.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Leland's attack upon the constitution of Connecticut during the
|
||
|
excitement over the Western Land bills called for new tactics on the
|
||
|
part of the dissenters. Thus far, in all their antagonism to the union
|
||
|
of Church and State, there had been on their part practically no
|
||
|
attack upon the constitution itself. Yet even as early as 1786 the
|
||
|
Anti-Federalists had proclaimed that the state of Connecticut was
|
||
|
without a constitution; that the charter government fell with the
|
||
|
Declaration of Independence; and that its adoption by the legislature
|
||
|
as a state constitution was an unwarranted excess of authority. The
|
||
|
Anti-Federalists maintained also that many of the charter provisions
|
||
|
were either outgrown or unsuited to the needs of the state. But the
|
||
|
majority of the dissenters, like the Constitutional Reform party of
|
||
|
recent date, preferred redress for their grievances through
|
||
|
legislation rather than through the uprooting of an ancient and
|
||
|
cherished constitution. Accordingly, it was not until the elections of
|
||
|
1804-6 that this question of a new constitution could reasonably be
|
||
|
made a campaign issue. But from 1793 the dissenters began to lean
|
||
|
towards affiliation with the Democratic-Republican [a] party, the
|
||
|
successors to the Anti-Federal; yet it was not until toward the close
|
||
|
of the War of 1812 that the Republican party made large gains in
|
||
|
Connecticut and the dissenters began to feel sure that the dawn of
|
||
|
religious liberty was at hand. But before that time the Republicans
|
||
|
made three distinct though abortive attempts to secure the electoral
|
||
|
power.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Anti-Federalists early began to probe for weak spots in the
|
||
|
constitutional government of Connecticut. The Fundamental Orders had
|
||
|
given four deputies to each of the three original towns, and had made
|
||
|
the number of deputies from each new town proportionate to its
|
||
|
population. The Charter had limited the deputies to two from each
|
||
|
town. The Fundamental Orders gave the General Court, composed of
|
||
|
Governor, Magistrates or Assistants, and Deputies, supreme governing
|
||
|
power, including, together with that of legislation, the granting of
|
||
|
levies, the admission of freemen, the disposal of public lands, and
|
||
|
the organization of courts. It had also a general supervision over
|
||
|
individuals, magistrates, and courts, with power to revise decisions
|
||
|
and to mete out punishments. The Charter of 1662 did not materially
|
||
|
alter the laws and customs of the government as previously established
|
||
|
under the Fundamental Orders, or the "first written constitution." The
|
||
|
Charter emphasized the executive, and began the segregation of the
|
||
|
Upper House or Council, since by it the "Particular Court" of the
|
||
|
founders became the Governor's Council, serving upon like occasions,
|
||
|
but requiring the presence of at least six magistrates for the
|
||
|
transaction of business. The Particular Court had consisted of the
|
||
|
Governor or Deputy-Governor, and three Assistants. In emergencies
|
||
|
occurring during adjournment of the General Court, the Particular
|
||
|
Court was to serve in place of the larger body. After 1647 this
|
||
|
special court could consist of two or three magistrates who, in the
|
||
|
absence of the Governor or Deputy-Governor, chose one of their number
|
||
|
to act as moderator. After 1662 the formula of the General Court "Be
|
||
|
it ordered, enacted and decreed" was changed to "Be it enacted by the
|
||
|
Governor and Council and House of Representatives in General Court
|
||
|
assembled." At the regular session of the General Court or General
|
||
|
Assembly, the Councilors first sat as a separate body in 1698. After
|
||
|
the Declaration of Independence this Upper House or Council became the
|
||
|
Senate, and for many years was referred to under any one of the three
|
||
|
names.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The power of the General Court--this jumble of legislative, executive,
|
||
|
and judicial--worked well so long as the community consisted of a few
|
||
|
hundred or a few thousand souls with little diversity of sentiment or
|
||
|
industrial interest. It was not until the last quarter of the
|
||
|
eighteenth century that the inefficiency of the "first written
|
||
|
constitution" began to be felt. Then there arose the need of a new
|
||
|
constitution to modify the body of laws and customs that had grown up;
|
||
|
to destroy much of the erroneous legislation that in effect perverted
|
||
|
or nullified their original intent; and to furnish a constitutional
|
||
|
basis for the government of a larger and less homogeneous people. Here
|
||
|
and there a few thoughtful men, irrespective of their church or party,
|
||
|
were beginning to apprehend the difficulty of piloting a democratic
|
||
|
state under the old royal charter. The more prominent among them
|
||
|
belonged to the Anti-Federal party, and naturally they sought to
|
||
|
expose the constitutional difficulties which they believed impeded
|
||
|
progress. [b]
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the earliest party tilts grew out of the increase of new towns
|
||
|
and the unequal development of some of the older ones. Then as now,
|
||
|
though on a much smaller scale, the unit of town representation
|
||
|
threatened rotten boroughs and a fictitious representation of the will
|
||
|
of the majority as represented by the delegates to the Lower
|
||
|
House. The state in 1786 had not recovered from the exhaustion due to
|
||
|
the Revolutionary War, and the support of the many new deputies, due
|
||
|
to the increase of the towns, was a burden which the October
|
||
|
legislation of that year attempted to lighten. With the object of
|
||
|
cutting down state expenses a bill was introduced into the House to
|
||
|
refer to the freemen some proposition for reducing the number of their
|
||
|
delegates and for equalizing representation. Mr. James Davenport of
|
||
|
Stamford moved to substitute for the bill [c] another in which this
|
||
|
reduction should be made by the legislature without submitting the
|
||
|
proposed change to the freemen. This was objected to on the ground
|
||
|
that a reduction of delegates was a constitutional question, "the
|
||
|
Assembly having no right to alter the representation without authority
|
||
|
given by their constituents." The supporters of the bill contended
|
||
|
with Mr. Davenport that--
|
||
|
|
||
|
_we have no Constitution_ but the laws of the State. The
|
||
|
_Charter is not the Constitution_. By the Revolution
|
||
|
_that_ was abrogated. A law of the State gave a subsequent
|
||
|
sanction to that which was before of no force; if that law be
|
||
|
valid, any alteration made by a later act will also be valid; if
|
||
|
not, we have no Constitution, so defined, as to preclude the
|
||
|
Legislature from exercising _any_ power necessary for the
|
||
|
good of the people.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The bill was carried over to the May session of 1787, when it was
|
||
|
defeated by sixty-two yeas to seventy-five nays, the towns of
|
||
|
Hartford, East Hartford, Berlin, Stamford and Woodbury favoring it. A
|
||
|
confidential letter of February, 1787, from Dr. Gale, the probable
|
||
|
author of "Brief, decent but free Remarks or Observations on Several
|
||
|
Laws passed by the Honorable Legislature of the State of Connecticut
|
||
|
since the year 1775, by a Friend to his Country," suggested that in
|
||
|
addition to the reduction of representatives, laws should be passed
|
||
|
forbidding any citizen to hold, at the same time, more than one place
|
||
|
of public trust, either civil or military, and also requiring an
|
||
|
increase in the number of councilors, or senators, from the total of
|
||
|
twelve to three from each county. [d] Dr. Gale believed that if these
|
||
|
senators should be elected by each county, and not upon a general
|
||
|
ticket, the change would be beneficial. [195]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In regard to the senators, the Fundamental Orders prescribed that
|
||
|
nominations for the magistrates should be made by the towns through
|
||
|
their deputies to the fall session of the General Court, and that the
|
||
|
election should take place the following spring at the Court of
|
||
|
Elections. As the life of the colony expanded, modifications of this
|
||
|
rule were made; in time, vote by proxy took the place of the freeman's
|
||
|
presence at the Court of Election. After 1689, the Assistants to be
|
||
|
nominated, twenty in number, were balloted for in the fall town
|
||
|
meetings. The sealed lists were sent to the legislature, where they
|
||
|
were opened, and the ticket for the spring election was made out from
|
||
|
the twenty names receiving the largest vote. The Court could no longer
|
||
|
as in earlier times add any new names. Hence, the custom grew up of
|
||
|
listing nominations, not according to popularity, but first according
|
||
|
to seniority in office, and then according to the number of votes
|
||
|
received. These lists were published in the papers throughout the
|
||
|
state. The candidates for election were presented at the April town
|
||
|
meetings, where each name was read in order and voted upon. A much
|
||
|
later enactment provided twelve ballots, and forbade any one to cast
|
||
|
more than twelve, whether for or against a candidate or in blank. If a
|
||
|
man held any one of his slips in reserve for a more satisfactory
|
||
|
candidate, he had none for the teller, and thus the secrecy of the
|
||
|
ballot was almost destroyed. New candidates or those not up for
|
||
|
reelection, whose names appeared at the foot of the list, whatever the
|
||
|
number of votes received, were sometimes kept waiting years for an
|
||
|
election, until those above them had died in office or resigned. [e]
|
||
|
For instance, Jonathan Ingersoll received 4600 votes in nomination in
|
||
|
1792, while the senior councilor, William Williams, had only 2000; yet
|
||
|
Williams's name was preferred, and Ingersoll's had to wait over
|
||
|
another year, when he was again nominated and elected, and held his
|
||
|
seat from 1793 to 1798. An election was a wearisome affair, and many
|
||
|
men would not stay until the voting upon the list was finished,
|
||
|
preferring for various reasons to cast an early ballot. The natural
|
||
|
tendency was to support the experienced and known, even if
|
||
|
indifferently efficient councilor, rather than to vote for an untried
|
||
|
and unfamiliar man whose name would come up later, or even for popular
|
||
|
men who could not be proposed until far into the day. As a result the
|
||
|
party in power felt assured of their continuance in office. Moreover,
|
||
|
proxies for the election were returned in April, but the result was
|
||
|
not announced until the legislature met in May, nor was there any
|
||
|
supervision compelling an honest count. Thus it was easy to keep in
|
||
|
office Federal candidates, and thus the Senate, or Council, came to
|
||
|
reflect public opinion about twenty years behind the popular
|
||
|
sentiment. Furthermore, the clergy of the Establishment would get
|
||
|
together and talk matters over before the elections, and the parish
|
||
|
minister would endeavor to direct his people's vote according to his
|
||
|
opinion of what was best for the commonwealth. This ministerial
|
||
|
influence was not shaken until about 1817.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was still another grievance against the Council besides that
|
||
|
just mentioned. It had come to be almost a Privy Council for advice
|
||
|
and consultation. Furthermore it was, until 1807, the Supreme Court of
|
||
|
the state to which lay appeals in all cases, civil or criminal, where
|
||
|
errors of law had been committed in the trial courts. Its twelve
|
||
|
members were mostly, if not all, lawyers, holding a tremendous power
|
||
|
of patronage over the members of the Lower House, many of whom were
|
||
|
also lawyers, eager for preferment; over the courts throughout the
|
||
|
state, from which, since 1792, the old non-professional judges had
|
||
|
been debarred, and also over the militia, whose officers, from the
|
||
|
earliest times, had been appointed by the General Court. Further, the
|
||
|
united action of the two houses was necessary to pass or to repeal a
|
||
|
law, and thus much important legislation centred upon a majority of
|
||
|
seven in the Council.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Furthermore, at the opening of the nineteenth century, the courts of
|
||
|
law also were thought to need reorganizing. The judges were declared
|
||
|
partisan, as they naturally would be under the conditions of their
|
||
|
appointment. The Republicans could not meet the Federals upon an equal
|
||
|
footing in the state tribunals. They were disparaged in their business
|
||
|
relations, "were treated as a degraded party, and this treatment was
|
||
|
extended to all the individuals of the party however worthy or
|
||
|
respectable; in fact as the Saxons were treated by the Normans and the
|
||
|
Irish by the English government." [196]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Because of these political conditions, early in statehood, there were
|
||
|
three schools of politicians; namely, those who approved a
|
||
|
constitutional convention, expressly called to frame a new
|
||
|
constitution; those who wished such a convention merely to amend the
|
||
|
existing charter-constitution; and those, until 1800, predominately in
|
||
|
the majority, who were convinced that whether the state had a
|
||
|
constitution or not was a most frivolous and baneful question, mooted
|
||
|
only by "visionary theorists," or by those who were desirous of a
|
||
|
change, no matter how disastrous it might be to good government. The
|
||
|
conservative party held that, since the charter had been drawn
|
||
|
according to the tenor of a draft submitted by Winthrop and outlining
|
||
|
the government according to the Fundamental Orders, framed in 1639 by
|
||
|
the "inhabitants and residents of Hartford, Windsor and Wethersfield,"
|
||
|
the charter was not a grant of privileges but an approval asked and
|
||
|
obtained for a government already existing. Consequently, such
|
||
|
government as had been exercised before and was continued under the
|
||
|
charter was essentially a creation of the people. It therefore needed
|
||
|
only the declarative act of the legislature to annul those clauses of
|
||
|
the charter that bound the colony to the crown and to continue over
|
||
|
into statehood the government of the colonial period. Further,
|
||
|
granting that the separation from Great Britain annulled the
|
||
|
constitution, the subsequent conduct of the people in assenting to,
|
||
|
approving of, and acquiescing in such acts of the legislature, had
|
||
|
established and rendered those acts valid and binding, and had given
|
||
|
them all the force and authority of an express contract. [197] Such
|
||
|
discussion of constitutional questions, confined at first to the few,
|
||
|
spread among the many after Leland's attack upon the charter, and were
|
||
|
debated with great earnestness. Leland's attack gained him, at the
|
||
|
time, comparatively few adherents, but it brought the question of
|
||
|
disestablishment fairly before the people, demonstrating to the
|
||
|
discontented that there was very little hope for larger liberty, for
|
||
|
greater justice, until the power of legislation, granted by the old
|
||
|
charter, should be curtailed, and the bond between Church and State
|
||
|
severed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The growth in Connecticut of the Democratic-Republican party, outside
|
||
|
its following among Methodists, Baptists and a few radical thinkers,
|
||
|
was very slow. The Episcopalians were held in much higher esteem by
|
||
|
the Federal members of the Establishment, or "Standing Order," as they
|
||
|
were called, than were the other dissenters. Yet notwithstanding the
|
||
|
wealth and conservatism of the sect, they were looked at askance when
|
||
|
it came to giving them political office, for the old dislike to a
|
||
|
Churchman still lingered in New England. Accordingly, they were
|
||
|
somewhat dissatisfied at the treatment they received as political
|
||
|
allies of the Standing Order, and, in order to quiet their incipient
|
||
|
discontent, the government thought best to occasionally extend some
|
||
|
small favor to them. So in 1799, the legislature granted them a
|
||
|
charter for a fund for their bishop which they were trying to
|
||
|
raise. About the same time, Yale first conferred upon an Episcopal
|
||
|
clergyman the title of doctor of divinity. The transfer of the annual
|
||
|
fast day to coincide with Good Friday was appreciated by the
|
||
|
Churchmen. The change was first made in 1795, and came about through
|
||
|
Governor Huntington's friendship for Bishop Seabury, and because of a
|
||
|
desire to remove from the public mind a misapprehension, arising from
|
||
|
the refusal of the Episcopal church in New London to comply with
|
||
|
President Washington's proclamation for a national Thanksgiving. [f]
|
||
|
From 1797 this change of fast-day became customary. It removed the
|
||
|
long-standing complaint that Presbyterian days of fasting or rejoicing
|
||
|
frequently occurred during Episcopal feasts or fasts. At an earlier
|
||
|
period, the ignoring of such public proclamations was sometimes made
|
||
|
the occasion for imposing fines for the benefit of the Establishment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As has been said, the Republican gains were greater among the
|
||
|
Methodists and Baptists. This was partly because not a few among
|
||
|
these dissenters associated Jefferson's party with his efforts towards
|
||
|
disestablishment in Virginia in 1785. Out of Connecticut's population
|
||
|
of two hundred and fifty thousand, the Republicans counted upon
|
||
|
recruits from the Methodist body, numbering, in 1802, one thousand six
|
||
|
hundred and fifty-eight, and from the Baptists, approximating four
|
||
|
thousand six hundred and sixty members. In 1798-1800 the division of
|
||
|
the Federalists over national issues strengthened the Republicans in
|
||
|
Connecticut, as they were the successors to the Anti-Federalists,
|
||
|
those "visionary theorists" of 1786. The new Democratic-Republican
|
||
|
party received further additions to their ranks through the opposition
|
||
|
in Connecticut to the Federal and obnoxious "Stand-up Law" of
|
||
|
1801. This law, which required a man to stand when voting for the
|
||
|
nomination of senators, "was made to catch the secret vote of the
|
||
|
Republicans," [198] and revealed at once the opposition of every
|
||
|
dissenter, debtor, employee, or of any one who had cause to fear
|
||
|
injury to himself if he gave an honest vote. It was passed by a
|
||
|
compact and reunited body of Federalists whose boast was that no
|
||
|
division upon national questions could affect their unity and strength
|
||
|
in the Land of Steady Habits.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Republican-Democratic party in the state would have gained
|
||
|
recruits more rapidly had it not been for its attitude as a national
|
||
|
party toward France. To appreciate the situation in Connecticut, one
|
||
|
must consider, first of all, the influence of the French
|
||
|
Revolution. One must realize the intense interest, the mingled
|
||
|
exultation and terror with which conservatives who, though they might
|
||
|
differ in their religious preferences, were yet the rank and file of
|
||
|
the state, watched its varying aspects from its outbreak in 1789 on
|
||
|
through the years of its earliest experiments in statecraft, of its
|
||
|
exaggerated exploitation of "liberty, equality, and fraternity," and
|
||
|
of its casting off of all religious bonds and trammels. As the Federal
|
||
|
party lost its sympathy with the French cause the attitude of the
|
||
|
nation changed. The consolidated factions of the Anti-Federalists,
|
||
|
however, increased their ardor for the French republic, and took from
|
||
|
1792 the name Democratic-Republican. They carried their keen sympathy
|
||
|
even to expressing their French sentiments by their dress and
|
||
|
manners. The change in the national attitude was reflected in
|
||
|
Connecticut by the whole-hearted antipathy of large numbers of her
|
||
|
people to what they considered "radicalism of the most destructive
|
||
|
character." English Arianism and Arminianism, with which the
|
||
|
Edwardeans had waged war, were nothing compared to the influx of
|
||
|
French infidelity and atheism which appeared to be sweeping over the
|
||
|
land. Books formerly guarded by the clergy were on sale
|
||
|
everywhere. They found among the masses many like Aaron Burr, who,
|
||
|
during his period of study with Dr. Bellamy, had preferred the logic
|
||
|
of the printed books upon the shelves to that of the master who placed
|
||
|
them there. Dr. Bellamy proposed to confute the pernicious arguments
|
||
|
of these books, bringing them one by one before his select body of
|
||
|
students, so that they should be able to guide their future
|
||
|
parishioners when the insidious poison of these dangerous authors,
|
||
|
these "followers of Satan," should force its way among them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All sects attempted to oppose such an influx of irreligion. All but
|
||
|
the Episcopalians fell back upon revivals as their chief means. In
|
||
|
these revivals the Methodists and Congregationalists were perhaps the
|
||
|
most successful in securing converts. The policy of the Episcopal
|
||
|
church did not favor this phase of religious life. It felt that its
|
||
|
whole attitude was a protest against exaggerated liberty, or license,
|
||
|
and against all atheistical ideas. During the revivals the Baptists,
|
||
|
also, added largely to their numbers. The Methodists, however, brought
|
||
|
to their revival meetings the peculiar strength of fervent proselytes
|
||
|
to a new faith; of one rapidly becoming popular, appealing strongly to
|
||
|
the emotions, and having a touch of martyrdom still clinging to its
|
||
|
profession. Among those Federalists who were also Congregationalists,
|
||
|
the French Revolution was believed to be the "result of a combination
|
||
|
long since formed in Europe by infidels and atheists to root out and
|
||
|
effectually destroy religion and civil government." Holding this
|
||
|
opinion; seeing the Baptists and Methodists increasing in importance,
|
||
|
both in the nation and in the state; watching the continual increase
|
||
|
of the unorthodox and of the freethinker, and perceiving the growing
|
||
|
loss of confidence in the Federal party both in the nation and the
|
||
|
state, the Standing Order felt itself face to face with imminent
|
||
|
peril. It scented danger to itself and to the existence of the
|
||
|
commonwealth. But it sadly lacked a great leader, until the year 1795,
|
||
|
when it found one in the recently elected president of Yale, the
|
||
|
Rev. Timothy Dwight. He was a grandson of Jonathan Edwards, and was a
|
||
|
man of amazing energy, of varied training, and of great personal
|
||
|
charm.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In his experience Dr. Dwight counted a college education, a
|
||
|
theological training under Jonathan Edwards, Jr., a tutorship at Yale,
|
||
|
a chaplaincy among the rough soldiers of the war of the Revolution,
|
||
|
home-life on his father's farm at Northampton, where the men in the
|
||
|
field vied with each other "to rake or hoe beside Timothy" in order to
|
||
|
hear him talk. In political life Dr. Dwight had served an
|
||
|
apprenticeship in the General Court of Massachusetts, where he sat as
|
||
|
deputy from Northampton. He had had experience as a preacher in
|
||
|
several small towns, and as pastor at Greenfield Hill, a part of
|
||
|
Fairfield. There he had added to his income by establishing the
|
||
|
Greenfield Academy for both sexes. Upon accepting the presidency of
|
||
|
Yale he became also professor of theology, and in addition he took
|
||
|
under his special care the courses in rhetoric and oratory. These last
|
||
|
two, together with literature, had, he thought, been entirely too much
|
||
|
neglected. [g] His coming was a forecast of the man of the nineteenth
|
||
|
century.[199] Dr. Stiles had been a fine type of the
|
||
|
eighteenth. Dr. Dwight was a man of less acquirements in languages,
|
||
|
but he was a more accurate scholar, of broader intelligence, and with
|
||
|
a mind well stocked and ready. He had a pleasing power of expression,
|
||
|
was tactful, and could readily adapt himself to men and
|
||
|
circumstances. It was he who was to give Yale its initial movement
|
||
|
from college to university. He himself was to become a celebrated
|
||
|
teacher and theologian. He was to be one of the founders of the New
|
||
|
England school, whose principles Dr. Taylor, in 1827, was to make
|
||
|
known under the name of the New Haven Theology. [h] In his own day
|
||
|
Dr. Dwight was equally celebrated as a power both in religion and
|
||
|
politics. "Pope Dwight" his enemies termed him, and they nicknamed
|
||
|
his ministerial following his "bishops," while they dubbed the Council
|
||
|
or Senators "his Twelve Cardinals."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Outside his college duties, and as a part of his care for its
|
||
|
spiritual welfare, President Dwight's immediate purpose was to combine
|
||
|
all forces that could be used to stem the dangerous currents rushing
|
||
|
against the bulwarks of Church and State. He had early favored the
|
||
|
drawing together of Congregational and Presbyterian bodies. He had
|
||
|
discerned, as early as 1792, a stirring of new life in the religious
|
||
|
world, the breaking down of the apathy of half a century that had been
|
||
|
indicated by revivals in places far scattered, not only throughout New
|
||
|
England but in other states. Towns in Massachusetts, with East Haddam
|
||
|
and Lyme in Connecticut, had been roused as early as the year
|
||
|
named. That element of personal experience which had been so marked a
|
||
|
feature of the Great Awakening reappeared, but without that excessive
|
||
|
emotionalism [i] which characterized the earlier revival. Nor was
|
||
|
there any such pronounced leadership as then. There was the same
|
||
|
conviction of sinfulness, the peace after its acknowledgment, and the
|
||
|
joyous satisfaction in the determination to lead an upright life,
|
||
|
seeking God's grace and will. Recognition of this spiritual awakening
|
||
|
had in some measure entered into the proposed disposal of the money
|
||
|
from the Western Lands, as it had also in the discussion of the joint
|
||
|
missionary work of 1791-1794, and again in 1797-98, [200] when the
|
||
|
General Association of Connecticut was incorporated as the Connecticut
|
||
|
Missionary Society, [j] In all of these movements President Dwight had
|
||
|
taken an active part. Upon entering the presidency of Yale he at once
|
||
|
began a series of sermons, which he delivered Sunday mornings, and
|
||
|
which were so arranged that in each four years the course was
|
||
|
complete. These lectures were his "Theology Explained and Defended,"
|
||
|
first published in 1818. President Dwight, with the leading
|
||
|
Presbyterian or Congregational ministers, together with the Methodist
|
||
|
and Baptist clergy, continued to favor the revival movement. This
|
||
|
reached its height in 1807. From beginning to end it lasted nearly a
|
||
|
quarter of a century, and was punctuated by the revival years of 1798,
|
||
|
1800, and 1802, that were especially fruitful of conversions in
|
||
|
Connecticut. That of 1802 attracted large numbers of the college
|
||
|
students. The success of the revivals was marked by increasing
|
||
|
austerities, such as the denunciation of amusements, both public and
|
||
|
private, and the revival of dead-letter laws for the more strict
|
||
|
observance of Sunday. Traveling or driving was prohibited without a
|
||
|
pass signed by a justice of the peace. Travelers were held up over
|
||
|
"holy time." Attempts were made to prevent the young people from
|
||
|
gathering in companies on Sunday evenings after the Sabbath was
|
||
|
legally over. Too much hilarity, though innocent, was condemned. Such
|
||
|
restrictions were extremely distasteful to a large minority in the
|
||
|
state, and seemed to many citizens only repeated proofs of how closely
|
||
|
the government and the Presbyterian-Congregational church were banded
|
||
|
together. Accordingly the Republicans began to think it was time to
|
||
|
test the strength of such a platform as they could put forth while
|
||
|
making a bid for the whole dissenting vote.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The election of Adams and Jefferson [k] in 1797 was a spur to both
|
||
|
parties, lending hope to the scattered Republicans, and prodding the
|
||
|
recently over-confident Federalists. In March, 1798, the whole nation
|
||
|
was roused almost to forgetfulness of party lines by the anger created
|
||
|
by the publication of the "X Y Z Papers." A few months later the
|
||
|
Federal party, through its Alien and Sedition laws, had lost its
|
||
|
renewed hold upon the nation. Connecticut denounced the Virginia and
|
||
|
Kentucky resolutions of 1798-99, and was to all appearances stanchly
|
||
|
Federal. But her leaders were looking for another presidential
|
||
|
candidate than Adams, while the Republicans, elate with the
|
||
|
anticipated national victory in 1800, were making preparations to
|
||
|
catch any and every dissatisfied voter in the state. The scattered
|
||
|
Republican clubs and committees awoke to new activity. As Jefferson
|
||
|
kept his party well in hand, and let the national dissatisfaction
|
||
|
increase that he might rush to victory at the presidential election of
|
||
|
1800, so the Connecticut Republicans matured their plans. They did not
|
||
|
formally organize their party till 1800, first making sure of their
|
||
|
great leader as the nation's executive, and almost of his
|
||
|
reelection. Then they began to urge the acceptance of their platform
|
||
|
upon the oppressed Connecticut dissenters, and to taunt the Federal
|
||
|
Episcopalians with an allegiance that as late as 1802 had not been
|
||
|
thought of sufficient worth to warrant the small favor of a college
|
||
|
charter for their academy at Cheshire. The Federalists attempted to
|
||
|
disarm the Episcopal dissatisfaction over the refusal by granting them
|
||
|
a license for a lottery to raise $15,000 for the bishop's fund.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The leader of the Republicans in Connecticut was Pierpont Edwards, a
|
||
|
recently appointed United States district judge. He was brother of
|
||
|
Jonathan Edwards, Jr., for years the pastor of the North Church at New
|
||
|
Haven, and in 1800 president of Union College. This Republican leader
|
||
|
was the maternal uncle of his opponent in Federal state politics,
|
||
|
President Dwight, and also of the Republican Vice-President, Aaron
|
||
|
Burr. Another nephew of his was Theodore Dwight, the brother of
|
||
|
Yale's president, who led the Federal civilians, and who was editor of
|
||
|
the "Hartford Courant," the organ of the Connecticut Federalists. The
|
||
|
Hartford "American Mercury" voiced the sentiments of the
|
||
|
Republicans. The latter party throughout the state was formally
|
||
|
organized in 1800 at a meeting in New Haven, the home of Mr. Edwards
|
||
|
and of his henchman, Abraham Bishop, son of that city's mayor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The close personal relationship of the leaders, [l] the scorn of the
|
||
|
radicals, the abhorrence of the conservatives for the principles,
|
||
|
opinions, and even, in some cases, habits of life of their opponents,
|
||
|
entered into the strife and vituperation of the political campaigns
|
||
|
from 1800 to 1806. Personalities were unsparing, passion rose high,
|
||
|
and speeches were bitter. This was particularly the case in New Haven,
|
||
|
where Abraham Bishop's impudent boldness of attack and denunciation
|
||
|
was exaggerated by his father's position. Samuel Bishop, the father,
|
||
|
was a man of seventy-seven, and old in the service of both Church and
|
||
|
State. He was senior deacon in the North Church, or what was at that
|
||
|
time known as the Church of the United White Haven and Fair Haven
|
||
|
Societies. He was also a justice of the peace, town clerk, and mayor
|
||
|
of the city. The last office was held, according to the charter,
|
||
|
during the pleasure of the legislature. Samuel Bishop was also chief
|
||
|
judge of the court of common pleas for New Haven County, and sole
|
||
|
judge of probate, annual offices which the General Assembly had
|
||
|
re-conferred upon him in 1800 and in 1801. His son was a graduate of
|
||
|
Yale (1778). He was a lawyer of somewhat indifferent practice, and
|
||
|
from 1791 to 1798 clerk of the county court under his father, while
|
||
|
from 1798 he had been clerk of the superior court. Before settling
|
||
|
down to practice at the bar he had lived abroad, and had been caught
|
||
|
in the whirl of French thought and democratic ideas. He had returned
|
||
|
home bearing words of recommendation to Washington's secretary of
|
||
|
state from Jefferson's European friends. A personal meeting with that
|
||
|
party leader had added to Bishop's enthusiasm. For some years he had
|
||
|
lived in Boston, and tried his hand at literature. He had returned to
|
||
|
New Haven in 1791, and had thrown himself into politics. He purposely
|
||
|
exaggerated his opinions. He was careless of his unorthodox
|
||
|
expressions even to the verge of blasphemy. Though himself a believer
|
||
|
in God, he was perhaps what one would probably have termed a little
|
||
|
later a Unitarian. His enemies exaggerated his exaggerations,--and
|
||
|
Unitarianism was a crime according to the Connecticut statutes. [m]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In his speeches and essays Abraham Bishop struck out boldly, with
|
||
|
earnestness, logic, shrewd wit, and irony, and, as has been said, at
|
||
|
times with dangerous irreverence,--often with down-right impudence
|
||
|
when that would serve his purpose. An illustration of his extreme use
|
||
|
of it was in 1800, about the time of the organization of the
|
||
|
Republican party throughout the state.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had been honored with the Phi Beta Kappa oration, annually
|
||
|
delivered on the eve of the Yale Commencement, then in September. A
|
||
|
polished literary effort was expected. He broke tradition, courtesy,
|
||
|
and every implied obligation in the choice of his subject. In August
|
||
|
he sent to the committee his paper for their acceptance or refusal. It
|
||
|
was entitled "The Extent and Power of Political Delusions," and was an
|
||
|
out and out campaign document. The presidential election was due in
|
||
|
November! Further, Bishop made political capital of the anticipated
|
||
|
refusal of his paper, which was not sent him until the eleventh
|
||
|
hour. The readers of the morning paper, wherein the committee offered
|
||
|
an apology for the change of speakers at the Society's meeting to be
|
||
|
held that night, were confronted by the announcement that the refused
|
||
|
address would be given to all who cared to listen to it in the parlors
|
||
|
of the White Haven church that same evening, and by the still further
|
||
|
notice that copies of it were fresh from the printer's hands and were
|
||
|
ready to be distributed to the remotest parts of the state. Needless
|
||
|
to state, the Phi Beta Kappa audience dwindled away to swell the crowd
|
||
|
of fifteen hundred, wherein Bishop gleefully counted "eight clergymen
|
||
|
and many ladies." The address met with great favor, and the
|
||
|
Wallingford Republicans at their celebration of March 11, 1801, in
|
||
|
honor of the election of Jefferson and Burr, asked Mr. Bishop to be
|
||
|
their orator. [n]
|
||
|
|
||
|
To top Bishop's insult,--as it was regarded by every friend of the
|
||
|
Standing Order,--came in the following spring Jefferson's displacement
|
||
|
of Elizur Goodrich, President Adams's appointee as collector of the
|
||
|
port of New Haven, and the substitution of Samuel Bishop. President
|
||
|
Jefferson considered himself at liberty to make this change; and all
|
||
|
the more so because President Adams had made the appointment as one of
|
||
|
his last official acts, when he must have known it would have been
|
||
|
unacceptable to the incoming Republican administration. The merchants
|
||
|
of New Haven immediately united in a petition to President Jefferson,
|
||
|
in which they declared that Samuel Bishop was too old to perform the
|
||
|
duties of the office, and, moreover, not acquainted with
|
||
|
accounts. Assuming that his son Abraham would assist him, they
|
||
|
denounced the latter as "entirely destitute of public confidence, so
|
||
|
conspicuous for his enmity to commerce and opposition to order, so
|
||
|
odious to his fellow citizens, that we presume his warmest partizans
|
||
|
would not have hazarded a recommendation of him." Notwithstanding
|
||
|
this protest the appointment was continued, the President pointing out
|
||
|
the honors bestowed upon the father and the care with which he,
|
||
|
Jefferson, had investigated the case before acting upon it. Reproving
|
||
|
the authorities for so long excluding the Republicans entirely from
|
||
|
office, Jefferson expressed his regret at finding upon his accession
|
||
|
to the presidency not even a "moderate participation in office in the
|
||
|
hands of the majority." He further stated that when such a situation
|
||
|
was in some measure relieved he would be only too glad to make the
|
||
|
question "Is he capable? Is he honest? Is he faithful to the
|
||
|
Constitution?" the only tests for obtaining and holding office. Samuel
|
||
|
Bishop died in 1803, and the collector ship was then bestowed upon his
|
||
|
son, who held it until his death in 1829.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In Connecticut the two political parties prepared for conflict. The
|
||
|
Republicans desired a new constitution and disestablishment. The old
|
||
|
constitutional and religious debates were opened and fiercely fought
|
||
|
out in pamphlet, press, sermon, and political oration. Noah Webster
|
||
|
replied to the "Extent and Power of Political Delusion" by "A Rod for
|
||
|
the Fool's Back." John Leland published his famous Hartford speech as
|
||
|
"A Blow at the Root, a fashionable Fast-Day Sermon," and his "High
|
||
|
Flying Churchman," as contributions in behalf of civil and religious
|
||
|
liberty. Abraham Bishop took up the latter topic in his "Wallingford
|
||
|
Address, Proofs of a Conspiracy Against Christianity and the
|
||
|
Government of the United States," published in 1802, as well as in his
|
||
|
"Extent and Power of Political Delusion" of 1800. A fair type of
|
||
|
Mr. Bishop's style and treatment is shown in his "Connecticut
|
||
|
Republicanism," a campaign document, wherein he sets forth his opinion
|
||
|
of the union of Church and State. [o]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In his campaign document under the title "Connecticut Republicanism"
|
||
|
Bishop declared:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Christianity has suffered more by the attempts to unite church and
|
||
|
state than by all the deistical writings, yet the men who denounce
|
||
|
them are pronounced atheists and no proof of their atheism is
|
||
|
required but their opposition to Federal measures.... Church and
|
||
|
state cannot be better served than by keeping them distinct and by
|
||
|
placing them where they ought to be, above, instead of beneath the
|
||
|
control of men who care no more for either of them than they can
|
||
|
turn to their personal benefit. The self-styled friends of order
|
||
|
have in all nations been the cause of all the convulsions and
|
||
|
distresses which have agitated the world.... The clergyman
|
||
|
preaches politics, the civilian prates of orthodoxy, and if any
|
||
|
man refuse to join their coalition they endeavor to hunt him down
|
||
|
to the tune "The Church is in danger."... In 1787 this visible
|
||
|
intolerance had abated in New England; there was no written law in
|
||
|
force that none but church-members should be free burgesses: yet
|
||
|
the avowed charge of Christ's church was in our law-books, some
|
||
|
nice points of theology were settled in our statutes and the
|
||
|
common law of church and state was in full force.... The
|
||
|
Trinitarian doctrine is established by laws, and the denial of it
|
||
|
is placed in the rank of felony. Though we have ceased to
|
||
|
transplant from town to town Quakers, New Lights, and Baptists;
|
||
|
yet the dissenters from our prevailing denominations are even at
|
||
|
this moment praying for a repeal of those laws which abridge the
|
||
|
rights of conscience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Break the league of church and state which first subjugates your
|
||
|
consciences, then treating your understanding like galley slaves,
|
||
|
robs you of religion and civil freedom.... Thirty thousand freemen
|
||
|
are against the union of church and state. Thirty thousand more
|
||
|
men, deprived of voting because they are not rich or learned
|
||
|
enough, are ready to join them. [201]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In his "Wallingford Address," Bishop exclaims "The clerical
|
||
|
_politician_ is a useless preacher; the _political_
|
||
|
Christian is a dangerous statesman." On the title page of this address
|
||
|
appeared the epigram, "Our statesmen to the Constitution; our Clergy
|
||
|
to the Bible." The unfortunately irreverent parallel which Bishop drew
|
||
|
between the Saviour of the world and the leader of the national
|
||
|
Republican party, or of the democracy or common people, gave to the
|
||
|
epigram an evil significance not intended, and to its author a
|
||
|
reputation not wholly deserved.
|
||
|
|
||
|
David Daggett, a prominent New Haven Federalist and lawyer, [p] tried
|
||
|
in "Facts are Stubborn Things" to refute the charge that the people
|
||
|
were priest-ridden, the legislature arbitrary and tyrannical, the
|
||
|
clergy bigots. In the course of his argument he gives an account of
|
||
|
the reception of a Baptist petition which, voicing the smouldering
|
||
|
discontent that was kept burning by the certificate law, had been
|
||
|
presented to the legislature. Daggett charged the Republicans with
|
||
|
instituting the custom of holding their party meetings in Hartford and
|
||
|
New Haven at the time of the meeting of the Assembly in those cities,
|
||
|
and of making the political gathering a means of directing what topics
|
||
|
should be brought up for discussion in the House of Representatives,
|
||
|
and what discussed in their party organ the "American Mercury."
|
||
|
Daggett accused the Republicans of purposely choosing subjects of
|
||
|
discussion of an inflammable character, and declared that it was in
|
||
|
Babcock's paper (so called from its editor) that the Baptist petition
|
||
|
originated, which, circulated through the state, received some three
|
||
|
thousand signatures, "many of whom doubtless sought the public good."
|
||
|
[202] The petition was presented for trial in 1802 and a day set for
|
||
|
its hearing, upon which Mr. Pierpont Edwards and Mr. Gideon Granger
|
||
|
were to advocate it. The gentlemen, according to Mr. Daggett's
|
||
|
account, did not appear, and of course no trial was held. Instead, the
|
||
|
Assembly referred it to a committee of eighteen from the two
|
||
|
houses. Mr. Daggett insisted that "it was thoroughly canvassed, and
|
||
|
every gentleman professed himself entirely satisfied that there was no
|
||
|
ground of complaint which the Legislature could remove, except John
|
||
|
T. Peters, Esq., who declared that nothing short of an entire repeal
|
||
|
of the law for the support of religion would accord with his idea."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The truth of the matter was that the committee were chiefly
|
||
|
Federalists. Mr. Peters was a Republican. In their answer to the
|
||
|
petition, the committee assumed that it "was an equitable principle,
|
||
|
that every member of the society should, in some way, contribute to
|
||
|
the support of religious institutions and so the complaint of those
|
||
|
who declined to support any such institution was invalid." If there
|
||
|
was ground for complaint because of sequestration of property for the
|
||
|
benefit of Presbyterians only, the committee failed to find any such
|
||
|
cause, and if such existed, the proper channel of appeal was through
|
||
|
the courts. All other complaints in the petition were considered to
|
||
|
be answered by the assumption that the legislature had the right, on
|
||
|
the ground of utility, to compel contributions for the support of
|
||
|
religion, schools, and courts, whether or not every individual
|
||
|
taxpayer had need of them. The next year, 1803, the petition gained a
|
||
|
hearing, but that was all. It continued to be presented at every
|
||
|
session of the Assembly, and was first heard by both houses in
|
||
|
1815. It was finally withdrawn at the session that passed the bill for
|
||
|
the new constitution of 1818.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As one of the preliminary steps in the education of the people in
|
||
|
Republican principles and aims, John Strong of Norwich in 1804 founded
|
||
|
the "True Republican," thus giving a second paper for the
|
||
|
dissemination of Republican opinions. From 1792 the "Phenix or Windham
|
||
|
Herald" had been dealing telling blows at the Establishment and at the
|
||
|
courts of law through a discussion in its columns carried on by Judge
|
||
|
Swift, the inveterate foe of the union of Church and State, and a
|
||
|
lawyer, frank to avow that partiality existed in the administration of
|
||
|
justice. Though both the paper and the judge were strongly Federal in
|
||
|
their politics, they were both materially helping the Republican
|
||
|
advocates of reform. From the Windham press came, also, a
|
||
|
republication of "A Review of the Ecclesiastical Establishments of
|
||
|
Europe," edited by R. Huntington, with special reference to the
|
||
|
bearing of its arguments upon the conditions existing in Connecticut,
|
||
|
where illustration could be found of the absurdities and dangers that
|
||
|
the book had been originally written to expose. In 1803 John Leland,
|
||
|
representing forty-two Baptist clergymen, twenty licensed exhorters,
|
||
|
four thousand communicants, and twenty thousand attendants, sent out
|
||
|
another plea for disestablishment in his "Van Tromp lowering his Peak
|
||
|
with a Broadside, containing a Plea for the Baptists of Connecticut."
|
||
|
In it he urges that thirteen states have already granted religious
|
||
|
liberty, and that many of them have formed newer constitutions since
|
||
|
the Revolution. Such should also be the case in Connecticut. Moreover,
|
||
|
it could readily be accomplished at the small cost of five cents per
|
||
|
man. Such a small sum would pay the expenses of a convention to
|
||
|
formulate a constitution and another to ratify it, while five cents
|
||
|
more per person would furnish every citizen with a copy of the
|
||
|
proposed document, so that each could decide for himself upon the
|
||
|
constitutionality of any measure proposed, and would no longer be
|
||
|
obliged to read pamphlet after pamphlet or column after column in the
|
||
|
newspaper to determine its validity. [203]
|
||
|
|
||
|
All this was preparatory; and the first purely political note of
|
||
|
warning and call to battle for a new constitution was sounded by
|
||
|
Abraham Bishop at Hartford, May 11, 1804, in his "Oration in Honor of
|
||
|
the Election of President Jefferson and the peaceful acquisition of
|
||
|
Louisiana." He sums up the situation thus:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut has no Constitution. On the day independence was
|
||
|
declared, the old charter of Charles II became null and void. It
|
||
|
was derived from royal authority, and went down with royal
|
||
|
authority. Then, the people ought to have met in convention and
|
||
|
framed a Constitution. But the General Assembly interposed,
|
||
|
usurped the rights of the people, and enacted that the government
|
||
|
provided for in the charter should he the civil constitution of
|
||
|
the State. Thus all the abuses inflicted on us when subjects of a
|
||
|
crown, were fastened on us anew when we became citizens of a free
|
||
|
republic. We still live under the old jumble of legislative,
|
||
|
executive and judicial powers, called a Charter. We still suffer
|
||
|
from the old restrictions on the right to vote; we are still ruled
|
||
|
by the whims of seven men. Twelve make the council. Seven form a
|
||
|
majority, and in the hands of these seven are all powers,
|
||
|
legislative, executive and judicial. Without their leave no law
|
||
|
can pass; no law can be repealed. On them more than half of the
|
||
|
House of the Assembly is dependent for re-appointments as
|
||
|
justices, judges, or for promotion in the militia. By their breath
|
||
|
are, each year, brought into official life six judges of the
|
||
|
Superior Court, twenty-eight of the probate, forty of county
|
||
|
courts, and five hundred and ten justices of the peace, and, as
|
||
|
often as they please, all the sheriffs. Not only do they make
|
||
|
laws, but they plead before justices of their own appointment, and
|
||
|
as a Court of Errors interpret the laws of their own making. Is
|
||
|
this a Constitution? Is this an instrument of government for
|
||
|
freemen? And who may be freemen? No one who does not have a
|
||
|
freehold estate worth seven dollars a year, or a personal estate
|
||
|
on the tax list of one hundred and thirty-four dollars.... For
|
||
|
these evils there is but one remedy, and this remedy we demand
|
||
|
shall be applied. _We demand a constitution that shall separate
|
||
|
the legislative, executive and judicial power, extend the
|
||
|
freeman's oath to men who labor on highways, who serve in the
|
||
|
militia, who pay small taxes, but possess no estates._ [204]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Abraham Bishop threw down the gauntlet, and in the following July his
|
||
|
party issued a circular letter. It emanated from the Republican
|
||
|
General Committee, of which Pierpont Edwards was chairman. It stated
|
||
|
"that many very respectable Republicans are of the opinion that it is
|
||
|
high time to speak to the citizens of Connecticut plainly and
|
||
|
explicitly on the subject of forming a constitution; but this ought
|
||
|
not to be done without the approbation of the party." A general
|
||
|
meeting was proposed to be held in New Haven on August 29, 1804. In
|
||
|
response, ninety-seven towns sent Republican delegates to assemble at
|
||
|
the state house in New Haven on that date. Major William Judd of
|
||
|
Farmington was chosen chairman. The meeting was held with closed
|
||
|
doors, and a series of resolutions was passed in favor of adopting a
|
||
|
new constitution. It was declared "the unanimous opinion of this
|
||
|
meeting that the people of this state are at present without a
|
||
|
constitution of civil government," and "that it is expedient to take
|
||
|
measures preparatory to the formation of the Constitution and that a
|
||
|
committee be appointed to draft an Address to the People of this State
|
||
|
on that subject." The address reported by this committee was printed
|
||
|
in New Haven on a small half-sheet with double columns, and ten
|
||
|
thousand copies were ordered distributed through the state.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The issue was fairly before the people. From the Federal side, just
|
||
|
before the September elections, came David Daggett's "Count the Cost,"
|
||
|
in which he ably reviewed the Republican manifesto, impugning the
|
||
|
motives of the leaders of the Republican party, and eloquently urging
|
||
|
every friend of the Standing Order and every freeman to "count the
|
||
|
cost" before voting with the Republicans for the proposed reform.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fall election of 1804 was lost to the Republicans, for while they
|
||
|
made many gains here and there throughout the state, [q] the immediate
|
||
|
slight access to the Federal ranks showed that the people generally
|
||
|
were not yet ready for a constitutional change.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As one result of the defeat at the polls, there arose a wider sympathy
|
||
|
for the defeated party. When the legislature met in October, the
|
||
|
Federal leaders resolved to administer punishment to the defeated
|
||
|
Republicans. So strong was the popular feeling, and so determined the
|
||
|
attitude of the legislature, that it summoned before it all five of
|
||
|
the justices of the peace [r] who had attended the New Haven
|
||
|
convention of August 29, to show why they did not deserve to be
|
||
|
deprived of their commissions. Their oath of office ran "to be true
|
||
|
and faithful to the Governor and Company of this state, and the
|
||
|
Constitution and government thereof." What right, the Federals asked,
|
||
|
had they to attack a constitution they had sworn to uphold? At the
|
||
|
same time, several of the militia, known to be of Republican
|
||
|
sympathies, were also deposed or superseded. Mr. Pierpont Edwards was
|
||
|
allowed to make the defense for the justices. Mr. Daggett appeared for
|
||
|
the state. Reviewing the proceedings of the Republican meeting,
|
||
|
Mr. Daggett traced the history of the government of the colony and
|
||
|
state in order to demonstrate that the charter was peculiarly a
|
||
|
constitution of the people, "_made by the people_ and in a sense
|
||
|
not applicable to any other people." He declared the New Haven
|
||
|
"address" an outrage upon decency, and it to be the duty of the
|
||
|
Assembly to withdraw their commissions from men who questioned the
|
||
|
existence of the constitution under which they held them. The day
|
||
|
after the hearing, a bill to revoke the commissions was passed
|
||
|
unanimously by the governor and council, and by a majority of eleven
|
||
|
in the Lower House, the vote standing 67 yeas to 56 nays. This attempt
|
||
|
to stifle public opinion won a general acknowledgment that the
|
||
|
minority were oppressed. The feeling of sympathy thus roused was
|
||
|
increased by the death of Major Judd, who had been taken ill after his
|
||
|
arrival in New Haven. His partisans asserted that his death was
|
||
|
caused by his efforts to save himself and friends, and his consequent
|
||
|
obligation to appear at the trial when really too ill to be about. The
|
||
|
day after his death, the Republicans published and distributed
|
||
|
broadcast his "Address to the people of the State of Connecticut on
|
||
|
the subject of the removal of himself and four other justices from
|
||
|
office."
|
||
|
|
||
|
From this time forward the minority thoroughly realized that it was
|
||
|
"not a matter of talking down but of voting down their opponents."
|
||
|
Their leaders also understood it. Bishop entered the lists, not only
|
||
|
against his political antagonist David Daggett, but against such men
|
||
|
as Professor Silliman, Simeon Baldwin, Noah Webster, Theodore Dwight,
|
||
|
and against the clergy, led by President Dwight, Simon Backus, Isaac
|
||
|
Lewis, John Evans, and a host of secondary men who turned their
|
||
|
pulpits into lecture desks and the public fasts and feasts into
|
||
|
electioneering occasions. Their general plea was that religion
|
||
|
preserved the morals of the people, and consequently their civil
|
||
|
prosperity, and hence the need for state support. Occasionally one
|
||
|
would insist that it was a matter of conscience with the Presbyterians
|
||
|
which made them enforce ecclesiastical taxes and fines, and that all
|
||
|
had been given the dissenters that could be; that the Presbyterians
|
||
|
had "yielded every privilege they themselves enjoyed and subjected
|
||
|
them (the dissenters) to no inconvenience, not absolutely
|
||
|
indispensable to the countenance of the practice" (of dissent). David
|
||
|
Daggett maintained that there was a just and wide-spread alarm lest
|
||
|
the Republicans should undermine all religion, and therefore it
|
||
|
behooved all the friends of stable government to support the Standing
|
||
|
Order.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Republicans vigorously contested the elections of 1804,1805, and
|
||
|
1806. Their second general convention, that of August, 1806, at
|
||
|
Litchfield, was more outspoken in its criticism, and so much bolder in
|
||
|
its demands that many conservative people hesitated to follow its
|
||
|
programme. The Republican gains were so small that after 1806 there
|
||
|
was a lull in the agitation for constitutional reform for some
|
||
|
years. It was well understood that the religious establishment was the
|
||
|
greatest clog upon the government. It was also thoroughly understood
|
||
|
by many that its destruction meant the destruction of the Federal
|
||
|
party in Connecticut. Consequently the Federal patronage distributed
|
||
|
the several thousand offices within the gift of Church and State with
|
||
|
a "liberality equalled only by the fidelity with which they were paid
|
||
|
for." So firm was the Federal control over the state that even in 1804
|
||
|
they risked antagonizing the Episcopalians by again refusing to
|
||
|
charter the Cheshire Academy as a college with authority to confer
|
||
|
degrees in art, divinity, and law. In the face of a strong protest, it
|
||
|
was refused again in 1810. The House approved this last petition, but
|
||
|
the Council rejected it. Naturally, the Episcopalians felt still more
|
||
|
aggrieved when in 1812 the charter was once more refused; but still
|
||
|
they did not desert the Federal party. The latter clung to the spoils
|
||
|
of office for their partisans, to the old restrictive franchise, and
|
||
|
to the obnoxious Stand-up Law, nor were they less disdainful of the
|
||
|
dissenters and of the Republican minority.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet many of their best men had come to feel that there was wrong and
|
||
|
injustice done the minority; that there should be a stop put to the
|
||
|
open ignoring of Democratic lawyers, numbering in their ranks many men
|
||
|
of wide learning and of great practical ability; that the spectacle of
|
||
|
a Federal state-attorney prosecuting Republican editors was not
|
||
|
edifying, and that the imprisonment of such offenders and their trial
|
||
|
before a hostile judiciary opened that branch of the state government
|
||
|
to damaging and dangerous suspicion. [205]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In July, 1812, a meeting was called in Judge Baldwin's office in New
|
||
|
Haven, with President Dwight in the chair, to organize a Society for
|
||
|
the Suppression of Vice and the Promotion of Good Morals. At this
|
||
|
meeting the political situation was thoroughly discussed, and measures
|
||
|
were taken to cope with it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am persuaded [wrote the Rev. Lyman Beecher to Rev. Asahel Hooker in
|
||
|
the following November] that the time has come when it becomes every
|
||
|
friend of the State to wake up and exert his whole influence to save
|
||
|
it from innovation.... That the effort to supplant Governor Smith [s]
|
||
|
will be made is certain unless at an early stage the noise of rising
|
||
|
opposition will be so great as to deter them; and if it is made, a
|
||
|
separation is made in the Federal party and a coalition with
|
||
|
Democracy, which will in my opinion be permanent, unless the overthrow
|
||
|
by the election should throw them into despair or inspire repentance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If we stand idle we lose our habits and institutions piecemeal, as
|
||
|
fast as innovations and ambitions shall dare to urge on the work.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My request is that you will see Mr. Theodore Dwight, expressing to him
|
||
|
your views on the subject, ... and that you will in your region touch
|
||
|
every spring, _lay_ or clerical, which you can touch prudently,
|
||
|
that these men do not steal a march upon us, and that the rising
|
||
|
opposition may meet them early, before they have gathered
|
||
|
strength. Every blow struck now will have double the effect it will
|
||
|
after the parties are formed and the lines drawn. I hope we shall not
|
||
|
act independently, but I hope we shall all act, who fear God or regard
|
||
|
men. [206]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Writing of the meeting to organize the Society for the Suppression of
|
||
|
Vice and the Formation of Good Morals, Dr. Beecher in his
|
||
|
"Autobiography" gives a sketch of the politics of the time that had
|
||
|
led up to the occasion. One of the prominent actors of the time, he
|
||
|
tells us that this meeting, composed of prominent Federalists of all
|
||
|
classes, was unusual, for--
|
||
|
|
||
|
it was a new thing in that day for the clergy and laymen to meet
|
||
|
on the same level and co-operate. It was the first time there had
|
||
|
ever been such a consultation in our day. The ministers had always
|
||
|
managed things themselves, for in those days the ministers were
|
||
|
all politicians. They had always been used to it from the
|
||
|
beginning.... On election day they had a festival, and, fact is,
|
||
|
when they got together they would talk over who should be
|
||
|
Governor, and who Lieutenant-Governor, and who in the Upper House,
|
||
|
and their councils would prevail. Now it was a part of the old
|
||
|
steady habits of the state ... that the Lieutenant-Governor should
|
||
|
succeed to the governorship. And it was the breaking up of this
|
||
|
custom by the civilians, against the influence of the clergy, that
|
||
|
first shook the stability of the Standing Order and the Federal
|
||
|
party in the state. Lieutenant Governor Treadwell (1810) was a
|
||
|
stiff man, and the time had come when many nlen did not like that
|
||
|
sort of thing. He had been active in the enforcement of the
|
||
|
Sabbath laws, and had brought on himself the odium of the opposing
|
||
|
party. Hence of the civilians of our party, David Daggett and
|
||
|
other wire-pullers, worked to have him superseded, and Roger
|
||
|
Griswold, the ablest man in Congress, put in his stead. That was
|
||
|
rank rebellion against the ministerial candidate. But Daggett
|
||
|
controlled the whole of Fairfleld County bar, and Griswold was a
|
||
|
favorite with the lawyers, and the Democrats helped them because
|
||
|
they saw how it would work; so there was no election by the
|
||
|
people, and Treadwell was acting Governor till 1811, when Griswold
|
||
|
was chosen. The lawyers, in talking about it, said: "We have
|
||
|
served the clergy long enough; we must take another man, and they
|
||
|
must look out for themselves." Throwing Treadwell over in 1811
|
||
|
broke the charm and divided the party; persons of third-rate
|
||
|
ability on our side who wanted to be somebody deserted; all the
|
||
|
infidels in the state had long been leading on that side ... minor
|
||
|
sects had swollen and complained of certificates. Our efforts to
|
||
|
reform morals by law were unpopular. [t]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally the Episcopalians went over to the Democrats. The Episcopal
|
||
|
split was due to a foolish and arbitrary proceeding on the part of the
|
||
|
Federals. In the spring of 1814, a petition was presented to the
|
||
|
General Assembly for the incorporation of the Phoanix Bank of
|
||
|
Hartford, offering "in conformity to the precedents in other states,
|
||
|
to pay for the privilege of the incorporation herein prayed for, the
|
||
|
sum of sixty thousand dollars to be collected (being a Premium to be
|
||
|
advanced by the stockholders) as fast as the successive instalments of
|
||
|
the capital stock shall be paid in; and to be appropriated, if in the
|
||
|
opinion of your Honors it shall be deemed expedient, in such
|
||
|
proportion as shall by your Honors be thought proper, to the use of
|
||
|
the Corporation of Yale College, of the Medical Institution,
|
||
|
established in the city of New Haven, and to the corporation of the
|
||
|
Trustees of the Fund of the Bishop of the Episcopal church in this
|
||
|
state, or for any purpose whatever, which to your Honors may seem
|
||
|
best." The capital asked for was $1,500,000. "The purpose of this
|
||
|
offer [u] a was a double one,--creating an interest in favor of the
|
||
|
Bank Charter among Episcopalians and retaining their influence on the
|
||
|
side of the Charter Government, as there was no inconsiderable amount
|
||
|
of talent among them." The Bishop's Fund, slowly gathering since 1799,
|
||
|
amounted to barely $6000. This bonus would give it a good start, and
|
||
|
conciliate the Episcopalians, still indignant at the refusal of the
|
||
|
Assembly to incorporate their college. When presented to the Assembly,
|
||
|
the Lower House favored the bank charter; the Council, rejecting it,
|
||
|
appointed a committee to consider its request. They soon originated an
|
||
|
act of incorporation, granting a capital of $1,000,000, and ordered
|
||
|
the bonus to be paid into the treasury. An act of incorporation,
|
||
|
rather than a petition, was, they claimed, the way established by
|
||
|
custom of granting bank charters. The same session of the legislature
|
||
|
originated bills giving $20,000 to the Medical Institution of Yale
|
||
|
College, and one of the same amount to the Bishop's Fund, "in
|
||
|
conformity to the offer of the petitioners for the Phonix Bank, and
|
||
|
out of the first moneys received from it as a bonus." The bill for
|
||
|
the medical school was passed unanimously by the House; that for the
|
||
|
Bishop's Fund uniformly voted down. [v] The Episcopalians, to whom the
|
||
|
Republicans were quick to offer their sympathy, asserted that by the
|
||
|
"grant to Yale the legislature had _committed themselves in good
|
||
|
faith_ to make the grant to the two other corporations connected
|
||
|
with it in the same petition." [w] Stripped of formal and courteous
|
||
|
wording, the petition, both in letter and in spirit, had offered its
|
||
|
conditions to all, if accepted by one; or, if refused at all, the
|
||
|
opportunity to divert the money from all three recipients to some
|
||
|
other and quite different use which should be approved by the
|
||
|
legislature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The further bad faith of both branches of the Assembly increased the
|
||
|
enmity of the Episcopalians. In the spring of 1815, they petitioned
|
||
|
for their first installment of $10,000. They were told that the
|
||
|
treasury was empty, and that war time was no time to attend to such
|
||
|
matters. In the fall, in answer to their second petition, they found
|
||
|
the Lower House still hostile; the majority of the Council, including
|
||
|
the governor, in their favor, until the discussion came up, when the
|
||
|
Council, with one exception, sided with the House. The explanation of
|
||
|
the change appeared to the Episcopalians to be due to the fact that
|
||
|
during the session the Medical School had petitioned for the balance
|
||
|
of the $30,000, and seemed likely to receive it at the spring
|
||
|
meeting. This was too much for the Episcopalians, and thereafter the
|
||
|
Democrats claimed nine tenths of their vote. The sect was estimated in
|
||
|
1816 to contain from one eleventh to one thirteenth of the
|
||
|
population. The Democratic-Republicans had won over discontented
|
||
|
radicals, a majority of the dissatisfied dissenters, a few
|
||
|
conservatives, and now the indignant Episcopalians. Their political
|
||
|
hopes rose higher, but the War of 1812-1814 interfered, substituting
|
||
|
national interests for local ones, yet all the while adding recruits
|
||
|
to the Republican ranks, so that at its close there was a strong
|
||
|
party. There was also a Federal faction in process of
|
||
|
disintegration. The result was that when the constitutional reform
|
||
|
movement again became the issue of the day, though supported by the
|
||
|
Republicans, the question at issue soon drew to itself a new political
|
||
|
combine which under various forms kept the name of the Toleration
|
||
|
Party, and which eventually won the victory for religious freedom and
|
||
|
disestablishment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] This party, called for short "Republican," stood for the
|
||
|
principles known as "democratic,"--the appellation of the party itself
|
||
|
since 1828. This was the school of Jefferson.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] There were men of mark among the Anti-Federalist leaders, such as
|
||
|
William Williams of Lebanon, a signer of the Declaration, Gen. James
|
||
|
Wadsworth of Durham, and Gen. Erastus Wolcott of East Windsor,--these
|
||
|
three were members of the Council; Dr. Benjamin Gale of Killingworth,
|
||
|
Joseph Hopkins, Esq., of Waterbury, Col. Peter Bulkley of Colchester,
|
||
|
Col. William Worthington of Saybrook, and Capt. Abraham Granger of
|
||
|
Suffield. At the ratification of the Constitntution the Tote stood 128
|
||
|
to 40. Afterwards for about ten years, in the conduct of state
|
||
|
politics, there was little friction, for in local matters the
|
||
|
Anti-Federalists were generally conservatives."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] Two deputies were allowed every town rated at $60,000. In 1785
|
||
|
Oliver Ellsworth had prepared a bill limiting towns of L20,000 or
|
||
|
under to one deputy. It passed the Senate, but was defeated in the
|
||
|
House.--_The Constitution of Connecticut_, 1901, State Series,
|
||
|
p. 105.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] In his pamphlet Dr. Gale advises that each town nominate one man,
|
||
|
and from the nominations in each county, the General Assembly elect
|
||
|
two, four or six delegates from each county to meet and frame a new
|
||
|
constitution, since "any legislature is too numerous a body, and too
|
||
|
unskilled in the science of government to properly perform such a
|
||
|
task" (p. 29).--J. Hammond Trumbull, _Hist. Notes on the
|
||
|
Constitution of Conn._, p. 17, and Wolcott's Manuscript in
|
||
|
_Mass. Hist. Soc. Col._ vol. iv.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] A similar method of election applied to the representatives in
|
||
|
Congress. Eighteen names were voted on in May for nomination, of which
|
||
|
the seven highest were listed for election in September.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] Bishop Seabury's church, St. James of New London, had neglected to
|
||
|
ohserve President Washington's proclamation of a national thanksgiving
|
||
|
on February 19, 1795, which fell in Lent. This roused some antagonism,
|
||
|
and was made the subject of a sharp and rather censorious newspaper
|
||
|
attack upon the Episcopalians. At the same time a few Federal
|
||
|
Congregationalists were further stirred by Bishop Seabury's signature,
|
||
|
viz. "Samuel, Bishop of Connecticut and Rhode Island," to a
|
||
|
proclamation that the prelate had issued, urging a contribution in
|
||
|
behalf of the Algerine captives. This signature was regarded as a
|
||
|
"pompous expression of priestly pride." Governor Huntington was a
|
||
|
personal friend of Bishop Seabury. Moreover, at this particular time,
|
||
|
the congregation to which the Governor belonged in Norwich was
|
||
|
worshiping in the Episcopal church during the rebuilding of their own
|
||
|
meeting-house, which had been destroyed by fire. The Governor had
|
||
|
previously been approached with a suggestion that the fasts and feasts
|
||
|
of the Congregationalists and Episcopalians should be made to
|
||
|
coincide, or at least that the annual fast day should not be appointed
|
||
|
for any time between Easter Week and Trinity Sunday, and that the
|
||
|
public thanksgivings, when occasion required them, should, if
|
||
|
possible, not be appointed during Lent. In 1795, the annual fast day
|
||
|
would have fallen upon the Thursday in Holy Week. In order to avoid
|
||
|
laying any stress upon the sanctity of certain days of the week, and
|
||
|
because Governor Huntington wished to turn the public mind away from
|
||
|
the petty controversy, he appointed the fast day on Good Friday. In
|
||
|
1796, the annual fast fell in the Lenten season. In 1797, in order to
|
||
|
avoid having the fast interfere with the regular sessions of the
|
||
|
County Courts, and at the same time to avoid its falling in Easter
|
||
|
week, Governor Trumbull appointed it again on Good Friday. The
|
||
|
arrangement was accepted with satisfaction by the Episcopalians and
|
||
|
with no objections from the Congregationalists, and thereafter it
|
||
|
became the custom. (Bishop Seabury had been elected to the bishopric
|
||
|
of Rhode Island in 1790.)--William DeLoss Love, Jr., _Fasts and
|
||
|
Thanksgivings of New England_, pp. 346-361.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Early in his career he had written a versification of the Psalms,
|
||
|
in 1788 his _Conquest of Canaan_, and later _Triumph of
|
||
|
Infidelity_. President Dwight taught the seniors rhetoric, logic,
|
||
|
ethics, and metaphysics, and the graduate students in theology. In
|
||
|
1805 he was appointed to the professorship of the latter study.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] Dr. Dwight's _Theology Explained_ was not published until
|
||
|
1818, after his death, and his _Travels_ not until 1821-22.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] Except among the backwoodsmen of Kentucky in 1799-1803.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] The Society was granted a charter in 1802. In 1797 interest in the
|
||
|
missions was intensified by the free distribution of seventeen hundred
|
||
|
copies of the report of missionary work in England and America.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] The Rev. Jedidiah Champion of Lifcchfield, an ardent Federalist,
|
||
|
on the Sunday following the news of the election of Adams and
|
||
|
Jefferson, prayed fervently for the president-elect, closing with the
|
||
|
words, "0 Lord! wilt Thou bestow upon the Vice-President a double
|
||
|
portion of Thy grace, _for Thou knowest he needs it._" This was
|
||
|
mild, for Jefferson was considered by the New England clergy to be
|
||
|
almost the equal of Napoleon, whom one of them named the "Scourge of
|
||
|
God."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] Pierpont Edwards, b. April 8, 1750, graduated at Princeton, 1768,
|
||
|
died April 5, 1826.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Timothy Dwight, b. May 14, 1752, died January 11, 1817.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Aaron Burr, b. February 6, 1756, Vice-President 1801-05, died
|
||
|
September 14, 1836.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Theodore Dwight, b. December 15, 1754, educated for the law under
|
||
|
Pierpont Edwards, and practiced it for a time in New York city with
|
||
|
his cousin, Aaron Burr. He broke the partnership because of difference
|
||
|
in politics, and went to Hartford. He became a member of the
|
||
|
governor's council, 1809-1815; secretary of the Hartford Convention,
|
||
|
1814. He established the _Connecticut Mirror_ in 1809; founded
|
||
|
and conducted the _Albany Daily Advertiser_, 1815-16, and the
|
||
|
_Daily Advocate_, New York, 1816-36. He died June 12, 1846.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] The crimes against religion punishable by law were Blasphemy (by
|
||
|
whipping, fine, or imprisonment); Atheism, Polytheism, Unitarianism,
|
||
|
Apostaey (by loss of employment, whether ecclesiastical, civil, or
|
||
|
military, for the first offense).--_Swift's System of Law_, ii,
|
||
|
320, 321.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] _Oration delivered in Wallingford on the eleventh of March 1801,
|
||
|
before the Republicans of the State of Connecticut at the General
|
||
|
Thanksgiving for the election of Thomas Jefferson to the Presidency,
|
||
|
and of Aaron Burr to the Vice-Presidency, of the United States of
|
||
|
America 1801._
|
||
|
|
||
|
See the appendix to the Oration for an account of the New Haven
|
||
|
episode.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[o] "Connecticutensis," or David Daggett, also replied in _Three
|
||
|
Letters to Abraham Bishop._ Theodore Dwight's _Oration at New
|
||
|
Haven before the Society of the Cincinnati, July 7, 1801,_ took up
|
||
|
the constitutionality of the charter government.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[p] Later chief justice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[q] Windham County was steadily Republican after this election.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[r] Major William Judd of Farmington, Jabez H. Tomlinson of Stratford,
|
||
|
Augur Judson of Huntington, Hezekiah Goodrich of Chatham, and
|
||
|
Nathaniel Manning of Windham.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[s] Federalist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[t] To preserve our institutions and reform public morals, to bring
|
||
|
back the keeping of the Sabbath was our aim ... We tried to do it by
|
||
|
resuscitating and enforcing the law (That was our mistake, but we did
|
||
|
not know it then.) and wherever I went I pushed that thing; Bear up
|
||
|
the laws--execute the laws.... We took hold of it in the Association
|
||
|
at Fairfield, June, 1814, ... recommending among other things a
|
||
|
petition to Congress." (_Autobiography_, i, 268.) At this meeting
|
||
|
originated the famous petition against Sunday mail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dr. Beeeher urged a domestic missionary society to build up waste
|
||
|
places in Connecticut. His sermon "Reformation of Morals practicable
|
||
|
and desirable" warned against "profane and profligate men of corrupt
|
||
|
minds and to every good work reprobate."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[u] Judge Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[v] The final speech in favor of the bill was made by Nathan Smith, a
|
||
|
lawyer of New Haven. When he had finished his eloquent setting forth
|
||
|
of the benefits and dangers attendant upon passing the bill, there was
|
||
|
an unusual and solemn silence. Dr. Gillett says if the bill had been
|
||
|
promptly put to vote it would probably have been passed, but the
|
||
|
churchlike silence was broken by a shrill voice piping forth,
|
||
|
"Mr. Speaker, Mr. Speaker, what shall we sing?" The laughter which
|
||
|
followed broke the orator's charm and sealed the fate of the bill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[w] See _Columbian Register_ of June 17, 1820, for a full
|
||
|
account of the Bishop's Fund and the final award of the bonus.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XV
|
||
|
|
||
|
DISESTABLISHMENT
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
No distinction shall I make between Trojan and Tyrian.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Federal grip upon Connecticut, one of the last strongholds of that
|
||
|
party, was weakening. Preceding the deflection of the Episcopalians
|
||
|
in Connecticut, there had been throughout New England a strong Federal
|
||
|
opposition to the national government and its commands during the War
|
||
|
of 1812. Such conduct had shattered party prestige, and when its
|
||
|
opposition culminated in the Hartford Convention of 1814, it wrote its
|
||
|
own death-warrant. The Republicans, on the contrary, had dropped local
|
||
|
questions of constitutional reform and religious liberty, preferring
|
||
|
to bend all their energies to the support of the general
|
||
|
government. When as a national party they humbled England and brought
|
||
|
the war to a victorious close, the contrast of their loyalty to state
|
||
|
and national interests steadily drew the popular favor. In the era of
|
||
|
good feeling and prosperity that followed, the great national
|
||
|
political parties dissolved somewhat and crystallized anew. In
|
||
|
Connecticut a similar change took place in local politics. In the
|
||
|
years immediately following the war, the Democratic-Republicans, the
|
||
|
majority of the dissenters, and the dissatisfied among the
|
||
|
Federalists, formed different coalitions that, under the general name
|
||
|
of Toleration, [a] opposed the Standing Order. In 1816 the agitation
|
||
|
for constitutional reform was revived, and after three years resulted
|
||
|
in the overthrow of the Federalists and the triumph of a peaceful
|
||
|
revolution whereby religious liberty was assured.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The conduct of the Federal party, both within and without Connecticut
|
||
|
from 1808 to 1815, was quite as much the real cause of their downfall
|
||
|
in the state as that coalition between clergy and lawyers described by
|
||
|
Dr. Beecher as causing the breakdown of party machinery and its
|
||
|
ultimate ruin. Glancing somewhat hastily at some of the most
|
||
|
far-reaching acts of the Federalists, we find first the Federal
|
||
|
opposition to the embargo that from December 22, 1807, for over a year
|
||
|
paralyzed New England commerce. In February, 1809, John Quincy Adams,
|
||
|
who had recently resigned the Massachusetts senatorship because of his
|
||
|
unpopular support of the embargo, informed President Jefferson that
|
||
|
the measure could no longer be enforced. He assured the President that
|
||
|
the New England Federalist leaders, privily encouraged by England,
|
||
|
were preparing to break that section off from the union of the states
|
||
|
if the embargo were not speedily repealed. This information, whether
|
||
|
accurate or not, so influenced the President and his advisers that the
|
||
|
Non-intercourse Act, applying only to France and England, replaced the
|
||
|
embargo, whose repeal took effect from March 4, 1809. In the following
|
||
|
December, Madison's administration (in the belief that France had
|
||
|
withdrawn her hostile decrees) limited non-intercourse to England
|
||
|
alone, after having vainly urged upon her a repeal of her Orders in
|
||
|
Council. With the embargo lifted, New England commerce revived, and
|
||
|
Connecticut seamen, Connecticut farmers, [b] Connecticut merchants,
|
||
|
together with artisans of all the allied industries that were called
|
||
|
upon in the fitting out of ships and cargoes, enjoyed two years of
|
||
|
prosperity. The period was given over to money-getting, and the
|
||
|
ordinary rules of national or commercial honesty were flung to the
|
||
|
winds. Napoleon sold licenses to British vessels to supply his
|
||
|
famishing soldiers stationed in continental ports, while forged
|
||
|
American and British papers were openly sold in London. So enormous
|
||
|
were the profits of a successful voyage that the possibility of
|
||
|
capture only added zest to the American ventures and contributed not a
|
||
|
little to the daring of the privateers in the years of the war. So
|
||
|
enriched was the state that by May, 1811, Connecticut had so far
|
||
|
recovered from her late financial distress that the "state owed no
|
||
|
debt and every tax was paid," while her exports were: domestic,
|
||
|
$994,216; foreign, $38,138, or a total of $1,032,354.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ninety days' embargo of 1812, the declaration of war (June
|
||
|
18,1812), and the patrolling of Long Island Sound by a British fleet,
|
||
|
brought such desolation to Connecticut that ships again lay rotting at
|
||
|
the wharves, ropewalks and warehouses were deserted, cargoes were
|
||
|
without carriers, and seamen were either scattered or idling about, a
|
||
|
constant menace to the public peace. National taxes to support a
|
||
|
detested war were laid upon the people at a time when their incomes
|
||
|
were ceasing, and their homes and property were laid bare to a
|
||
|
plundering enemy. "A nation without fleets, without armies, with an
|
||
|
impoverished treasury, with a frontier by sea and land extending many
|
||
|
hundreds of miles, feebly defended" by fortifications old and
|
||
|
neglected, had rushed headlong into war with the strongest nation of
|
||
|
the earth without "counting the cost." Such was the opinion of the
|
||
|
Federalists everywhere and, at first, of the large wing of the
|
||
|
Republican party who preferred peace. The Federalists of Connecticut,
|
||
|
when they saw a small majority sweep the nation into the conflict with
|
||
|
Great Britain, believed the war threatened liberty of speech. They
|
||
|
feared military despotism, when the general government demanded the
|
||
|
control of the militia; and that the war would prostrate" their civil
|
||
|
and religious institutions by increasing taxation and loss of income."
|
||
|
[c] They feared "national dismemberment" when the war measures,
|
||
|
together with the presence of the British fleet blockading the coast,
|
||
|
alternately angered the people almost to rebellion against an
|
||
|
apparently indifferent central government, or drove them into plans
|
||
|
for self-defense. Much of the opposition in New England is in part
|
||
|
accounted for by the rebound towards Federalism which the declaration
|
||
|
of the war caused, and by the belief that the national election of
|
||
|
1812 would be a Federal victory. Though it turned out to be a defeat,
|
||
|
it consolidated and so strengthened that party in New England that
|
||
|
before the close of 1813 all the state executives were Federalists and
|
||
|
were arrayed against the administration. The Republicans kept their
|
||
|
hold upon the minority, partly by the diversion of the capital, thrown
|
||
|
out of the carrying trade, into privateer ventures, war supplies, and
|
||
|
manufactures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the beginning of the war, Governor Griswold, of Connecticut, backed
|
||
|
by both houses of the legislature, joined with Governor Strong of
|
||
|
Massachusetts (supported only by the House of Representatives) in a
|
||
|
refusal to place the militia under regular officers of the United
|
||
|
States army. They refused also to allow the quotas called for by
|
||
|
General Dearborn (under the Act of Congress of April 10, 1812), for
|
||
|
the expedition against Canada, to leave the state. These executives
|
||
|
claimed that the troops were not needed to execute the laws of the
|
||
|
United States, to suppress insurrection, or to repel invasion,--the
|
||
|
only three constitutional reasons giving the President the right to
|
||
|
consider himself "commander in chief of the militia of the several
|
||
|
states." [207] By taking such a stand, the state governors assumed to
|
||
|
decide whether a necessity existed that gave the President his
|
||
|
constitutional right to call out the militia. Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge,
|
||
|
in his "Memoir of Governor Strong," exonerates that executive by
|
||
|
pleading his intense convictions of duty, his loyal patriotism, and
|
||
|
his later efficient aid [d] in defending the eastern coast of the
|
||
|
state. Mr. Lodge reminds his reader that the governor's position was
|
||
|
supported by the best lawyers, whom he had been at great pains to
|
||
|
consult concerning state and federal rights, which, at that period,
|
||
|
had not been so carefully examined and discriminated between as
|
||
|
since. The same pleas may be urged for Governors Griswold [e] and
|
||
|
Smith. The Connecticut legislature immediately passed an act for
|
||
|
raising twenty-six hundred men for state defense under state
|
||
|
officers. Governor Griswold's successor, Gov. J. Cotton Smith, when
|
||
|
Decatur was blockaded in the Thames, when the descent upon Saybrook
|
||
|
was made, at the attack upon Stonington, and during those months when
|
||
|
the enemy hovered upon the long exposed coast line, kept a large force
|
||
|
of militia ready for duty. The state supported these troops, for, in
|
||
|
the wrangle over officership, the national government refused the
|
||
|
promised supplies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The New England Federalists soon found seven great reasons for party
|
||
|
action. They were the uncertain success of the war by land; the great
|
||
|
commercial distress; [f] the possession by the enemy of a large part
|
||
|
of Maine; the publication of the terms upon which England would grant
|
||
|
peace; [g] the proposed legislation in the fall of 1814, providing for
|
||
|
the increase of the United States army by draft or conscription; the
|
||
|
proposed modified form of impressment of sailors; and the bill
|
||
|
allowing army officers to enlist minors and apprentices over eighteen
|
||
|
years of age, with or without consent of parents or guardians. [h]
|
||
|
These measures drove the New England Federalists, at the call of
|
||
|
Massachusetts, to the formation of the Hartford Convention. The
|
||
|
Connecticut legislature approved the sending of delegates by a vote of
|
||
|
153 to 36 opposed. Massachusetts and Rhode Island answered with like
|
||
|
enthusiasm. New Hampshire and Vermont hesitated, but the counties of
|
||
|
Cheshire and Grafton in the former state and of Windham in the latter
|
||
|
sent each a delegate to the convention. Rhode Island sent four
|
||
|
delegates and Massachusetts twelve, of whom George Cabot was elected
|
||
|
president of the convention. Connecticut furnished the secretary of
|
||
|
the convention, and later its historian in Theodore Dwight of
|
||
|
Hartford. She also sent seven other delegates, namely: Chauncey
|
||
|
Goodrich, mayor of Hartford, and from 1814 to 1815 governor of the
|
||
|
state; John Treadwell, ex-governor; James Hillhouse, who had served as
|
||
|
United States representative and senator; Zephaniah Swift, United
|
||
|
States representative and later chief judge of superior court of
|
||
|
Connecticut; Calvin Goddard, United States representative; Nathaniel
|
||
|
Smith, United States representative and later judge of the supreme
|
||
|
court; and Roger Minot Sherman, a distinguished lawyer and member of
|
||
|
the state legislature. All the delegates to the Hartford Convention
|
||
|
were men of high character, and most of them well-known leaders of the
|
||
|
Federal party. The convention lasted for three weeks, and, as its
|
||
|
sessions were conducted with the greatest secrecy, many prejudicial
|
||
|
rumors and surmises arose. The Massachusetts summons had bidden the
|
||
|
delegates convene for measures of safety "not repugnant to our
|
||
|
obligations as members of the Union," and the convention acknowledged
|
||
|
that it found the greatest difficulty in "devising means of defense
|
||
|
against dangers, and of relief from oppressions proceeding from the
|
||
|
act of their own Government without violating constitutional
|
||
|
principles or disappointing the hopes of a suffering and injured
|
||
|
people." The secrecy, the known antagonism to the Administration, the
|
||
|
knowledge of New England's early disbelief in the cohesive power of
|
||
|
the Union, and the convention's demands and resolutions, combined to
|
||
|
give a bad and traitorous reputation to the Hartford Convention that
|
||
|
has never been absolutely cleared away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As early as 1796, over the signature "Pelham," there had appeared in
|
||
|
the "Hartford Courant" a series of articles written with great ability
|
||
|
and keen foresight as to the difficulties that would arise in making
|
||
|
any impartial legislation for a nation composed of parts having such
|
||
|
diverse economic systems as those of the North and the South. The
|
||
|
articles suggested the development of two nations instead of
|
||
|
one. During the War of 1812, various suggestions had been thrown out
|
||
|
by different newspapers enlarging upon the resources of New England
|
||
|
and hinting at a separate peace with England. There were not a few
|
||
|
who, upon learning of the resolutions of the convention, felt that
|
||
|
"Pelham" was a close adviser of its measures if not one of its
|
||
|
delegates. Public opinion was so wrought up by the assumed disloyalty
|
||
|
of the Hartford Convention that in 1815 it forced the publication of
|
||
|
the convention's brief and non-committal "Journal." From it little
|
||
|
more was learned than that the convention had resolved that the
|
||
|
different states should take measures to protect themselves against
|
||
|
draft by the national government, that New England should be allowed
|
||
|
to defend herself, and for that purpose should have returned to each
|
||
|
of her states a reasonable share of the national taxes to meet the
|
||
|
expense of their arming. In addition, each New England state should
|
||
|
set apart a certain portion of her militia under her governor to give
|
||
|
aid in cases of extremity should she be called upon by the governor of
|
||
|
another state. At the close of the convention, delegates were
|
||
|
appointed to proceed to Washington with these resolutions and also
|
||
|
with six proposed amendments [i] to the national constitution. These
|
||
|
demands and resolves were reinforced by the proposal that should the
|
||
|
Administration refuse to consider the propositions, another convention
|
||
|
should be held in the following summer to consider further action.
|
||
|
When the delegates arrived in Washington with the resolutions, of
|
||
|
which two state legislatures had meantime approved, the news of peace
|
||
|
had been declared. In the general jubilation they saw fit to leave
|
||
|
their message undelivered. For years the taint of rebellion clung to
|
||
|
the Hartford Convention, and forced its secretary, in 1833, to publish
|
||
|
his "History," a defense of its members and their measures. Even this
|
||
|
did not remove the stigma. The delegates had in their own communities
|
||
|
always retained their reputation for high personal character, but
|
||
|
politically they were irretrievably ruined by their participation in
|
||
|
the Hartford gathering. They had dealt their party in their states a
|
||
|
mortal blow, and the Hartford Convention has been well named "the
|
||
|
grave of the Federal party."
|
||
|
|
||
|
However much the members of the convention swathed their sentiments in
|
||
|
expressions of allegiance to the Union, at least until extreme
|
||
|
provocation should force a separation; or however much they declared
|
||
|
their conviction that peace, not war, should be the time chosen for
|
||
|
such a separation, and that, first of all, distinction should be
|
||
|
carefully made between a bad constitution and a bad government, and a
|
||
|
good constitution or government badly administered, there was no doubt
|
||
|
but that they proposed to push nullification to the point of active
|
||
|
resistance within what they considered their legal rights. They had
|
||
|
also proposed a set of amendments which they knew stood no chance of
|
||
|
meeting with approval from any number of the states. Moreover the
|
||
|
Hartford Convention, whatever its intentions, seriously alarmed and
|
||
|
embarrassed the Administration. Because of the consequences of their
|
||
|
policy, its members were culpable in the opinion of all who hold that,
|
||
|
in the distress of war, to hamper one's own government is to lend
|
||
|
assistance to the enemy. [j]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The war at first was not popular, but made friends for itself as it
|
||
|
progressed. Connecticut sailors were among the seamen that England had
|
||
|
impressed, and Connecticut captains had surrendered ships and rich
|
||
|
cargoes at the command of the mistress of the seas. But the naval
|
||
|
triumphs of the first year caught the popular fancy, for "not until
|
||
|
the Guerriere's colors were struck to the Constitution had a British
|
||
|
frigate been humiliated on the ocean." The victories on land were
|
||
|
about equally balanced. The disclosures of English perfidy in
|
||
|
attempting through her secret agents [k] to detach New England from
|
||
|
the Union before war should break out, and during the conflict, by
|
||
|
favoritism to Massachusetts, helped to increase the supporters of the
|
||
|
war policy. Further, the war brought out the latent powers of the
|
||
|
nation, both for defense and for prosperity. The gradual introduction
|
||
|
of machinery since 1800 had enlarged the small manufactories of
|
||
|
Connecticut, and begun the exchange of products between near
|
||
|
localities. But before the War of 1812 no manufacturing in Connecticut
|
||
|
had achieved a notable success. [l] There was invention and skill, [m]
|
||
|
and often profit, in the home market for the coarser products, but
|
||
|
there was a general tendency to prefer imported goods of finer make.
|
||
|
The war cut off such supplies, and the need created a paying demand
|
||
|
and developed an ability to supply it. The political party that
|
||
|
conducted the war to a successful finish developed the policy of
|
||
|
protection of infant industries, and the tariff of 1816 gave birth to
|
||
|
Connecticut as a manufacturing state. The repeal of the obnoxious war
|
||
|
measures, the speedy reduction of the national expenses, and the
|
||
|
promise of prosperity smoothed out lingering resentment. The Federal
|
||
|
party was virtually extinct outside of its last strongholds in New
|
||
|
England and Delaware. In the Era of Good Feeling following the war the
|
||
|
whole people composed one party, with principles neither those of the
|
||
|
original Federal party nor those of the original Republican party, but
|
||
|
a combination of both." [n]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In New England during the War of 1812, as in the Revolution, the
|
||
|
clergy had been the nucleus of the local dominant party, and with its
|
||
|
leaders had been bitter opponents of the "unrighteous war." [208]
|
||
|
Consequently the Congregational clergy shared in the popular
|
||
|
disapproval and condemnation that overtook the Federalists. In
|
||
|
Connecticut, for a time, the Standing Order by its affiliation with
|
||
|
the Federal party prolonged its control. of the state. But the tide
|
||
|
was turning. Dr. Lyman Beecher, Dr. Dwight's able lieutenant, made
|
||
|
vigorous and laudable efforts to uphold the Dwights, the Aaron and
|
||
|
Moses, as it were, of the waning political power. The "Home Missionary
|
||
|
Society," [o] Bible societies, the "Domestic Missionary Society for
|
||
|
the Building up of Waste Places," and the many branches of the
|
||
|
"Society for the Suppression of Vice and Promotion of Good Morals" [p]
|
||
|
did much good among those who welcomed them. Where their results were
|
||
|
simply those of a morality enforced by law, they caused still greater
|
||
|
dissatisfaction with the ruling party. [q] The union of the clergy and
|
||
|
lawyers was not as influential as had been anticipated in the early
|
||
|
days of 1812. Soon after the war the clergy adopted a less vigorous
|
||
|
policy, preferring an attitude of defense against calumny and a
|
||
|
withdrawal from politics. [r]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The elections showed the change in public opinion. At the April
|
||
|
election, 1814, the Federals reelected Governor Smith, while the
|
||
|
Republican candidate, Mr. Edward Boardman, received 1629 votes. The
|
||
|
following year, notwithstanding Governor Smith's reelection, Mr.
|
||
|
Boardman polled 4876 votes, and the Republicans made a gain of twenty
|
||
|
in the House of Representatives, while in the fall nominations for
|
||
|
Assistants, the highest Federal vote was 9008 and that of the
|
||
|
Republicans was 4268. [209]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In January, 1816, "a meeting of citizens from various parts of the
|
||
|
state" was held in New Haven to agree upon a nomination for governor
|
||
|
and lieutenant-governor, which would bind together the Republicans and
|
||
|
such of the Federalists as were opposed to the Standing Order. Oliver
|
||
|
Wolcott and Jonathan Ingersll were unanimously agreed upon. Oliver
|
||
|
Wolcott had been living out of the state for fourteen years, and for
|
||
|
most of that time had not been in politics. His Republican supporters
|
||
|
had had time to forget him as a staunch Federalist, and remembered him
|
||
|
only as a man of parts who had held the secretaryship of the treasury
|
||
|
under Washington and Adams, and who had "opposed the Hartford
|
||
|
Convention; like Washington was a friend to the _Union_, a foe to
|
||
|
rebellion; with mild means resisted bigotry, with a glowing heart
|
||
|
favored toleration." [210] As he had approved the policy of the
|
||
|
general government since the days of Madison, he was pronounced an
|
||
|
available candidate. A good Congregationalist, he would not offend the
|
||
|
Federalists, would be acceptable to the Republicans, and would stand
|
||
|
to the capitalists and farmers as favorable to a protective tariff and
|
||
|
to more equitable taxation within the state. The prestige given him by
|
||
|
the executive abilities of his father and grandfather in the
|
||
|
gubernatorial chair also counted in his favor. The candidate for
|
||
|
lieutenant-governor was Jonathan Ingersoll, a Federalist, an eminent
|
||
|
New Haven lawyer, a prominent Episcopalian, senior warden of Trinity
|
||
|
Church, and chairman of the Bishop's Fund. He had had political
|
||
|
training in the Council, 1792-1798, and had been judge of the Superior
|
||
|
Court, 1798-1801, and again from 1811 to 1816. His nomination was the
|
||
|
price of the Episcopal vote, for "it was deemed expedient by giving
|
||
|
the Episcopalians a fair opportunity to unite with the Republicans, to
|
||
|
attempt to affect such change in the Government as should afford some
|
||
|
prospect of satisfaction to their united demands." [s]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The "Connecticut Herald," indignant at the Assembly's conduct in the
|
||
|
Phoenix Bank affair, left the Federal party and independently
|
||
|
nominated Jonathan Ingersoll for lieutenant-governor instead of the
|
||
|
regular candidate of that party, Chauncey Goodrich. The "American
|
||
|
Mercury," the organ of the American Toleration party, the union of
|
||
|
Republicans, dissenters, and dissatisfied, in order "to produce that
|
||
|
concord and harmony among parties which have too long, and without any
|
||
|
real diversity of interests, been disturbed, and which every honest
|
||
|
man must earnestly desire to see restored," nominated for governor,
|
||
|
Oliver Wolcott; for lieutenant-governor, Jonathan Ingersoll. The
|
||
|
Federal candidate for the executive was Governor John Cotton Smith, up
|
||
|
for reelection. The Tolerationists failed by a few hundred votes to
|
||
|
seat their candidate for the executive, with the result that the
|
||
|
election of 1816 raised to office Governor Smith and
|
||
|
Lieutenant-Governor Ingersoll. Governor Smith received 11,589 votes,
|
||
|
Mr. Wolcott 10,170, while Lieutenant-Governor Ingersoll polled a
|
||
|
majority of 1453 over his opponent, Mr. Calvin Goddard. [t] It was the
|
||
|
first time that a dissenter had held so high an office. The
|
||
|
Federalists might have seized the opportunity to renew their former
|
||
|
friendship with the Episcopalians had it not been for their
|
||
|
stubbornness and for their old fear of Churchmen in political
|
||
|
office. At the October town meetings, the returns from ninety-three
|
||
|
towns gave a Federal vote of 7995 and a Republican of 6315 for
|
||
|
representatives, with a Federal majority of about thirty in the
|
||
|
House. [2ll]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Federalists, realizing that the Episcopal vote was almost lost to
|
||
|
them, that their domestic policy was in disfavor, and that their
|
||
|
conduct during the war had damaged them and was leading to their
|
||
|
downfall in Connecticut even as in the nation, resolved upon a
|
||
|
desperate measure to conciliate a larger number of the dissenters.
|
||
|
This was the Act of October, 1816, for the Support of Literature and
|
||
|
Religion. Briefly, it divided the balance of the money which the
|
||
|
nation owed Connecticut for expenses during the war, namely $145,000,
|
||
|
among the various denominations. To the Congregationalists it gave in
|
||
|
round numbers, and including the grant to Yale, $68,000; to the
|
||
|
Episcopalians, $20,000; to Methodists, $12,000; and to Baptists,
|
||
|
$18,000; to Quakers, Sandemanians, etc., nothing. [u] The Quakers were
|
||
|
assumed to be satisfied with their recent exemptions from military
|
||
|
duty upon the payment of a small tax; Sandemanians and other
|
||
|
insignificant sects to be conciliated by the act of the preceding
|
||
|
April, which repealed, after a duration of nearly one hundred and
|
||
|
eighty years, the fine of fifty cents for absence from church on
|
||
|
Sunday. The people were at last free, not only to worship as they
|
||
|
chose, but when they chose, or to omit worship. They had yet to obtain
|
||
|
equal privileges for all denominations, and exemption from enforced
|
||
|
support of religion. The passage of the Act for the Support of
|
||
|
Literature and Religion raised, as the Congregationalists ought to
|
||
|
have known it would, a violent protest from every dissenter and from
|
||
|
every political come-outer. Some of the towns in town-meetings opposed
|
||
|
the bill as unnecessary for the support of schools and clergy; as
|
||
|
wasteful, when it would be wiser to create a state fund; and as unduly
|
||
|
favorable to Yale, where the policy was to create an intellectual
|
||
|
class and not to advance learning and literature among the
|
||
|
commonalty. At Andover, February 1, 1817, Episcopalians, Baptists, and
|
||
|
Methodists met together and denounced the act because they disapproved
|
||
|
of the union of Church and State which it encouraged; because of
|
||
|
Yale's tendency to bias religion; because they all approved of the
|
||
|
voluntary support of religion; and because they all scorned such a
|
||
|
political trick as the bill appeared to them, namely, an attempt to
|
||
|
win by their acceptance of the money their apparent approval of the
|
||
|
enforced support of religion. The Baptist societies in different
|
||
|
towns met to condemn the measure on the same grounds, and on the
|
||
|
additional ones that it was unfair to the Quakers, who had no paid
|
||
|
preachers; to the Universalists, because they were numerically still
|
||
|
too small to be of political importance; and indeed to many men,
|
||
|
since, as every man had contributed to the expense of the war, every
|
||
|
man ought to be rewarded proportionally. The Methodists agreed in all
|
||
|
these criticisms, and were no more backward in denouncing a measure
|
||
|
which forced on them money they did not seek, and for a purpose of
|
||
|
which they disapproved. The Methodist Society of Glastonbury were most
|
||
|
outspoken, declaring the law--
|
||
|
|
||
|
incompatible with sound policy and inconsistent with any former
|
||
|
act of the legislature of the state; the ultimate consequence of
|
||
|
which will prove a lasting curse to vital religion, which every
|
||
|
candid and reflecting mind may easily foresee; and we view it as a
|
||
|
very bold and desperate effort to effectuate a union between
|
||
|
Church and State.... We are induced to believe that Pilate and
|
||
|
Herod, and the chief Priests are still against us,... $12,000 to
|
||
|
the contrary notwithstanding. Resolved--
|
||
|
|
||
|
(1) We don't want such reparation for being characterized as an
|
||
|
illiterate set of enthusiasts devoid of character; our clergy a
|
||
|
set of worthless ramblers, unworthy the protection of our civil
|
||
|
laws.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(2) Pity and contempt for the Legislature should be expressed for
|
||
|
bribery.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(3) We believe the money, if received, would be a lasting curse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(4) The measure was intended for politics, not religion, and was
|
||
|
a species of Tyranny.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(5) We should use our best endeavors to have the money used for
|
||
|
state expenses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(6) Thanks should be sent to the members of the Legislature who
|
||
|
had opposed the measure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All Methodists were further angered by the affront put upon them by
|
||
|
the General Assembly, which, in spite of their known determination not
|
||
|
to receive the money, appointed Methodist trustees, of whom a majority
|
||
|
were Federalists, to receive their share of the appropriation. The
|
||
|
trustees accepted the money, defending their action on the ground that
|
||
|
they believed that their claim would become void if they did not draw
|
||
|
the money, and it might then be put to a worse use. But the Methodist
|
||
|
societies did not uphold the trustees, and "regretted the committee
|
||
|
imposed on us by the Legislature of the state." The chairman of the
|
||
|
committee, the Rev. Augustus Bolles, refused to serve, and the
|
||
|
societies rejected the money. [v]
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a result of the unwelcome legislation, the Republicans received the
|
||
|
whole vote of the Methodists for the "Toleration and Reform Ticket" of
|
||
|
1817, which repeated the nominations of the preceding election. The
|
||
|
Episcopalians of course favored the reelection of Lieutenant-Governor
|
||
|
Ingersoll. One small provocation by the Congregationalists of the
|
||
|
First Church of New Haven--the attempt to place the odium of expulsion
|
||
|
upon a member who became an Episcopalian--did not tend to allay
|
||
|
feeling. The Toleration party were sure of the votes of the more
|
||
|
feeble dissenters, whose interests they promised to regard, as well as
|
||
|
of those of the Baptists and of such Federalists as disapproved of the
|
||
|
high-handed policy of the Standing Order. The Tolerationists were also
|
||
|
counting upon a steady increase of recruits from the Federal ranks as
|
||
|
soon as the appreciation of a recent attack by the legislature upon
|
||
|
the judiciary and its danger should become more and more
|
||
|
realized. Many such recruits, convinced of the necessity of
|
||
|
constitutional reform, had gathered at the general meeting of
|
||
|
Republicans held in New Haven in October, 1816, to make up the ticket
|
||
|
for the spring election of 1817. The campaign issue was "whether
|
||
|
freemen shall be tolerated in the free exercise of their religious and
|
||
|
political rights." It was met by the election of Governor Wolcott with
|
||
|
a majority of 600 votes over ex-Governor J. Cotton Smith, and by no
|
||
|
opposition to the reelection of Lieutenant-Governor Ingersoll. [w] At
|
||
|
the same election many minor Republican officials were seated, and the
|
||
|
House went Republican by an assured majority of nearly two to one, the
|
||
|
Senate remaining strongly Federal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Governor Wolcott's inaugural placed before the Assembly the following
|
||
|
subjects for consideration: (1) A new system of taxation; for, as the
|
||
|
governor pointed out, the capitation tax was equivalent to about
|
||
|
one-sixteenth of the laboring man's income. (2) Judges of the Superior
|
||
|
Court should hold their office during good behavior instead of by
|
||
|
annual appointment by the legislature. (3) There should be a complete
|
||
|
separation of legislative and judicial powers of government. (4)
|
||
|
Rights of conscience and the voluntary support of religion, though if
|
||
|
necessary with "laws providing efficient remedies for enforcing the
|
||
|
voluntary contracts for their [ministers'] support," should be
|
||
|
considered; and (5) Freedom of suffrage. In concluding, the governor
|
||
|
urged that "whenever the public mind appears to be considerably
|
||
|
agitated on these subjects, prudence requires that the legislature
|
||
|
should revise its measures, and by reasonable explanation or
|
||
|
modifications of the law, restore public confidence and tranquillity."
|
||
|
[x]
|
||
|
|
||
|
To consider briefly these various points: Taxes upon mills, machinery,
|
||
|
and manufactures needed to be light in order to secure their continued
|
||
|
existence. The necessities of war-time had created a larger market for
|
||
|
their products, but one that could not be continued after the close of
|
||
|
the war allowed European products to enter free of duty. Nor could
|
||
|
the factories exist if burdened with heavy taxes before the new tariff
|
||
|
measures of 1816 had revived these depressed industries. In
|
||
|
agriculture, taxes upon horses, oxen, stock, dairy products, and
|
||
|
increased areas of tillage handicapped the farmer. Again, the tax upon
|
||
|
fire-places, rather than upon houses, weighed heavily upon the poor
|
||
|
and the moderately well-to-do, who built small and inexpensive houses
|
||
|
with say three fireplaces, while the rich owners of older and more
|
||
|
pretentious dwellings were often rated for fewer. [y] Money was
|
||
|
scarce, rich men rare. So also was great poverty. There was a scanty
|
||
|
living for the majority. Trades were few, wages low. A farm-hand
|
||
|
averaged three shillings a day, paid in provisions. Women of all work
|
||
|
drudged for two shillings and sixpence per week, while a farm overseer
|
||
|
received a salary of seventy dollars a year. The children of people in
|
||
|
average circumstances walked barefoot to church, carrying their shoes
|
||
|
and stockings, which they put on under the shelter of the big tree
|
||
|
nearest to the meeting-house. Their fathers made one Sunday suit last
|
||
|
for years. The wealthy had small incomes, though relatively great. It
|
||
|
was whispered that Pierpont Edwards, the rich and prosperous New Haven
|
||
|
lawyer, had an income from his law practice of two thousand dollars
|
||
|
per year.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Points (2) and (3) in the governor's address were prompted by the
|
||
|
widespread interest created by the action of the legislature in
|
||
|
October, 1815, when it had set aside the conviction, by a special
|
||
|
Superior Court at Middletown, of Peter Lung for murder, on the ground
|
||
|
that the court was irregularly and illegally convened. The chief judge
|
||
|
was Zephaniah Swift of Windham, author of the "System of Connecticut
|
||
|
Laws." [z] Judge Swift appealed to the public [aa] to vindicate his
|
||
|
judicial character from the censure implied by the Assembly's
|
||
|
action. An ardent Federalist, who in the early days of statehood could
|
||
|
see no need of a better constitution than he then insisted Connecticut
|
||
|
possessed through the adoption of her ancient charter, he had long
|
||
|
opposed the ecclesiastical establishment which that charter upheld. In
|
||
|
his defense of the constitution he had maintained that "it ought to be
|
||
|
deemed an inviolable maxim that _when proper courts of law are
|
||
|
constituted, the legislature are divested of all judicial
|
||
|
authority_." [2l2] But when the legislature claimed as
|
||
|
constitutional the right to call to account any court, magistrate, or
|
||
|
other officer for misdemeanor or mal-administration, [ab] Judge Swift
|
||
|
admitted the lack of "a written constitution." He further argued that
|
||
|
the one "made up of usages and customs, had always been understood to
|
||
|
contain certain fundamental axioms which were held sacred and
|
||
|
inviolable, and which were the basis on which rested the rights of the
|
||
|
people." Of these self-evident principles one was that the three
|
||
|
branches of government--the executive, legislative, and judicial--were
|
||
|
coordinate and independent, and that the powers of one should never be
|
||
|
exercised by the other. "It ought to be held as a fundamental axiom,"
|
||
|
the judge declared, "that _the Legislature should never encroach on
|
||
|
the jurisdiction of the Judiciary,_ nor assume the province of
|
||
|
interfering in private rights, nor of overhauling the decisions of the
|
||
|
courts of law." Otherwise, "the legislature would become one great
|
||
|
arbitration that would engulf all the courts of law, [ac] and
|
||
|
_sovereign discretion_ would be 'the only rule of decision,--a
|
||
|
state of things _equally favorable to lawyers and criminals."_
|
||
|
[213]
|
||
|
|
||
|
With respect to the fifth point in the governor's address, the right
|
||
|
of suffrage, the Republicans and their allies demanded its extension
|
||
|
from householders haying real estate rated at $7 (40s.), or personal
|
||
|
estate of $134 (L40), to "men who pay small taxes, work on highways,
|
||
|
or do service in the militia."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the fall of 1817, the reform party had forced the repeal of the
|
||
|
obnoxious Stand-Up Law, and it demanded that other restrictive
|
||
|
measures should be annulled. So bitter was the Federal antagonism in
|
||
|
the Council that during all the spring session of 1817, the
|
||
|
Tolerationists loudly complained that every reform measure proposed in
|
||
|
the House was lost in the Federal Senate. The committees to which
|
||
|
parts of the governor's speech had been referred for consideration did
|
||
|
little. That on taxation made a report in the fall recommending that a
|
||
|
careful investigation of conditions and resources should be made,
|
||
|
because, as capital sought investment, in banks, manufacturing, and
|
||
|
various commercial enterprises unknown to the earlier generations,
|
||
|
[ad] the fairness of the old system of taxation was lapsing. The mixed
|
||
|
committee, including several Tolerationists and having an Episcopal
|
||
|
chairman, that was to report upon the religious situation, gave no
|
||
|
encouragement to dissenters. The spring session allowed one barren act
|
||
|
to pass, the "Act to secure equal rights, powers, and privileges to
|
||
|
Christians of all denominations in this state." It enacted that
|
||
|
henceforth certificates should be lodged with the _town clerk,_
|
||
|
and permitted a come-outer to return to the society from which he had
|
||
|
separated. In the following spring, when an attempt was made to pass a
|
||
|
bill to supersede this act, it was maintained that the law of 1817
|
||
|
"did not effect the object or answer the desire of the aggrieved
|
||
|
party," for it retained the certificate clause and continued to deny
|
||
|
to dissenters the measure of religious liberty freely accorded to the
|
||
|
Established churches.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Tolerationists were determined to carry the elections of 1818. In
|
||
|
the fall elections of 1817, they again had a majority of nearly two to
|
||
|
one in the House, and consequently the struggle was for the control of
|
||
|
the Senate. At the fall meetings, they placed in nomination their
|
||
|
candidates for senators, and all through the winter they agitated in
|
||
|
town meetings and in every other way the discussion of their
|
||
|
"Constitution and Reform Ticket." Party pamphlets were scattered
|
||
|
throughout the state. One of these, the most in favor, was "The
|
||
|
Politics of Connecticut: by a Federal Republican" (George H. Richards
|
||
|
of New London). At the spring elections of 1818, the Constitution and
|
||
|
Reform Ticket carried the day, seating the reflected governor and
|
||
|
lieutenant-governor, eight anti-Federal senators, and preserving the
|
||
|
anti-Federal majority in the House. The political revolution was
|
||
|
complete, and the preliminary steps towards the construction of a new
|
||
|
constitution were at once begun. [ae]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The governor's inaugural address specified the main task before the
|
||
|
Assembly in the following words:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a portion of the people have expressed a desire that the form
|
||
|
of civil government in this State should be revised, this highly
|
||
|
interesting subject will probably engage your [the Assembly's]
|
||
|
deliberations.... Considered merely as an instrument denning the
|
||
|
powers and duties of magistrates and rulers, the Charter may
|
||
|
justly be considered as unprovisional and imperfect. Yet it ought
|
||
|
to be recollected that what is now its greatest defect was
|
||
|
formerly a pre-eminent advantage, it being then highly important
|
||
|
to the people to acquire the greatest latitude of authority with
|
||
|
an exemption from British influence and control.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If I correctly comprehend the wishes which have been expressed by
|
||
|
a portion of our fellow citizens, they are now desirous, as the
|
||
|
sources of apprehension from external causes are at present
|
||
|
happily closed, that the Legislative, Executive and Judicial
|
||
|
authorities of their own government may be more precisely denned
|
||
|
and limited, and the rights of the people declared and
|
||
|
acknowledged. It is your province to dispose of this important
|
||
|
subject in such manner as will best promote general satisfaction
|
||
|
and tranquillity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The House appointed a select committee of five to report upon the
|
||
|
revision of the form of civil government. The Council appointed
|
||
|
Hon. Elijah Boardman (Federalist) and Hon. William Bristol
|
||
|
(Tolerationist) to act as joint committee with several gentlemen
|
||
|
selected by the House. The joint committee reported that "the present
|
||
|
was a period peculiarly auspicious for carrying into effect the wishes
|
||
|
of our fellow-citizens,--the general desire for a revision and
|
||
|
reformation of the structure of our civil government and the
|
||
|
establishment of a Constitutional Compact" and "that the organization
|
||
|
of the different branches of government, the separation of their
|
||
|
powers,the tenure of office, the elective franchise, liberty of speech
|
||
|
and of the press, freedom of conscience, trial by jury, rights which
|
||
|
relate to these deeply interesting subjects, ought not to be suffered
|
||
|
to rest on the frail foundation of legislative will." [214]
|
||
|
Immediately, the House passed a bill requiring the freemen of the
|
||
|
towns to assemble in town meeting on the following Fourth of July "to
|
||
|
elect by ballot as many delegates as said towns now choose
|
||
|
representatives to the General Assembly," said delegates to meet in
|
||
|
constitutional convention at Hartford on the fourth Wednesday of the
|
||
|
following August (Aug. 26) for "the formation of a Constitution of
|
||
|
Civil Government for the people of this state." The bill further
|
||
|
declared that the constitution when "ratified by such majority of the
|
||
|
said qualified voters, convened as aforesaid, as shall be directed by
|
||
|
said convention, shall be and remain the Supreme Law of this State."
|
||
|
An attempt was made to substitute "one delegate" for "as many
|
||
|
delegates" as the towns sent. Upon the question in the convention, as
|
||
|
to what majority should be required for ratification, there was
|
||
|
considerable diversity of opinion. "Two-thirds of the whole number of
|
||
|
_towns"_ was suggested, but was opposed on the ground that
|
||
|
"two-thirds of the whole number of the _towns_ might not contain
|
||
|
one-fourth of the people." _"Three-fifths_ of the legal voters of
|
||
|
the state" was also suggested. In the final decision, the simple
|
||
|
"majority of the freemen" was accepted. Had this not been the case,
|
||
|
the constitution would have failed of ratification, for, as Burlington
|
||
|
made no returns, the vote stood 59 out of 120 towns for ratification,
|
||
|
with 13,918 yeas to 12,364 nays, giving a majority of but 1554.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Several causes tended to bring about an eager, an amiable, or tolerant
|
||
|
support of the work of the convention. Eepublicans and Tolerationists
|
||
|
hoped for sweeping reforms. The Federalists were divided. Many there
|
||
|
were who believed it dangerous for the state to continue destitute of
|
||
|
fundamental laws defining and limiting the powers of the legislature,
|
||
|
and to such as these the need of a bill of rights, and of the
|
||
|
separation of the powers of the government, was immediate and
|
||
|
imperative. The influential faction of the New Haven Federalists were
|
||
|
moved to modify any opposition existing among them by the proposed
|
||
|
change to annual sessions of the legislature with alternate sittings
|
||
|
in the two capitals. There were still other Federalists who accepted
|
||
|
the proposed change in government as inevitable, and who wisely
|
||
|
forebore to block it, preferring to use all their influence toward
|
||
|
saving as much as possible of the old institutions under new
|
||
|
forms. And in this resolve they were encouraged by the high character
|
||
|
of the men that all parties chose as delegates to the constitutional
|
||
|
convention.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The convention met August 26,1818, at Hartford. Governor Wolcott, one
|
||
|
of the delegates from Litchfield, was elected president, and Mr.
|
||
|
James Lanman, secretary. Mr. Pierpont Edwards was chosen chairman of a
|
||
|
committee of three from each county to draft a constitution. The
|
||
|
estimated strength of the parties was one hundred and five Republicans
|
||
|
to ninety-five Federalists, and, of the drafting committee, five
|
||
|
members belonged to the political minority. [af] An idea of the
|
||
|
character of the men chosen for this important task of framing a new
|
||
|
constitution is gained from a glance at some of the names. To begin
|
||
|
with, over thirty-nine of the delegates to the convention either were
|
||
|
Yale alumni or held its honorary degrees, and half of the drafting
|
||
|
committee were her graduates. Ex-Governor Treadwell and Alexander
|
||
|
Wolcott led the opposing parties, while their able seconds in command
|
||
|
were General Nathaniel Terry of Hartford and Pierpont Edwards of New
|
||
|
Haven. The latter still held the office of judge of the United States
|
||
|
District Court, to which Jefferson had appointed him. Among the
|
||
|
delegates, there were Mr. Amasa Learned, formerly representative in
|
||
|
Congress, the ex-chief-judges Jesse Root and Stephen Mix Mitchell,
|
||
|
Aaron Austin, a member of the Council for over twenty years until the
|
||
|
party elections of 1818 unseated him, ex-Governor John Treadwell, and
|
||
|
Lemuel Sanford,--all of whom had been delegates to the convention of
|
||
|
1788, called to ratify the constitution of the United States. Five
|
||
|
members of the drafting committee were state senators, namely:
|
||
|
Messrs. William Bristol, Sylvester Wells, James Lanman, Dr. John
|
||
|
S. Peters of Hebron, and Peter Webb of Windham. Five others,
|
||
|
Messrs. Elisha Phelps, Gideon Tomlinson, James Stevens, Orange Merwin,
|
||
|
and Daniel Burrows were afterwards elected to that office, while
|
||
|
Gideon Tomlinson and John S. Peters became in turn governors of the
|
||
|
state. James Lanman, Nathan Smith (a member also of the committee),
|
||
|
and Tomlinson entered the national Senate. Among the delegates, there
|
||
|
were nearly a dozen well-known physicians, most of them to be found
|
||
|
among the Tolerationists. Messrs. Webb, Christopher Manwaring of New
|
||
|
London, Gideon Tomlinson of Fairfield, and General Joshua King of
|
||
|
Ridgefield, together with Joshua Stow of Middletown (also on the
|
||
|
drafting committee), had been for years the warhorses of the
|
||
|
democracy, loyal followers of their leader Alexander Wolcott, who had
|
||
|
been the Republican state manager from 1800 to 1817.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The method of procedure in the convention was to report from time to
|
||
|
time a portion of the draft of the constitution, of which each article
|
||
|
was considered section by section, discussed, and amended. After each
|
||
|
of the several sections had been so considered, the whole article was
|
||
|
opened to amendment before the vote upon its acceptance was
|
||
|
taken. When all articles had been approved, the constitution was
|
||
|
printed as so far accepted, and was again submitted to revision and
|
||
|
amendment before receiving the final approval of the convention.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While the constitutional convention was in session, the Baptists and
|
||
|
Methodists resolved that no constitution of civil government should
|
||
|
receive their approbation and support unless it contained a provision
|
||
|
that should secure the full and complete enjoyment of religious
|
||
|
liberty. [2l5] And it was known that the Episcopalians were ready to
|
||
|
second such resolutions. These expressions of opinion were of weight
|
||
|
as foreshadowing the kind of reception that many of the towns where
|
||
|
the dissenters were in the ascendant would accord any constitution
|
||
|
sent to them for ratification.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the convention both the old Federal leader and the old Democratic
|
||
|
chief objected to the incorporation in the constitution of a bill of
|
||
|
rights. Governor Treadwell opposed it on the ground that such
|
||
|
_"unalterable"_ regulations were unnecessary where, as in a
|
||
|
republic, all power was vested in the people. Alexander Wolcott
|
||
|
objected that such a "bill would circumscribe the powers of the
|
||
|
General Assembly" and also because of his disapproval of some of its
|
||
|
clauses. [216] When the draft of fourth section was under discussion,
|
||
|
namely that "No preference shall be given by law to any religious sect
|
||
|
or mode of worship," the Kev. Asahel Morse, a Baptist minister,
|
||
|
offered the substitute,--
|
||
|
|
||
|
That rights of conscience are inalienable, that all persons have a
|
||
|
natural right to worship Almighty God according to their own
|
||
|
consciences; and no person shall be compelled to attend any place
|
||
|
of worship, or contribute to the support of any minister, contrary
|
||
|
to his own choice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The substitute was rejected, and after some discussion, the wording of
|
||
|
the section was changed by substituting "Christian" in place of
|
||
|
"religious" and this change retained in the final revision. [ag]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The seventh article, "Of Religion," was the subject of a long and
|
||
|
earnest debate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 1. It being the right and duty of all men to worship the
|
||
|
Supreme Being, the great Creator and Preserver of the universe, in
|
||
|
the mode most consistent with the dictates of their own
|
||
|
consciences; no person shall be compelled to join or support, nor
|
||
|
by law be classed with or associated to any congregation, church
|
||
|
or religious association. And each and every society or
|
||
|
denomination of Christians in this State, shall have and enjoy the
|
||
|
same and equal powers, rights and privileges; and shall have power
|
||
|
and authority to support and maintain the Ministers or Teachers of
|
||
|
their respective denominations, and to build and repair houses for
|
||
|
public worship, by a tax on the members of the respective
|
||
|
societies only, or in any other manner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 2. If any person shall choose to separate himself from the
|
||
|
society or denomination of Christians to which he may belong, and
|
||
|
shall leave written notice thereof with the Clerk of such society
|
||
|
he shall thereupon be no longer liable for any future expenses,
|
||
|
which may be incurred by said society.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Federalists contested its passage at every point, and succeeded in
|
||
|
modifying the first draft in important particulars, but could not
|
||
|
prevent complete severance of Church and State, nor the constitutional
|
||
|
guarantee to all denominations of religious liberty and perfect
|
||
|
equality before the law. To the first clause as reported--"It being
|
||
|
the right and _duty_ of all men to worship the Supreme Being, the
|
||
|
Great Creator and Preserver of the Universe, in the mode most
|
||
|
consistent with the dictates of their consciences"--Governor Treadwell
|
||
|
objected that "Conscience may be perverted, and man may think it his
|
||
|
duty to worship his Creator by image, or as the Greeks and Romans did;
|
||
|
and though he would _tolerate_ all modes of worship, he would not
|
||
|
recognize it in the Constitution, as the _duty_ of a person to
|
||
|
worship as the heathen do." Mr. Tomlinson afterwards moved to amend
|
||
|
the clause to its present shape, "The duty of all men to
|
||
|
worship... and their right to render that worship." Governor Treadwell
|
||
|
objected that the same clause went "to dissolve all ecclesiastical
|
||
|
societies in this State. That was probably its intent as
|
||
|
Messrs. Joshua Stow and Gideon Tomlinson had drafted it. The former
|
||
|
answered all objections by asserting that "if this section is altered
|
||
|
_in any way_, it will curtail the great principles for which we
|
||
|
contend." [ah]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first section was finally adopted by a vote of 103 to 86, while a
|
||
|
motion to strike out the second section was rejected by 105 to 84. On
|
||
|
its final revision it read:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 1. It being the duty of all men to worship the Supreme Being,
|
||
|
the Great Creator and Preserver of the Universe, and their right
|
||
|
to render that worship in the mode most consistent with the
|
||
|
dictates of their consciences; no person shall, by law, be
|
||
|
compelled to join or support, nor be classed with, or associated
|
||
|
to, any congregation, church, or religious association. But every
|
||
|
person now belonging to such congregation, church, or religious
|
||
|
association, shall remain a member thereof, until he shall have
|
||
|
separated himself therefrom, in the manner hereinafter
|
||
|
provided. And each and every society or denomination of
|
||
|
Christians, in this state, shall have and enjoy the same and equal
|
||
|
powers, rights and privileges; and shall have power and authority
|
||
|
to support and maintain the ministers or teachers of their
|
||
|
respective denominations, and to build and repair houses for
|
||
|
public worship, by a tax on the members of any such society only,
|
||
|
to be laid by a major vote of the legal voters assembled at any
|
||
|
such society meeting, warned and held according to law, or in any
|
||
|
other manner. [ai]
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the last revision of the constitution Mr. Terry had offered the
|
||
|
two amendments that continue the old ecclesiastical societies as
|
||
|
corporate bodies. [217]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The draft of the whole constitution was read through for the last time
|
||
|
as amended and ready for acceptance or rejection, and put to vote on
|
||
|
September 15, 1818. It was passed by 134 yeas to 61 nays. The
|
||
|
constitution then went before the people for their consideration [aj]
|
||
|
and ratification. For a while its fate seemed doubtful; but by the
|
||
|
loyalty of the Federal members of the convention and their efforts in
|
||
|
their own districts the whole state gave a majority for
|
||
|
ratification. The southern counties, with a vote of 11,181, gave a
|
||
|
majority for ratification of 2843; the northern counties, with a vote
|
||
|
of 15,101, gave a majority _against_ ratification of 1189. [218]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Toleration party as such had triumphed, and they felt that they
|
||
|
had won all they had promised the people, for they had secured "the
|
||
|
same and equal powers, rights and privileges to all denominations of
|
||
|
Christians." They had also cleared the way for a broader suffrage and
|
||
|
for the proper election laws to guarantee it. At the last two
|
||
|
elections the Republicans in the Toleration party had carefully
|
||
|
separated state and national issues, and had in large measure forborne
|
||
|
from criticism of the partisan government, insisting that the people's
|
||
|
decision at the polls would give them--the people--rather than any
|
||
|
political party, the power to correct existing abuses. The Republicans
|
||
|
also insisted that the Tolerationists, no matter what their previous
|
||
|
party affiliation, would with one accord obey the behests of the
|
||
|
sovereign people. But when the constitution was an assured fact the
|
||
|
Republicans felt that the Federalist influence had dominated the
|
||
|
convention, and the Federalists that altogether too much had been
|
||
|
accorded to the radical party. Nevertheless it was the loyalty of the
|
||
|
Federal members of the convention that won the small majority for the
|
||
|
Tolerationists and for the new constitution, even if that loyalty was
|
||
|
founded upon the belief, held by many, that the choice of evils lay in
|
||
|
voting for the new regime.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The constitution of 1818 was modeled on the old charter, and retained
|
||
|
much that was useful in the earlier instrument. The more important
|
||
|
changes were: (1) The clearer definition and better distribution of
|
||
|
the powers of government. (2) Rights of suffrage were established
|
||
|
upon personal qualifications, and election laws were guaranteed to be
|
||
|
so modified that voting should be convenient and expeditious, and its
|
||
|
returns correct. (3) The courts were reorganized, and the number of
|
||
|
judges was reduced nearly one half, while the terms of those in higher
|
||
|
courts were made to depend upon an age limit (that of seventy years),
|
||
|
efficiency, and good behavior. Their removal could be only upon
|
||
|
impeachment or upon the request of at least two thirds of the members
|
||
|
of each house. Judges of the lower courts, justices of the peace, were
|
||
|
still to be appointed annually by the legislature, and to it the
|
||
|
appointment of the sheriffs was transferred. [ak] (4) Amendments to
|
||
|
the constitution were provided for. (5) Annual elections and annual
|
||
|
sessions of the legislature, alternating between Hartford and New
|
||
|
Haven, were arranged for, and by this one change alone the state was
|
||
|
saved a yearly expense estimated at $14,000, a large sum in those
|
||
|
days. (6) The governor [al] was given the veto power, although a
|
||
|
simple majority of the legislature could override it. (7) The salaries
|
||
|
of the governor, lieutenant-governor, senators, and representatives
|
||
|
were fixed by statute, and were not alterable to affect the incumbent
|
||
|
during his term of office. (8) And finally, _the union of Church and
|
||
|
State was dissolved_, and all religious bodies were placed upon a
|
||
|
basis of voluntary support.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among the minor changes, the law that before the constitution of 1818
|
||
|
had conferred the right of marrying people upon the located ministers
|
||
|
and magistrates only, thereby practically excluding Baptist, Methodist
|
||
|
and Universalist clergy, now extended it to these latter. While
|
||
|
formerly the only literary institution favored was Yale College,
|
||
|
Trinity College, despite a strong opposition, was soon given its
|
||
|
charter, and one was granted later to the Methodists for Wesleyan
|
||
|
College at Middletown. Moreover, the government appropriated to both
|
||
|
institutions a small grant. The teaching of the catechism, previously
|
||
|
enforced by law in every school, became optional. Soon a normal
|
||
|
school, free to all within the state, was opened. The support of
|
||
|
religion was left wholly to voluntary contributions. [am] The
|
||
|
political influence of the Congregational clergy was gone. "The lower
|
||
|
magistracy was distributed as equally as possible among the various
|
||
|
political and religious interests," and the higher courts were
|
||
|
composed of judges of different political opinions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The battle for religious liberty was won, Church and State divorced,
|
||
|
politics and religion torn asunder. The day of complete religious
|
||
|
liberty had daw'ned in Connecticut, and in a few years the strongest
|
||
|
supporters of the old system would acknowledge the superiority of the
|
||
|
new. As the "old order changed, yielding place to new," many were
|
||
|
doubtful, many were fearful, and many there were who in after years,
|
||
|
as they looked backward, would have expressed themselves in the frank
|
||
|
words of one of their noblest leaders: [an] "For several days, I
|
||
|
suffered what no tongue can tell _for the best thing that ever
|
||
|
happened to the State of Connecticut."_
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[a] Party names were "American," "American and Toleration,"
|
||
|
"Toleration and Reform."
|
||
|
|
||
|
[b] Three fourths of Connecticut's exports were products of
|
||
|
agriculture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[c] "All institutions, civil, literary and ecclesiastical, felt the
|
||
|
pressure, and seemed as if they must he crushed. Our schools, churches
|
||
|
and government even, in the universal impoverishment, were failing and
|
||
|
the very foundations were shaken, when God interposed and took off the
|
||
|
pressure."--Lyman Beecher, _Autobiography_, i, 266.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[d] The Massachusetts militia were placed under General Dearborn,
|
||
|
August 5, 1812.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[e] Governor Griswold died Octoher, 1812, and was succeeded in office
|
||
|
by Lieutenant-Governor John Cotton Smith.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[f] The direct tax laid July 22-24,1813, by the national government,
|
||
|
was apportioned in September, as follows: To Massachusetts,
|
||
|
$316,270.71; to Rhode Island, $34,702.18; and to Connecticut,
|
||
|
$118,167.71, divided as follows (which shows the relative wealth of
|
||
|
the different sections of the state), Litchfield, $19,065.72;
|
||
|
Fairfield, $18,810.50; New Haven, $16,723.10; Hartford, $19,608.02;
|
||
|
New London, $13,392.04; Middlesex, $9,064.20; Windham, $14,524.38; and
|
||
|
Tolland, $6,984.69. Duties were levied upon refined sugar, carriages,
|
||
|
upon licenses to distilleries, auction sales of merchandise and
|
||
|
vessels, upon retailers of wine, spirits, and foreign merchandise;
|
||
|
while a stamp tax was placed upon notes and bills of exchange.--See
|
||
|
_Niles Register_, v, 17; _Schouler_, ii, 380. The tax in
|
||
|
1815 was $236,335.41.--_Niles_, vii, 348.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[g] Briefly, an independent Indian nation between Canada and the
|
||
|
United States; no fleets or military posts on the Great Lakes, and no
|
||
|
renunciation of the English rights of search and impressment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[h] The April (1815) session of the Connecticut legislature passed an
|
||
|
"Act to secure the rights of parents, masters and guardians." It
|
||
|
declared the proposed legislation in Congress contrary to the spirit
|
||
|
of the Constitution of the United States, and an unauthorized
|
||
|
interference with state rights. It commanded all state judges to
|
||
|
discharge on habeas corpus all minors enlisted without consent of
|
||
|
parents or guardians, and it enacted a fine, not to exceed five
|
||
|
hundred dollars, upon any one found guilty of enlisting a minor
|
||
|
against the consent of his guardian, and a fine of one hundred dollars
|
||
|
for the advertising or publication of enticements to minors to enlist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[i] "Amendments: (1) Restrictions npon Congress requiring a two thirds
|
||
|
vote in making and declaring war, (2) in laying embargoes, and (3) in
|
||
|
admitting new states. (4) Restriction of the presidential office to
|
||
|
one term without reelection, and with no two successive Presidents
|
||
|
from the same state. (5) Reduction of representation and taxation by
|
||
|
not reckoning the blacks in the slave states. (6) No foreign born
|
||
|
citizen should be eligible to office.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[j] "They advocated nullification and threatened dissolution of the
|
||
|
Union."--J. P. Gordy, _Political History of the United States_,
|
||
|
ii, 299.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[k] The President in March, 1812, sent to Congress the documents for
|
||
|
which he had paid one John Henry $50,000. The latter claimed to be an
|
||
|
agent sent from Canada in 1809 to detach New England Federalists from
|
||
|
their allegiance to the Union. Congress by resolution proclaimed the
|
||
|
validity of the documents. The British minister solemnly denied all
|
||
|
knowledge of them on the part of his government. The American people
|
||
|
believed in their authenticity, which belief was confirmed during the
|
||
|
war by the distinct favor shown for a while to Massachusetts, and by
|
||
|
the hope, openly entertained by England, of separating New England
|
||
|
from New York and the southern states.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[l] Manufactures in Connecticut (abridged from the U. S. marshal's
|
||
|
report in the autumn of 1810, cited in _Niles' Register_, vi,
|
||
|
323-333) were represented by 14 cotton mills, 15 woolen mills. (By
|
||
|
1815 New London county alone had 14 woolen mills and 10 cotton.) These
|
||
|
had increased to 60 cotton in 1819, and to 36 woolen. Flax cloth,
|
||
|
blended or unnamed cloths, and wool cloth,--all these made in
|
||
|
families,--amounted to a yearly valuation of $2,151,972; hempen cloth,
|
||
|
$12,148; stockings, $111,021; silks (sewing and raw), $28,503; hats to
|
||
|
the value of $522,200; straw bonnets, $25,100; shell, horn, and ivory
|
||
|
in manufactured products, $70,000. Looms for cotton numbered 16,132;
|
||
|
carding machines, 184; fulling mills, 213, and there were 11,883
|
||
|
spindles.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In iron, wood, and steel: 8 furnaces, with output of $46,180; 48
|
||
|
forges, $183,910; 2 rolling and slitting mills, 32 trip-hammers,
|
||
|
$91,146; 18 naileries, $27,092; 4 brass foundries, 1 type foundry,
|
||
|
brass jewelry, and plaited ware, $49,200; metal buttons, 155,000
|
||
|
gross, or $102,125; guns, rifles, etc., $49,050.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among other manufactories and manufactures there were 408 tanneries,
|
||
|
$476,339; shoes, boots, etc., $231,812; the tin plate industry,
|
||
|
$139,370; 560 distilleries, $811,144; 18 paper mills, $82,188;
|
||
|
ropewalks, $243,950; carriages, $68,855, and the beginnings of
|
||
|
brick-making, glass-works, pottery, marble works, which, with the
|
||
|
state's 24 flaxseed mills and seven gunpowder mills, brought the sum
|
||
|
total to approximately $6,000,000.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Still the great impetus to manufacturing, which completely
|
||
|
revolutionized the character of the state, followed the Joint-stock
|
||
|
Act of 1837, with its consequent investment of capital and rush of
|
||
|
emigration, resulting in later days in a development of the cities at
|
||
|
the expense of the rural districts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[m] Gilbert Brewster, the Arkwright of American cotton machinery, Eli
|
||
|
Whitney, with his cotton gin and rifle improvements, and John Fitch,
|
||
|
with his experiments with steam, are the most distinguished among a
|
||
|
host of men who made Yankee ingenuity and Yankee skill proverbial.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[n] "Era of Good Feeling, 1817-1829. The best principles of the
|
||
|
Federalists, the preservation and perpetuity of the Federal
|
||
|
government, had been quietly accepted by the Republicans, and the
|
||
|
Republican principle of limiting the powers and duties of the Federal
|
||
|
government had been adopted by the Federalists. The Republicans
|
||
|
deviated so far from their earlier strict construction views as in
|
||
|
1816 to charter a national bank for twenty years, and to model it upon
|
||
|
Hamilton's bank of 1791 which they had refused to re-charter in
|
||
|
1811,"--A. Johnson, _American Politics_, pp. 80, 81.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[o] "This was for the support of missions outside the state. The
|
||
|
Domestic or State Home Missionary Society undertook the buiding up of
|
||
|
places within the state that were without suitable religious care. The
|
||
|
former finally absorbed the latter when its original purpose was
|
||
|
accomplished. Then, there was the Litchfield County Foreign Mission
|
||
|
Society, founded in 1812, the _first _auxiliary of the American
|
||
|
Board, which began its career in 1810, and was incorporated the same
|
||
|
year that its youngest branch was organized."--Lyman Beecher,
|
||
|
_Autobiography_, i, 275, 287-88 and 291.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[p] Organized in New Haven in October, 1812, with Dr. Dwight as
|
||
|
chairman. Members of the committee upon organization included nearly
|
||
|
all the prominent men of that day, both of the clergy and of the
|
||
|
bar. A list is given in Lyman Beecher, _Autobiography_, i, 256.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[q] "We really broke up riding and working on the Sabbath, and got the
|
||
|
victory. The thing was done, and had it not been for the political
|
||
|
revolution that followed, it would have stood to this day.... The
|
||
|
efforts we made to execute the laws, and secure a reformation of
|
||
|
morals, reached the men of piety, and waked up the energies of the
|
||
|
whole state, so far as the members of our churches, and the
|
||
|
intelligent and moral portion of our congregation were
|
||
|
concerned. These, however, proved to be a minority of the suffrage of
|
||
|
the state."--Lyman Beecher, _Autobiography_, i, 268.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In Pomfret the Justice of the Peace arrested and fined townspeople
|
||
|
who persisted in working on Sunday, and held travellers over until
|
||
|
Monday morning."--E. D. Lamed, _History of Windham_, ii, 448.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[r] "The odium thrown upon the ministry was inconceivable. ... The
|
||
|
Congregational ministers agreed to hold back and keep silent until the
|
||
|
storm blew over. Our duty as well as policy was explanation and
|
||
|
self-defence, expostulation and conciliation."--_Autobiography_,
|
||
|
i, 344.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[s] "Aristides," March 26, 1826, and "Episcopalian," March 13, issues
|
||
|
of the _American Mercury_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"When the Episcopal Church petitioned the legislature in vain, as she
|
||
|
did for a series of years, for a charter to a college, he (the
|
||
|
Rev. Philo Shelton of Fairfield) with others of his brethren
|
||
|
_proposed a union with the political party, then in a minority_,
|
||
|
to secure what he regarded a just right. And the first fruit of the
|
||
|
union was the charter of Trinity (Washington) College, Hartford. He
|
||
|
was one of a small number of clergymen who decided on this measure,
|
||
|
and were instrumental in carrying it into effect; and it resulted in a
|
||
|
change in the politics of the State which has never yet been
|
||
|
reversed."--_Sprague's Annals of American Pulpit_ (Episcopal), v,
|
||
|
35.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[t] Total vote for governor 21,759. Mr. Goddard received 9421
|
||
|
votes.--J. H. Trumbull, _Hist. Notes_, p. 36.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[u] The law apportioned one third of the money to the
|
||
|
Congregationalists; one seventh to Yale; one seventh to the
|
||
|
Episcopalians; one eighth to the Baptists; one twelfth to the
|
||
|
Methodists, and the balance to the state treasury.--Cited in
|
||
|
_Connecticut Courant_, November 8, 1816. _Acts and Laws_,
|
||
|
pp. 279, 280.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[v] The first installment, $50,000, was paid into the Treasury in
|
||
|
June, 1817. The Methodists, and later the Baptists, accepted their
|
||
|
share, but not until political events had removed some of their
|
||
|
objections.
|
||
|
|
||
|
See the _Mirror_, February 16, 1818. It was not until 1820 that
|
||
|
the final acceptance of the money took place.
|
||
|
|
||
|
J. H. Trumbull, _Hist. Notes_, p. 36, foot-note, gives the
|
||
|
following figures. By November, 1817, $61,500 had been received and
|
||
|
apportioned: Congregationalists, $20,500.00; Trustees of the Bishop's
|
||
|
Fund, $8,785.71; Baptist Trustees, $7,687.50; Methodist Trustees,
|
||
|
$5,125.00; Yale College, $8,785.71, and a balance still unappropriated
|
||
|
of $10,616.08.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[w] Legal returns gave Wolcott 13,655
|
||
|
Smith 13,119
|
||
|
Scattering 202 13,321
|
||
|
------ ------
|
||
|
334
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The correction of errors increased the majority to 600, which the
|
||
|
Federalists conceded.--J. H. Trumbull, _Hist. Notes_, p. 38,
|
||
|
footnote.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[x] Governor Wolcott's speech, _Connecticut Courant_, May 20,
|
||
|
1817; also _Niles' Register_, xii, pp. 201-204.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[y] "In our climate, three fireplaces are occasionally necessary to
|
||
|
the comfortable accommodation of every family."--Governor's speech.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[z] Published 1795.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[aa] A vindication of the calling of the Special Superior Court at
|
||
|
Middletown... for the trial of Peter Lung... with observations, &c,
|
||
|
Windham, 1816.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ab] The legislature had also interfered with decisions regarding the
|
||
|
Symsbury patent. See E. Kirby, _Law Reports,_ p. 446.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ac] A summary of the Connecticut constitution, taken from _Niles's
|
||
|
Register,_ asserts that the General Court has sole power to make
|
||
|
and repeal laws, grant levies, dispose of lands belonging to the state
|
||
|
to particular towns and persons, to erect and style judicatories and
|
||
|
officers as they shall see necessary for the good government of the
|
||
|
people; also to call to account any court, magistrate, or other
|
||
|
officer for misdemeanor and maladministration, or for just cause may
|
||
|
fine, displace, or remove, them, or deal otherwise as the nature of
|
||
|
the ease shall require; and may deal or act in any other matter that
|
||
|
concerns the good of the state except the election of governor,
|
||
|
deputy-governor, assistants, treasurer and secretary, which shall be
|
||
|
done by the freemen at the yearly court of election, unless there be
|
||
|
any vacancy by reason of death or otherwise, after an election, when
|
||
|
it may be filled by the General Court. This court has power also, for
|
||
|
reasons satisfactory to them, to grant suspension, release, and jail
|
||
|
delivery upon reprieves in capital and criminal cases.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The elections for the assistants and superior officers are annual; for
|
||
|
the representatives, semi-annual. The sessions of the General Court
|
||
|
are semi-annual. The Governor and the speaker have the casting vote in
|
||
|
the Upper and Lower House, respectively.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Superior Court consists of one chief judge and four others, and
|
||
|
holds two sessions in each county each year. Its jurisdiction holds
|
||
|
over all criminal cases extending to life, limb, or banishment; all
|
||
|
criminal cases brought from county courts by appeal or writ of error,
|
||
|
and in some matters of divorce.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The county court consists of one judge and four justices of the
|
||
|
quorum, with jurisdiction over all criminal cases not extending to
|
||
|
life, limb, or banishment, and with original jurisdiction in all civil
|
||
|
actions where the demand exceeds forty shillings. Justices of the
|
||
|
Peace, in the various towns, have charge of civil actions involving
|
||
|
less than forty shillings, and criminal jurisdiction in some cases,
|
||
|
where the fine does not exceed forty shillings, or the punishment
|
||
|
exceed ten stripes or sitting in the stocks. Judges and Justices are
|
||
|
annually appointed by the General Court, and commonly reappointed
|
||
|
during good behavior, while sheriffs are appointed by the governor and
|
||
|
council without time-limit and are subject to removal. Recently
|
||
|
county courts determined matters of equity involving from five pounds
|
||
|
to two hundred pounds, the Superior Court two hundred pounds to
|
||
|
sixteen hundred, and the General Assembly all others.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Probate districts, not coextensive with the counties, exist, with
|
||
|
appeal to the Superior Court.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In military matters, the governor is the captain-general of the
|
||
|
militia, and the General Court appoints the general officers and field
|
||
|
officers, and they are commissioned by the governor. Captains and
|
||
|
subalterns are chosen by the vote of the company and of the
|
||
|
householders living within the limits of the company, but must be
|
||
|
approved by the General Court and commissioned by the governor before
|
||
|
they can serve. All military officers hold their commissions during
|
||
|
the pleasure of the General Assembly and may not resign them without
|
||
|
permission, except under penalty of being reduced to the ranks.--
|
||
|
_Niles' Register,_ 1813, vol. iii, p. 443, etc. Corrected
|
||
|
slightly by reference to Swift's _System of Laws._
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ad] Banks and insurance companies began to organize about 1790 to
|
||
|
1810.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ae] In 1818, for the first time, a dissenter, Mr. Croswell, rector of
|
||
|
Trinity Church, New Haven, preached the Election Sermon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[af] Messrs. Pitkin, Todd, G. Lamed, Pettibone, and Wiley. Of these,
|
||
|
the first had been twenty times state representative, five times
|
||
|
speaker of the House, and for thirteen years had been representative
|
||
|
in Congress.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ag] The first seven sections of the Bill of Bights according to the
|
||
|
final revision are:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 1. That all men when they form a social compact, are equal in
|
||
|
rights; and that no man, or set of men are entitled to exclusive
|
||
|
public emoluments or privileges from the community.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 2. That all political power is inherent in the people, and
|
||
|
all free governments are founded on their authority, and
|
||
|
instituted for their benefit; and that they have, at all times, an
|
||
|
undeniable and indefeasible right to alter their form of
|
||
|
government, in such a manner as they may think expedient.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 3. The exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and
|
||
|
worship, without discrimination, shall forever be free to all
|
||
|
persons in this state; provided, that the right, hereby declared
|
||
|
and established, shall not be so construed as to excuse acts of
|
||
|
licentiousness, or to justify practices inconsistent with the
|
||
|
peace and safety of the state.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 4. No preference shall be given by law to any Christian sect
|
||
|
or mode of worship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 5. Every citizen may freely speak, write, and publish his
|
||
|
sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of
|
||
|
that liberty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 6. No law shall ever be passed to curtail or restrain the
|
||
|
liberty of speech or of the press.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sec. 7. In all prosecutions or indictments for libels, the truth
|
||
|
may be given in evidence; and the jury shall have the right to
|
||
|
determine the law and the facts, under the direction of the court.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ah] Mr. Trumbull asserts that "writers and historians are in error
|
||
|
when attributing to Mr. Morse of Suffield (the Baptist minister
|
||
|
aforementioned) the drafting of the Article on Religious Liberty. The
|
||
|
drafting committee were Messrs. Tomlinson and Stow, and the first
|
||
|
clause, as reported, seems to have been taken with slight alteration
|
||
|
from Governor Woleott's speech to the General Assembly, May, 1817,
|
||
|
namely, 'It is the right and duty of every man publicly and privately
|
||
|
to worship and adore the Supreme Creator and Preserver of the Universe
|
||
|
in the manner most agreeable to the dictates of his own conscience.'"
|
||
|
--J. H. Trumbull, _Notes on the Constitution_, pp. 56, 57.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ai] The second section remained unchanged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[aj] Seven hundred copies were distributed among the towns.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ak] By later amendments, judges of the Supreme Court of Errors and
|
||
|
the Superior Court are nominated by the governor and appointed by the
|
||
|
General Assembly. Judges of probate are now elected by the electors in
|
||
|
their respective districts; justices of the peace in the several towns
|
||
|
by the electors in said towns; and sheriffs by their counties.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[al] By amendment of 1901, the vote for governor, lieutenant-governor,
|
||
|
secretary, treasurer, comptroller, and attorney-general was changed
|
||
|
from a majority to a plurality vote, the Assembly to decide between
|
||
|
candidates, if at any time two or more should receive "an equal and
|
||
|
the greatest number" of votes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[am] "It cut the churches loose from dependence upon state support--It
|
||
|
threw them wholly on their own resources and on God." "The mass is
|
||
|
changing," wrote Dr. Beecher. "We are becoming another people. The old
|
||
|
laws answered when all men in a parish were of one faith."--Lyman
|
||
|
Beecher, _Autobiography,_ i, pp. 344, 453.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[an] Lyman Beecher.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
APPENDIX
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
NOTES
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER I. THE EVOLUTION OF EARLY CONGREGATIONALISM.
|
||
|
|
||
|
1, H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in Literature, p. 49.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2, Robert Browne, A True and Short Declaration, p. l.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3, H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in Literature, p. 70.
|
||
|
|
||
|
4, Report of Conference April 3, 1590, quoted in F. J. Powicke, Henry
|
||
|
Barrowe, p. 54.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5, W. Walker, Creeds and Platforms, p. 12.
|
||
|
|
||
|
6, Ibid., pp. 14, 15; also H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in
|
||
|
Literature, pp. 96-104.
|
||
|
|
||
|
7, Robert Browne, A Treatise on Reformation without Tarrying, pp. 4,
|
||
|
7,12.
|
||
|
|
||
|
8, Robert Browne, A True and Short Declaration, p. 7; Book which
|
||
|
Sheweth, pp. 117-148.
|
||
|
|
||
|
9, Robert Browne, Book which Sheweth, Questions 55-58.
|
||
|
|
||
|
10, Ibid., Def. 35-40; Henry Barrowe, Discovery of False Churches,
|
||
|
p. 34, and The True Description in Appendix IV of F. J. Powicke's
|
||
|
Henry Barrowe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
11, Robert Browne, Book which Sheweth, Def. 53 and 54.
|
||
|
|
||
|
12, Henry Barrowe, Discovery of False Churches, p. 48.
|
||
|
|
||
|
13, Henry Barrowe, Discovery of False Churches, pp. 166, 275; Robert
|
||
|
Browne, Book which Sheweth, Def. 51; A True and Short Declaration,
|
||
|
p. 20; The True Confession of Faith, Article 38.
|
||
|
|
||
|
14, H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in Literature, pp. 221,
|
||
|
232; also John Brown, Pilgrim Fathers of New England, pp. 22-25.
|
||
|
|
||
|
15, The True Confession, Art. 39.
|
||
|
|
||
|
16, "The Seven Articles," of which the following is the text:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
(1) "To ye confession of fayth published in ye name of ye Church
|
||
|
of England and to every artikell thereof wee do w'th ye reformed
|
||
|
churches wheer wee live & also els where assent wholly.".
|
||
|
|
||
|
(2) "And as wee do acknowlidg ye doctryne of fayth theer tawght so
|
||
|
do wee ye fruites and effeckts of ye same docktryne to ye
|
||
|
begetting of saving fayth in thousands in ye land (conformistes &
|
||
|
reformistes) as ye ar called w'th whom also as w'th our brethren
|
||
|
wee do desyer to keepe speirtuall communion in peace and will
|
||
|
pracktis in our parts all lawful thinges."
|
||
|
|
||
|
(3) "The King's Majesty wee acknowlidg for Supreme Governor in his
|
||
|
dominion in all causes, and over all parsons [persons] and ye none
|
||
|
maye decklyne or apeale his authority or judgment in any cause
|
||
|
whatsoever, but ye in all thinges obedience is dewe unto him,
|
||
|
either active, if ye thing commanded be not against God's woord,
|
||
|
or passive yf itt bee, except pardon can bee obtayned."
|
||
|
|
||
|
(4) "Wee judge itt lawfull for his Majesty to apoynt bishops,
|
||
|
civill overseers, or officers in awthoryty onder hime in ye
|
||
|
severall provinces, dioses, congregations or parishes, to oversee
|
||
|
ye churches, and governe them civilly according to ye Lawes of ye
|
||
|
Land, uutto whom ye ar in all thinges to geve an account and by
|
||
|
them to bee ordered according to Godlyness." (This is not an
|
||
|
acknowledgment of spiritual--superiority or authority, only the
|
||
|
recognition that as church officers were also magistrates, the
|
||
|
king could appoint them as his civil servants.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
(5) "The authority of ye present bishops in ye land wee do
|
||
|
acknowlidg so far forth as ye same is indeed derived from his
|
||
|
Majesty untto them and as ye proseed in his name, whom wee will
|
||
|
also therein honor in all thinges and hime in them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
(6) "Wee believe ye no sinod, classes, convocation or assembly of
|
||
|
Ecclesiastical Officers hath any power or awthority att all but ye
|
||
|
same by ye Majestraet given unto them." (Intended to be a denial
|
||
|
of Presbyterianism.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
(7) "Lastly wee desyer to geve untto all Superiors dew honour to
|
||
|
preserve ye unity of ye spiritt w'th all ye feare God to have
|
||
|
peace w'th all men what in us lyeth and wherein wee err to bee
|
||
|
instructed by any." (Text of Points of Difference and Seven
|
||
|
Articles in W. Walker, Creeds and Platforms, pp. 75-93.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER II. THE TRANSPLANTING OF CONGREGATIONALISM.
|
||
|
|
||
|
17, The Commons prayed, "that no man hereafter be compelled to make or
|
||
|
yield any gift, loan, benevolence, tax, or such like charge, without
|
||
|
common consent by Act of Parliament. And that none be called to make
|
||
|
answer, or to take such oaths, or to be confined or otherwise molested
|
||
|
or disputed concerning the same, or for refusal thereof. And that no
|
||
|
freeman may in such manner as is before mentioned be imprisoned or
|
||
|
detained."--Extract from the Petition of Right. See J. R. Green, Short
|
||
|
History of the English People, pp 486, 487.
|
||
|
|
||
|
18, E. H. Byington, The Puritan in England and New England, pp. 486,
|
||
|
487.
|
||
|
|
||
|
19, See Gott's Letter in Bradford's Letter-Book, Mass. Hist. Soc.,
|
||
|
iii, 67,68.
|
||
|
|
||
|
20, G. L. Walker, History of the First Church in Hartford, p. 154.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER III. CHURCH AND STATE IN NEW ENGLAND.
|
||
|
|
||
|
21, Thomas Hooker, Survey of Church Discipline, chap. 3, p. 75; also
|
||
|
Mass. Col. Rec., iii, 424; J. Cotton, Way of the Churches, pp. 6, 7.
|
||
|
|
||
|
22, J. Cotton, Way of the Churches, pp. 6, 7; Plymouth Col. Rec., ii,
|
||
|
67; Mass. Col. Rec., i, 216, iii, 354; Hartford Town Voter, in
|
||
|
Conn. Hist. Soc. Coll., vi, 32; Conn. Col. Rec., i, 311, 545.
|
||
|
|
||
|
23, Plymouth Col. Laws, ed. 1836, p. 258; Conn. Col. Rec., i, pp. 96,
|
||
|
138, 290, 331, 389, 525.
|
||
|
|
||
|
24, J. Cotton, A Discourse about Civil Government in a New Plantation
|
||
|
whose Design is Religion (written many years since), London, 1643,
|
||
|
pp. 12, 19. (This is a misprint in the title-page, for the author was
|
||
|
John Davenport.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
25, Mass. Col. Rec., i, 87.
|
||
|
|
||
|
26, J. Cotton, Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, pp. 50, 53.
|
||
|
|
||
|
27, Mass. Law of 1636; Conn. Col. Rec., i, 341.
|
||
|
|
||
|
28, Conn. Col. Rec., i, 525.
|
||
|
|
||
|
29, G. F. Ellis, Puritan Age in Massachusetts, p. 34.
|
||
|
|
||
|
30, Winthrop, i, 81.
|
||
|
|
||
|
31, Mass. Col. Rec., i, 142.
|
||
|
|
||
|
32, Winthrop, i, 287; H. M. Dexter, Ecclesiastical Councils of New
|
||
|
England, p. 31.
|
||
|
|
||
|
33, J. A. Doyle, Puritan Colonies, ii, 70.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IV. THE CAMBRIDGE PLATFORM AND THE HALF-WAY COVENANT.
|
||
|
|
||
|
34, C. Mather, Magnalia, ii, 277.
|
||
|
|
||
|
35, Horace Bushnell, in Discourse on Christian Nurture, p. 25.
|
||
|
|
||
|
36, Cotton Mather, Magnalia, ii, 179.
|
||
|
|
||
|
37, Results of Half-Way Covenant Convention, Prop. 4. See W. Walker,
|
||
|
Creeds and Platforms, p. 296.
|
||
|
|
||
|
38, W. Walker, Creeds and Platforms, p. 295. See Question 7, of
|
||
|
Results.
|
||
|
|
||
|
39, Conn. Col. Rec., i, 386, 426.
|
||
|
|
||
|
40, Conn. State Papers (Ecclesiastical), vol. i, Doc. 106. Quoted in
|
||
|
the Church Review and Ecclesiastical Register, x, p. 116.
|
||
|
|
||
|
41, Beardsley, Hist, of the Church in Connecticut, i, 101; Perry,
|
||
|
Hist, of Epis. Church in the United States, i, 283, 284.
|
||
|
|
||
|
42, Conn. Col. Rec., i, 437, 438.
|
||
|
|
||
|
43, G. L. Walker, Hist, of First Church in Hartford, p. 200.
|
||
|
|
||
|
44, Record of the United Colonies, i, 506.
|
||
|
|
||
|
45, G. L. Walker, Hist, of First Church in Hartford, p. 209.
|
||
|
|
||
|
46, L. Bacon, Coatr. to Eccl. Hist, of Connecticut, p. 29.
|
||
|
|
||
|
47, E. Stiles, Christian Union, p. 85; J. A. Doyle, Puritan Colonies,
|
||
|
ii, 69; Conn. Col. Rec., i, 545; ii, 290 and 557.
|
||
|
|
||
|
48, Conn. Col. Rec., vii, 33; viii, 74.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER V. A PERIOD OF TRANSITION.
|
||
|
|
||
|
49, Thomas Prince, Christian History, i, 94.
|
||
|
|
||
|
50, Preface to Work of the Reforming Synod.
|
||
|
|
||
|
51, C. Mather, Magnalia, Book v, p. 40.
|
||
|
|
||
|
52, C. Mather, Ratio Discipline, p. 17.
|
||
|
|
||
|
53, C. M. Andrews, Three River Towns, p. 86. See also Bronson, Early
|
||
|
Government, in New Haven Hist. Soc. Papers, iii, 315;
|
||
|
Conn. Col. Rec., 290-293, 321, 354.
|
||
|
|
||
|
54, Conn. Col. Rec., v, 67.
|
||
|
|
||
|
55, L. Bacon, Contr. to Ecel. History, p. 33.
|
||
|
|
||
|
56, Conn. Col. Rec., v, 87.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VI. THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM.
|
||
|
|
||
|
57, Saybrook Platform.
|
||
|
|
||
|
58, L. Bacon, Thirteen Historical Discourses, pp. 190, 191.
|
||
|
|
||
|
59, S. Stoddard, Instituted Churches, p. 29.
|
||
|
|
||
|
60, Trumbull, Hist, of Connecticut, i, 406; T. Clap, Hist, of Yale
|
||
|
College, p. 30.
|
||
|
|
||
|
61, Trumbull, Hist, of Connecticut, i, 406.
|
||
|
|
||
|
62, L. Bacon, Thirteen Historical Discourses, p. 190.
|
||
|
|
||
|
63, H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in Literature, pp. 489,
|
||
|
490.
|
||
|
|
||
|
64, Conn. Col. Rec., v, 87.
|
||
|
|
||
|
65, Ibid., v, 50.
|
||
|
|
||
|
66, A. Johnston, Connecticut, p. 232.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VII. THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM AND THE TOLERATION ACT.
|
||
|
|
||
|
67, John Bolles, A Relation of the Opposition some Baptist People met
|
||
|
at Norwich in 1761.
|
||
|
|
||
|
68, Ibid., p. 7.
|
||
|
|
||
|
69, Quaker Laws. The New Haven Laws against Quakers deal thus
|
||
|
fiercely:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
"_Whereas_ there is a cursed sect of heretics lately risen up
|
||
|
in the world, which are commonly called Quakers, who take upon
|
||
|
them that they are immediately sent of God and infallibly assisted
|
||
|
by his spirit, who yet write and speak blasphemous opinions,
|
||
|
despise governments and the order of God, in church and
|
||
|
commonwealth... we do hereby order and declare
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That whosoever shall hereafter bring, or cause to be brought,
|
||
|
directly or indirectly, any known Quaker or Quakers, or other
|
||
|
blasphemous heretics, into this jurisdiction, every such person
|
||
|
shall forfeit the sum of 600 pounds to the jurisdiction, except it
|
||
|
appear that he wanted true knowledge or information of their being
|
||
|
such... and it is hereby ordered that what Quaker or Quakers
|
||
|
soever come into this jurisdiction, from foreign parts or places
|
||
|
adjacent, if it be about their civil, lawful occasions to be
|
||
|
quickly despatched among us, which time of stay shall be limited
|
||
|
by the civil authority in each plantation, and that they shall not
|
||
|
use any means by words, writings, books, or any other way, to go
|
||
|
about to seduce others, nor revile nor reproach, nor any other way
|
||
|
make disturbance or offend. They shall upon their first arrival,
|
||
|
or coming in, appear to be brought before the authorities of the
|
||
|
place and from them have license to put about and issue their
|
||
|
lawful occasions, and shall have one or more to attend upon them
|
||
|
at their charge until such occasions of theirs be discharged, and
|
||
|
they return out of the jurisdiction which if they refuse to do,
|
||
|
they shall be denied such free passage and commerce and be caused
|
||
|
to return back again, but if this first time they shall offend in
|
||
|
any of the ways as before expressed, and contrary to the intent of
|
||
|
this law, they shall be committed to prison, severely whipped,
|
||
|
kept to work, and none suffered to converse with them during their
|
||
|
imprisonment, which shall be no longer than necessity requires,
|
||
|
and at their own charge sent out of the jurisdiction."
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a second offense, they were to be branded, as well as to be
|
||
|
committed to prison. For a fourth offense, they were to have their
|
||
|
tongues bored through with hot irons. Their books, papers, etc., were
|
||
|
to subject their possessors to a fine of 5 pounds, and entertaining or
|
||
|
concealing a Quaker was to be punished by a fine of 20s.; while
|
||
|
undertaking to defend any of their heretical opinions was doubly
|
||
|
fined.--New Haven Col. Kec., ii, 217, 238,363.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1656, the Connecticut Court, in conformity to a suggestion from the
|
||
|
commissioners of the United Colonies, ordered that "no towne within
|
||
|
this jurisdiction shall entertaine any Quakers, Kanters, Adamites, or
|
||
|
such notorious heretiques, or suffer them to continue with them above
|
||
|
the space of fourteen days,... and shall give notice to the two next
|
||
|
towns to send them on their way under penalty of L5 per week for any
|
||
|
town entertaining any such person, nor shall any master of a ship land
|
||
|
such or any." In August, 1657, the above fine was imposed on the
|
||
|
individual who entertained the Quaker, etc., as well as on the town,
|
||
|
and an officer was appointed to examine suspects. A little later, a
|
||
|
penalty of 10s. was imposed for Quaker books and MSS. found in the
|
||
|
possession of any but a teaching elder. Twice the Court saw fit to
|
||
|
leave, notwithstanding all former orders, all such cases to the
|
||
|
jurisdiction of the separate towns, to order fines, banishment, or
|
||
|
corporal punishment, provided the fines "exceed not ten pounds."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The tone is brief and businesslike, dealing with a matter that had
|
||
|
already caused great trouble to the other United Colonies, and which
|
||
|
might become a menace to Connecticut. There are almost no recorded
|
||
|
cases of sentence being imposed. See Conn. Col. Kec., i, 283,303,308,
|
||
|
324.
|
||
|
|
||
|
70, J. Bowden, History of the Society of Friends, i, 104, quoting
|
||
|
Norton's Ensign, p. 52.
|
||
|
|
||
|
71, Ibid., i, 106.
|
||
|
|
||
|
72, Ibid., i, 440.
|
||
|
|
||
|
73, R. P. Hallowell, The Pioneer Quakers, p. 47.
|
||
|
|
||
|
74, R. R. Hinman, Antiquities of the Charter Government of
|
||
|
Connecticut, p. 229.
|
||
|
|
||
|
75, E. E. Beardsley, History of the Episcopal Church in Connecticut,
|
||
|
i, 19.
|
||
|
|
||
|
76, A. L. Cross, Anglican Episcopate in the American Colonies, pp. 33
|
||
|
et seq.
|
||
|
|
||
|
77, Ibid., p. 95, note.
|
||
|
|
||
|
78, C. F. Hawkins, Missions of the Church of England, 377, 378.
|
||
|
|
||
|
79, Church Documents, Conn., i, 14.
|
||
|
|
||
|
80, Ibid., i, 59.
|
||
|
|
||
|
81, Ibid., i, 136.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VIII. THE FIRST VICTORY FOR DISSENT.
|
||
|
|
||
|
82, Church Documents, Conn., i, 153.
|
||
|
|
||
|
83, Ibid., i, 56.
|
||
|
|
||
|
84, S. D. McConnell, History of the American Episcopal Church, p. 132.
|
||
|
|
||
|
85, Conn. Col. Rec., viii, 106; and Church Documents, Conn., i, 280,
|
||
|
283.
|
||
|
|
||
|
86, Conn. Col. Rec., vii, 459, and viii, 123, 334.
|
||
|
|
||
|
87, Rogerine Laws. See Conn. Col. Rec., v. 248, 249.
|
||
|
|
||
|
88, C. W. Bowen, The Boundary Disputes of Connecticut, especially
|
||
|
pp. 48, 58, and 74.
|
||
|
|
||
|
89, The Talcott Papers, published in vols. iv and v of the
|
||
|
Conn. Hist. Soc. Collections.
|
||
|
|
||
|
90, Conn. Col. Rec., iv, 307.
|
||
|
|
||
|
91, Talcott Papers, i, 147, 189, and ii, 245, 246, in
|
||
|
Conn. Hist. Soc. Collections, vols. iv and v.
|
||
|
|
||
|
92, C. M. Andrews, The Connecticut Intestacy Law, in Yale Review, iii,
|
||
|
261 et seq.
|
||
|
|
||
|
93, Conn. Col. Rec., vii, 237.
|
||
|
|
||
|
94, Ibid., vii, 257.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IX. THE GREAT AWAKENING.
|
||
|
|
||
|
95, Jonathan Edwards' Works, iv, 306-324.
|
||
|
|
||
|
96, Ibid., iv, 81.
|
||
|
|
||
|
97, Lauer, Church and State, p. 77; also Conn. Col. Rec., vi, 33.
|
||
|
|
||
|
98, A. Johnston, Hist, of Conn., pp. 255, 256; also H. Bronson,
|
||
|
Historical Account of Conn. Currency, in New Haven Hist. Soc. Papers,
|
||
|
i, 51 et seq.
|
||
|
|
||
|
99, Joseph Tracy, The Great Awakening, p. 13.
|
||
|
|
||
|
100, Edwards' Works, iv, 34-37.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER X. THE GREAT SCHISM.
|
||
|
|
||
|
101, Conn. Col. Rec., vii, 309.
|
||
|
|
||
|
102, Ibid., viii, 522.
|
||
|
|
||
|
103, Charles Chauncy, Seasonable Thoughts, p. 249.
|
||
|
|
||
|
104, Conn. Col. Rec., viii, 438, 468; also Joseph Tracy, The Great
|
||
|
Awakening, p. 303.
|
||
|
|
||
|
105, Conn. Col. Rec., viii, 454 et seq.; B. Trumbull, Hist, of
|
||
|
Connecticut, ii, 165; C. Chauncy, Seasonable Thoughts, p. 41.
|
||
|
|
||
|
106, Conn. Col. Rec., viii, 456.
|
||
|
|
||
|
107, Ibid., viii, 456.
|
||
|
|
||
|
108, Ibid., viii, 457.
|
||
|
|
||
|
109, Trumbull, Hist, of Conn., ii, 135.
|
||
|
|
||
|
110, S. W. S. Button, Hist, of the North Church in New Haven.
|
||
|
|
||
|
111, E. D. Lamed, Hist, of Windham County, vol. ii, book 5, chapter
|
||
|
3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
112, O. W. Means, Hist, of the Enfleld Separate Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
113, Conn. Col. Rec., October, 1751.
|
||
|
|
||
|
114, E. D. Lamed, Hist, of Windham County, vol. ii, book 5, chapter
|
||
|
3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
115, Conn. Col. Rec., viii, 501.
|
||
|
|
||
|
116, Ibid., viii, 502.
|
||
|
|
||
|
117, E. D. Larned, Hist, of Windham County, ii, 417, 419, 425, 426;
|
||
|
L. Bacon, Thirteen Historical Discourses, p. 245.
|
||
|
|
||
|
118, Solomon Paine's View, pp. 15, 16.
|
||
|
|
||
|
119, Thomas Clap, History of Yale, p. 27.
|
||
|
|
||
|
120, G. P. Fisher, Church of Christ in Yale College, app. 6.
|
||
|
|
||
|
121, E. D. Lamed, History of Windham County, i, 425, 426.
|
||
|
|
||
|
122, S. L. Blake, The Separatists, pp. 183, 192. (This book gives the
|
||
|
origin and end of every Separate church.) Also 0. W. Means, History of
|
||
|
the Enfield Separate Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
123, Conn. Col. Rec., xii, 269, 341.
|
||
|
|
||
|
124, Ibid., viii, 507.
|
||
|
|
||
|
125, Trumbull, History of Connecticut, i, 132, 133.
|
||
|
|
||
|
126, W. C. Reichel, Dedication of Monuments erected by the Moravian
|
||
|
Historical Societies in New York and Connecticut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
G. H. Loskiel, Hist, of Missions of the United Brethren among the
|
||
|
Indians of North America. J. Heckwelder, Missions of the United
|
||
|
Brethren among the Delaware and Mohegan Indians, pp. 51 et seq.
|
||
|
|
||
|
127, Conn. Col. Rec., ix, 218.
|
||
|
|
||
|
128, I. Backus, History of the Baptists, ii, 80.
|
||
|
|
||
|
129, H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in Literature, p. 503.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XI. THE ABROGATION OF THE SAYBROOK PLATFORM.
|
||
|
|
||
|
130, Frederick Dennison, Notes of the Baptists and their Principles in
|
||
|
Norwich, Conn., p. 10.
|
||
|
|
||
|
131, Ibid., p. 16.
|
||
|
|
||
|
132, Stiles, Ancient Windsor, p. 439.
|
||
|
|
||
|
133, C. H. S. Davis, Hist, of Wallingford, pp. 164-210.
|
||
|
|
||
|
134, "To the King's Most Excellent Majesty in Council." (Quoted in
|
||
|
Frederick Dennison, Notes of the Baptists.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
135, T. Clap, History of Yale, pp. 41-60.
|
||
|
|
||
|
136, Quoted by E. H. Gillett, Civil Liberty in Connecticut, Historical
|
||
|
Magazine, 2d series, vol. iv.
|
||
|
|
||
|
137, E. D. Lamed, History of Windham County, i, 468.
|
||
|
|
||
|
138, Thomas Darling, Some Remarks, p. 6.
|
||
|
|
||
|
139, Ibid., p. 41.
|
||
|
|
||
|
140, Ibid., pp. 43, 46.
|
||
|
|
||
|
141, Robert Ross, Plain Address, p. 54.
|
||
|
|
||
|
142, E. Frothingham, Key to Unlock, p. 147.
|
||
|
|
||
|
143, Ibid., pp. 56, 58.
|
||
|
|
||
|
144, Ibid., pp. 51-53.
|
||
|
|
||
|
145, Ibid., p. 42.
|
||
|
|
||
|
146, Ibid., p. 156.
|
||
|
|
||
|
147, Ibid., p. 181.
|
||
|
|
||
|
148, Loomis and Calhoun, Judicial and Civil History of Connecticut,
|
||
|
p. 55.
|
||
|
|
||
|
149, M. C. Tyler, Literary History of the American Revolution, i, 133.
|
||
|
|
||
|
150, Fulham, MSS. cited in A, L. Cross, Anglican Episcopate in the
|
||
|
American Colonies, p. 115. See also pp. 122 et seq. and 332, 345.
|
||
|
|
||
|
151, A. L. Cross, Anglican Episcopate, pp. 164 and 216. Perry,
|
||
|
American Episcopal Church, i, 415.
|
||
|
|
||
|
152, Minutes of the Association, i, 3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
153, F. M. Caulkins, History of Norwich, p. 363.
|
||
|
|
||
|
154, Conn. Col. Rec., xiii, 360.
|
||
|
|
||
|
155, I. Backus, History of the Baptists, ii, 340.
|
||
|
|
||
|
156, E. D. Lamed, History of Windham County, ii, 103.
|
||
|
|
||
|
157, I. Backus, An Appeal to the Public for Religious Liberty, Boston,
|
||
|
1773, p. 28.
|
||
|
|
||
|
158, Ibid., p. 13.
|
||
|
|
||
|
159, Ibid., pp. 43-48.
|
||
|
|
||
|
160, John Wise, Vindication, Edition of 1717, p. 84.
|
||
|
|
||
|
161, Public Records of the State of Connecticut, i, 232.
|
||
|
|
||
|
162, Quoted in E. H. Gillett, Civil Liberty in Connecticut,
|
||
|
Hist. Magazine, 1868.
|
||
|
|
||
|
163, I. Backus, History of the Baptists, ii, 304.
|
||
|
|
||
|
164, Minutes of Hartford North Association.
|
||
|
|
||
|
165, I. Foster, Defense of Religious Liberty, pp. 30, 32; also 135
|
||
|
and 142.
|
||
|
|
||
|
166, Acts and Laws of the State of Connecticut, 1784, pp. 21, 22, 213,
|
||
|
235.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XII. CONNECTICUT AT THE CLOSE OF THE REVOLUTION.
|
||
|
|
||
|
167, P. K. Kilbourne, History of Litchfield, pp. 166, 169.
|
||
|
|
||
|
168, James Morris, Statistical Account of the Towns of Litchfield
|
||
|
County.
|
||
|
|
||
|
169, Judge Church, in his Litchfield County Centennial Address.
|
||
|
|
||
|
170, J. D. Champlin, Jr., "Litchfield Hill."
|
||
|
|
||
|
171, Noah Webster, Collection of Essays (ed. of 1790), p. 379.
|
||
|
|
||
|
172, Ibid., p. 338.
|
||
|
|
||
|
173, Ibid., p. 338.
|
||
|
|
||
|
174, Letter of Sept. 11,1788, one of the series in answer to the
|
||
|
quotations from Richard Price's "Observations on the Importance of the
|
||
|
American Revolution." See American Mercury, Feb. 7, 1785. Connecticut
|
||
|
Journal, Feb. 16, and Connecticut Courant, Feb. 22, 1785.
|
||
|
|
||
|
175, James Schouler, History of the United States, i, 53.
|
||
|
|
||
|
176, Isaac Backus, The Liberal Support of the Gospel Minister, p. 35.
|
||
|
|
||
|
177, Report of Superintendent of Public Schools, 1853, pp. 62, 63.
|
||
|
|
||
|
178, W. Walker, The Congregationalists, pp. 311 et seq.
|
||
|
|
||
|
179, John Lewis, Christian Forbearance, p. 31.
|
||
|
|
||
|
180, E. Stiles, Diary, i, 21.
|
||
|
|
||
|
181, H. M. Dexter, Congregationalism as seen in Literature, p. 523.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIII. CERTIFICATE LAWS AND WESTERN LAND BILLS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
182, Acts and Laws of the State of Connecticut (ed. of 1784), pp. 403,
|
||
|
404.
|
||
|
|
||
|
183, Courant, May 28, 1791.
|
||
|
|
||
|
184, Ibid., May 28, 1791.
|
||
|
|
||
|
185, J. Leland, High Flying Churchman, pp. 10, 11, 16, 17.
|
||
|
|
||
|
186, Acts and Laws (ed. of 1784), p. 418.
|
||
|
|
||
|
187, Ibid., p. 417.
|
||
|
|
||
|
188, Cited from Report of the Superintendent of Public Schools, 1853,
|
||
|
p. 65.
|
||
|
|
||
|
189, The American Mercury, Feb. 24 and Apr. 17, 1794.
|
||
|
|
||
|
190, J. Leland, A Blow at the Boot, pp. 7, 8.
|
||
|
|
||
|
191, See Rep. of Supt. of Public Schools, 1853, pp. 74-95.
|
||
|
|
||
|
192, Ibid., pp. 101, 102.
|
||
|
|
||
|
193, Published in Courant of March 16, 23 and 30, 1795.
|
||
|
|
||
|
194, See Hollister, Hist, of Connecticut, ii, 568-575; Report of
|
||
|
Superintendent of Public Schools, 1853; Swift's System of Laws, i, 142
|
||
|
et seq.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIV. THE DEVELOPMENT or POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONNECTICUT.
|
||
|
|
||
|
195, Wolcott Manuscript, in vol. iv, Library of Conn. Historical
|
||
|
Society, Hartford, Conn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
196, Judge Church's Manuscript, deposited with New Haven Historical
|
||
|
Society.
|
||
|
|
||
|
197, Swift, System of the Laws of Connecticut, i, 55-58.
|
||
|
|
||
|
198, Hollister, Hist, of Connecticut, ii, 510-514, quoting Judge
|
||
|
Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
199, D. G. Mitchell, American Lands and Letters, i, 142; F. B. Dexter,
|
||
|
Hist, of Yale, p. 87.
|
||
|
|
||
|
200, Minutes of the General Association, Report of the Session of
|
||
|
1797.
|
||
|
|
||
|
201, A. Bishop, Proofs of a Conspiracy, p. 32.
|
||
|
|
||
|
202, Connecticut Journal, April 30, 1816, quotes the Petition and
|
||
|
reply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
203, J. Leland, Van Tromp lowering his Peak, p, 33.
|
||
|
|
||
|
204, A. Bishop, Oration in Honor of the Election of Jefferson, pp. 9,
|
||
|
10, 11-16.
|
||
|
|
||
|
205, Judge Church's Manuscript.
|
||
|
|
||
|
206, Lyman Beecher, Autobiography, i, 257, 259, 260, 342, 343.
|
||
|
|
||
|
207, Constitution of the United States, Article II, Sect, ii, 1;
|
||
|
Art. I, Sect, viii, 15. For the correspondence between General
|
||
|
Dearborn and Gov. J. C. Smith, see Mies' Register, viii, 209-212.
|
||
|
|
||
|
208, Hildreth, History of United States, vi, 319-325; Schouler, Hist,
|
||
|
of United States, ii, 270.
|
||
|
|
||
|
209, Niles' Register, viii, 291; ix, 171; also American Mercury of
|
||
|
April 19, 1815.
|
||
|
|
||
|
210, New Haven Register, and also the American Mercury of Feb. 12,
|
||
|
1817.
|
||
|
|
||
|
211, Niles' Register, xi, 80.
|
||
|
|
||
|
212, Swift, System of Law, i, 74.
|
||
|
|
||
|
213, Swift, Vindication of the calling of the Special Superior Court,
|
||
|
pp. 40-42.
|
||
|
|
||
|
214, Report of the Committee. See also J. H. Trumbull, Historical
|
||
|
Notes, pp. 43-47.
|
||
|
|
||
|
215, Connecticut Courant of Aug. 25, 1818.
|
||
|
|
||
|
216, J. H. Trumbull, Historical Notes, pp. 55, 56.
|
||
|
|
||
|
217, Journal of the Convention, pp. 49, 67. (The Connecticut Courant
|
||
|
and the American Mercury published the debates of the Convention in
|
||
|
full as they occurred.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
218, Trumbull, Historical Notes, p. 60. See also the text, preceding
|
||
|
this note, p. 483.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Constitution of 1818, admirable for the conditions of that time,
|
||
|
leaves now large room for betterment. The century-old habit of
|
||
|
legislative interference was not wholly uprooted in 1818, and soon
|
||
|
began to grow apace. The Constitution stands to-day with its original
|
||
|
eleven articles and with thirty-one amendments, some of which, at
|
||
|
least in their working, are directly opposed to the spirit of the
|
||
|
framers of the commonwealth. The old cry of excessive legislative
|
||
|
power is heard again, for the legislature by a majority of one may
|
||
|
override the governor's veto, and, through its powers of confirmation
|
||
|
and appointment, it may measurably control the executive department
|
||
|
and the judicial. Moreover, apart from these defects in the
|
||
|
constitution, certain economic changes have resulted in a
|
||
|
disproportionate representation in the House of Representatives. The
|
||
|
Joint-Stock Act of 1837 gave birth to great corporations, and with
|
||
|
railroads soon developed the formation of large manufacturing
|
||
|
plants. As a result, there was a rush, at first, of the native born,
|
||
|
and, later, of large numbers of immigrants, who swelled the
|
||
|
population, to the cities. This, together with the development of the
|
||
|
great grain-producing western states, changed Connecticut from an
|
||
|
agricultural to a manufacturing state, and from a producer of her own
|
||
|
foodstuffs to a consumer of those which she must import from other
|
||
|
states.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such shifting of the population has produced a condition where a bare
|
||
|
majority of one in a House of two hundred and fifty-five members may
|
||
|
pass a measure that really represents the sentiment of but
|
||
|
one-fifteenth of the voters of the state. There results a system of
|
||
|
rotten boroughs and the opportunity for a well-organized lobby and the
|
||
|
moneyed control of votes. It is asserted that the first section of the
|
||
|
bill of rights, namely, "That no man or set of men are entitled to
|
||
|
exclusive public emoluments or privileges from the community," is
|
||
|
constantly violated by this misrepresentation, which especially
|
||
|
affects the population in the cities, and is felt not only in all
|
||
|
state measures, but in all local ones about which the legislature must
|
||
|
be consulted. As an illustration of the inequality of representation,
|
||
|
the following figures are given. In the Constitutional Convention of
|
||
|
1818, 81 towns sent _two_ delegates each, and 39 towns sent
|
||
|
_one_, from communities out of which 11 had a population of less
|
||
|
than 1000, and 100 ranged between 1000 and 4000, while only 9
|
||
|
surpassed this last number. In the Constitutional Convention of 1902,
|
||
|
87 towns, with an aggregate population of 781,954, sent each
|
||
|
_two_ delegates, while 81, with a combined population of 126,411,
|
||
|
sent each _one_ delegate. Thus it happened that in 1902, New
|
||
|
Haven, population 108,027, sent _two_ delegates, and the town of
|
||
|
Union, population 428, also sent _two_ delegates, while ten other
|
||
|
towns, with a population ranging from 593 to 885 each, sent _two_
|
||
|
delegates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The "Standing Order" of to-day is not a privileged church, but a
|
||
|
dominant political party strong in the privilege and powers derived
|
||
|
from long tenure of office and intrenched behind constitutional
|
||
|
amendments which, in addition to this unequal representation in the
|
||
|
House, provide for the election of Senators upon town and county lines
|
||
|
rather than upon population. The Constitutional Reform Party of to-day
|
||
|
propose radical measures to remedy these more glaring defects in the
|
||
|
administration of government, and to consider these, called the
|
||
|
Constitutional Convention of 1902. In it, the influence of the small
|
||
|
towns on the drafting of the proposed constitution was so great that,
|
||
|
when it was presented to the people for ratification, an adverse
|
||
|
majority in every county refused to accept it. In fact, only fifteen
|
||
|
per cent of the whole people thought it worth while to express any
|
||
|
opinion at all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
References for the Constitutional Convention of 1902: Clarence Deming,
|
||
|
Town Eule in Connecticut, Political Science Quarterly, September,
|
||
|
1889; and M. B. Carey, The Connecticut Constitution. (These will be
|
||
|
found useful as summing up much of the newspaper discussion of the
|
||
|
period, and also for the data upon which the argument for the desired
|
||
|
changes is based.) There is also "The Constitutions of Connecticut,
|
||
|
with Notes and Statistics regarding Town Representation in the General
|
||
|
Assembly, and Documents relating to the Constitutional Convention of
|
||
|
1902," printed by order of the Comptroller, Hartford, Conn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
A. HISTORIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. GENERAL
|
||
|
|
||
|
A few titles are given of those works found most useful in acquiring a
|
||
|
general historic setting for the main topic.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bancroft, George. History of the United States. New York, 1889.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gardiner, S. R. History of England from Accession of James I. London,
|
||
|
1863.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of England under the Duke of Buckingham and Charles
|
||
|
I. London, 1875.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate. London and New York,
|
||
|
1894-1903.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Green, John Richard. Short History of the English People. London,
|
||
|
1884.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of the English People. New York, 1880. 4 vols., chiefly
|
||
|
vol. iii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hildreth, Richard. History of the United States to 1824. New York,
|
||
|
1887. 6 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
McMaster, John Bach. A History of the People of the United States from
|
||
|
the Revolution to the Civil War. New York, 1884-1900. 5 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schouler, James. History of the United States of America under the
|
||
|
Constitution. Washington, Philadelphia, and New York, 1882-99. 6 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tyler, Moses Coit. A History of American Literature, 1607-1765. New
|
||
|
York, 1879. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Literary History of the American Revolution, 1763-1783. New
|
||
|
York and London, 1897. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Winsor, Justin. Narrative and Critical History of America. Cambridge,
|
||
|
1886-89. 8 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. SPECIAL
|
||
|
|
||
|
Adams, Henry. Documents relating to New England Federalism,
|
||
|
1800-1815. Boston, 1877.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Adams, John. Works with a Life of the Author, Notes and
|
||
|
Illustrations. (Ed. by Charles Francis Adams.) Boston, 1850-56. 10
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arber, Edward. The Story of the Pilgrim Fathers, 1606-1623 A. D. as
|
||
|
told by themselves, their Friends and their Enemies, edited from the
|
||
|
original Texts. London, 1897.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Barlow, Joel. Political Writings. New York, 1796.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bradford, William. History of "Plimoth" Plantation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reprint from original MS. with report of proceedings incident to its
|
||
|
return. Boston, 1898.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brown, John. The Pilgrim Fathers of New England and their Puritan
|
||
|
Successors. London, 1895. Revised American ed. 1897. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Byington, Ezra B. The Puritan in England and New England. Boston,
|
||
|
1897.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Campbell, Douglas. The Puritans in Holland, England and America. New
|
||
|
York, 1892. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cobb, Sanford H. Rise of Religious Liberty in America. New York and
|
||
|
London, 1902.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pages 236-290 and 512-514 treat of Connecticut, while 454-482 deal
|
||
|
with the American Episcopate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Doyle, John Andrew. The English in America; The Puritan Colonies. New
|
||
|
York, 1889. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ellis, George E. The Puritan Age and Rule in the Colony of
|
||
|
Massachusetts Bay, 1629-1685. Boston and New York, 1888.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Felt, Joseph Barton. The Ecclesiastical History of New England,
|
||
|
comprising not only Religious but Moral and other Relations. Arranged
|
||
|
chronologically and with index. Boston, 1855-62. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fish, Carl Russell. The Civil Service and the Patronage. New York,
|
||
|
1905.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pages 32-39, Jefferson's removal of Mr. Goodrich of New Haven.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fiske, John. The Beginnings of New England; or, The Puritan Theocracy
|
||
|
in its Relations to Civil and Religious Liberty. Boston and New York,
|
||
|
1880.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gardiner, S. R. The First Two Stuarts and the Puritan Revolution,
|
||
|
1603-1660. London, 1887.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Goodwin, John Abbott. The Pilgrim Republic: An Historical Review of
|
||
|
the Colony of New Plymouth, with sketches of the Rise of other New
|
||
|
England Settlements, the History of Congregationalism and the Creeds
|
||
|
of the Period [New England to 1732]. Cambridge, 1895.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Heckewelder, J. A Narrative of the Mission of the United Brethren
|
||
|
among the Delaware and Mohigan Indians from 1740 to
|
||
|
1808. Philadelphia, 1820.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lauer, P. E. Church and State in New England. Baltimore, 1892.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Also in Johns Hopkins University Studies, Nos. 2 & 3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lodge, Henry Cabot. A Short History of the English Colonies in
|
||
|
America. New York, 1881.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Love, Wm. De Loss, Jr. The Fasts and Thanksgiving Days of New
|
||
|
England. Boston, 1895. Includes a bibliography.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Loskiel, George H. History of the Missions of the United Brethren
|
||
|
among the Indians in North America. London, 1794.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mather, Cotton. Magnalia Christi Americana; or, The Ecclesiastical
|
||
|
History of New England from its First Planting in the Year 1620 to the
|
||
|
Year of our Lord 1698. Ed. London, 1702,--Hartford, 1820. 2 vols. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
3d ed. with Introduction and occasional Notes by T. Bobbins.
|
||
|
Hartford, 1853, 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mourt's Relation or Journal of a Plantation settled at Plymouth, in
|
||
|
New England and proceedings Thereof. London, 1622. 2d ed. Annotated
|
||
|
by A. Young. Boston, 1841. Also found in Young's Chronicle of the
|
||
|
Pilgrim Fathers. Boston, 1846. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reprint with illustrative cuts, George B. Cheever, Editor, New York,
|
||
|
1849.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reprint ed. by H. M. Dexter. Boston, 1865. (See vol. viii, 1st
|
||
|
series, Mass. Hist Soc. Col., also Library of New England History,
|
||
|
vol. i.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Neal, Daniel. History of the Puritans, or Protestant Non-conformists:
|
||
|
from the Reformation in 1517 to the death of Queen Elizabeth, with an
|
||
|
Account of their principles: their Attempts for a further Reformation
|
||
|
in the Church: their Sufferings, and the Lives and Characters of their
|
||
|
considerable Divines, etc. London, 1732, 4 vols. Revised ed. London,
|
||
|
1837, 3 vols. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Palfrey, John G. Comprehensive History of New England. Boston,
|
||
|
1858-90. 5 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Prince, Thomas. A Chronological History of New England in the form of
|
||
|
Annals. Boston, 1736. Edited by Drake with Memoir of the
|
||
|
Author. Boston, 1852. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reprint to Mass. Hist. Soc. Col., 2d series, vol. vii, 1818. New
|
||
|
edition, edited by N. Hale. Boston, 1826. Found also in Arber's
|
||
|
English Garner, vol. ii, 1879.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reichel, W. C. Memorial of the Dedication of Monuments erected by
|
||
|
Moravian Historical Society to mark the sites of ancient missionary
|
||
|
stations. Philadelphia, 1858.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Schaff, Philip. Religious Liberty. See American Historical Society
|
||
|
Annual Report, 1886-87.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thornton, J. Wingate. The Pulpit of the American Revolution. Boston,
|
||
|
1876.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Weeden, William B. Economic and Social History of New England. Boston,
|
||
|
1890. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Winthrop, John. History of New England, 1636-47, edited by James
|
||
|
Savage. Boston, 1853. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wood, John (Cheetham, James). History of the Administration of John
|
||
|
Adams. New York, 1802.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of the Administration of J. Adams, with Notes. New York,
|
||
|
1846.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3. STATISTICAL
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baird, Robert. Religion in America; or An Account of the Origin,
|
||
|
Relation to the State and Present Condition of the Evangelic Churches
|
||
|
in the United States. New York, 1856.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bishop, J. Leander. A History of American Manufactures,
|
||
|
1608-1860. 1868. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This includes a history of the origin and growth of the principal
|
||
|
mechanical arts and manufactures: notice of important inventions;
|
||
|
results of each decennial census; tariffs; and statistics of
|
||
|
manufacturing centres. It has a good index by which the industrial
|
||
|
history of each colony and state can be quickly traced. Bolles,
|
||
|
Albert S. The Financial History of the United States. New York,
|
||
|
1879-86. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Carroll, Henry King. Religious Forces in the United States,
|
||
|
enumerated, classified and described on the basis of the Government
|
||
|
Census of 1890. New York, 1893.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dorchester, Daniel. Christianity in the United States from the first
|
||
|
settlement down to the present time. New York and Cincinnati, 1888.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hayward, John. The Religious Creeds and Statistics of every Christian
|
||
|
Denomination in the United States. Boston, 1836.
|
||
|
|
||
|
4. LOCAL
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut-State, county, town, etc., of which only the more
|
||
|
important town and county histories, and reports of anniversary
|
||
|
celebrations are given. Those omitted are of small interest outside of
|
||
|
their respective towns, except to genealogists or to those whose
|
||
|
families chance to be mentioned in the sketch of historical
|
||
|
development or of commercial growth. The many books of this type
|
||
|
contribute general coloring, and some of them a few important bits of
|
||
|
information, to the story of the development of the state, but many
|
||
|
are not worth enumerating as sources, or as assistants to the general
|
||
|
reader or student.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Allen, Francis Olcott. The History of Enfleld, compiled from all the
|
||
|
public records of the town known to exist, covering from the beginning
|
||
|
to 1850. Lancaster, 1900. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Carefully compiled and attested by the town clerk. Includes also
|
||
|
graveyard inscriptions and extracts from Hartford, Northampton and
|
||
|
Springfield records.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Andrews, Charles M. The River Towns of Connecticut, Wethersfield,
|
||
|
Hartford and Windsor. Baltimore, 1889. (Also Johns Hopkins Historical
|
||
|
and Political Science Papers, vii, 341-456.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Atwater, Edward E. (editor). History of the City of New Haven. New
|
||
|
York, 1887.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Good for the earlier history, for a few extracts from records;
|
||
|
contains descriptions of public men and events, also extracts from
|
||
|
old newspapers, etc.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of the Colony of New Haven to its absorption into
|
||
|
Connecticut. New Haven, 1881. A much better book, being the best
|
||
|
special history of the New Haven Colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baldwin, Simeon E. Constitutional Reform. A Discussion of the Present
|
||
|
Inequalities of Representatives in the General Assembly [of
|
||
|
Connecticut]. New Haven, 1873.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Early History of the Ballot in Connecticut. American
|
||
|
Historical Association Papers, i, 407-422. New York, 1890.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Three Constitutions of Connecticut. In New Haven Historical
|
||
|
Society Papers, vol. v.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Barber, John W. Connecticut Historical Collections. New Haven, 1856.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A book of brief anecdotal town histories, curious legends, notable
|
||
|
events, newspaper clippings, together with a goodly number of
|
||
|
illustrations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bolles, John Rogers. The Rogerenes: Some hitherto unpublished annals
|
||
|
belonging to the Colonial History of Connecticut. Part
|
||
|
1. A. Vindication, by J. R. Bolles. Part 2. History of the Rogerenes,
|
||
|
by Anna B. Williams. Boston, 1904.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bowen, Clarence W. The Boundary Disputes of Connecticut. Boston,
|
||
|
1882.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Breckenridge, Francis A. Recollections of a New England Town
|
||
|
(Meriden). Meriden, 1899.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Typical of the life in New England towns, 1800-1850.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bronson, Henry, Early Government of Connecticut. (New Haven
|
||
|
Historical Society Papers, iii, 293 et seq.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bushnell, Horace. "Work and Play," being the first volume of his
|
||
|
"Literary Varieties." New York, 1881.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Contains an historical estimate of Connecticut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Caulkins, Frances M. History of New London, Connecticut. New London,
|
||
|
1852.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of Norwich, Connecticut. Norwich, 1845.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These two histories are readable, reliable and full of detail,
|
||
|
culled from original records, many of which are now deposited with
|
||
|
the New London Historical Society.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Clap, Thomas. Annals or History of Yale College. New Haven, 1766.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cothren, William. History of Ancient Woodbury, Connecticut,
|
||
|
1669-1879. (Including Washington, Southbury, Bethlehem, Roxbury, and
|
||
|
part of Oxford and Middlebury.) Waterbury, 1854, 1872, 1879. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Vols. i and ii, history, with considerable genealogy. Vol. iii,
|
||
|
1679-1879, births, marriages and deaths.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dexter, Franklin Bowditch. Thomas Clap and his Writings. See New
|
||
|
Haven Historical Society Papers, vol. v.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Sketch of the History of Yale University. New Haven, 1887.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dwight, Theodore. History of Connecticut. New York, 1841.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of Hartford Convention. Hartford, 1833.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of the 447 pages, 340 are devoted to recounting the events which led
|
||
|
to the calling of the convention, and, with much political bias, to
|
||
|
the history of Jefferson's political career from 1789, quoting from
|
||
|
official correspondence and his private letters. Pages 340-422 deal
|
||
|
with the convention proper, giving, pp. 383-400, its "Secret
|
||
|
Journal." The Appendix, pp. 422-447, has brief biographies of the
|
||
|
members.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dwight, Timothy. Travels in New England and New York. New Haven,
|
||
|
1831. 4 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dodd, Stephen. The East Haven Register in Three Parts. New Haven,
|
||
|
1824.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A rare little book of 200 pages compiled by the pastor of the
|
||
|
Congregational Church in East Haven. Part i contains a history of
|
||
|
the town from 1640 to 1800; part ii, names, marriages, and births,
|
||
|
1644-1800; part iii, account of the deaths in families, from 1647 to
|
||
|
1824.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Field, David Dudley. A History of the Towns of Haddam and East
|
||
|
Haddam. Middletown, 1814.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A book of some forty-eight pages, of which six are devoted to
|
||
|
genealogies "taken partly from the records of the towns, and partly
|
||
|
from the information of aged people" by the pastor of the church in
|
||
|
Haddam. Though largely ecclesiastical, its author-- a college
|
||
|
A. M.--realizes the value of statistics in references to population,
|
||
|
necrology, taxes, militia, farming, and other industries, and weaves
|
||
|
them into his rambling story.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Statistical Account of the County of Middlesex. Middletown, 1819.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fowler, William Chauncey. History of Durham, 1662- 1866.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Includes in chapter xii--pp. 229-443--extracts trom Town Records,
|
||
|
Ministerial Records, Proprietor's Eecords.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gillett, E. H., Rev. The Development of Civil Liberty in
|
||
|
Connecticut. In Historical Magazine, 2d series, vol. iv (1868),
|
||
|
pp. 1-34, Appendices, pp. 34-49. Morrisania, N. Y., 1868.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Appendix A. Report of the Rev. Elizur Goodrich, D. D., to the
|
||
|
Convention of Delegates from the Synod of New York and Philadelphia
|
||
|
and from the Associations of Connecticut, held annually from 1766 to
|
||
|
1775 inclusive (being a statement on the subject of Religious
|
||
|
Liberty in the Colony), with notes by E. H. G. pp. 34-43.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Appendix B. Letter of Rev. Thomas Prince of Boston to Rev. John
|
||
|
Drew of Groton, Conn., May 8, 1744, pp. 43-47. (Sympathizing with
|
||
|
the New Lights.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Appendix C. Three short paragraphs omitted from the body of the
|
||
|
article.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Appendix D. Extracts from the American reprint of Graham's
|
||
|
"Ecclesiastical Establishments of Europe," pp. 47, 48.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This article in itself contains Israel Holly's "Memorial," Joseph
|
||
|
Brown's "Letter to Infant Baptisers of North Parish in New London"
|
||
|
(in part); also copious citations from the pamphlets of Bolles,
|
||
|
Frothingham, Bragge, the Autobiography of Billy Hibbard (Methodist
|
||
|
preacher) and extracts from Abraham Bishop's pamphlets.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hartford Town Votes, 1635-1716. (Transcribed by Chas. J. Hoadly.) See
|
||
|
Connecticut Historical Society Collections, 1897, vol. vi.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hollister, Gideon H. Address in Litchfleld, April 9,1856, before the
|
||
|
Historical and Antiquarian Society, on the occasion of completing its
|
||
|
organization. Hartford, 1856.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hollister, Gideon H. The History of Connecticut. New Haven, 1855. 2
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A history of Connecticut from the first settlement of the colony to
|
||
|
the adoption of the present Constitution in 1818.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hurd, D. Hamilton. History of Fairfield County, Connecticut, with
|
||
|
illustrations and Biographical Sketches of its Prominent Men and
|
||
|
Pioneers. Philadelphia, 1881.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Johnson, William Samuel. Letters to the Governors of Connecticut,
|
||
|
1766-1771. See Mass. Historical Society Collections, series 5,
|
||
|
vol. ix, pp. 211-490.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Johnston, Alexander. The Genesis of a New England State,
|
||
|
Connecticut. Baltimore, 1883. Revised 1903. (Also in Johns Hopkins
|
||
|
University Studies, vol. i, no. 11.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Connecticut; a Study of a Commonwealth Democracy. Boston and New
|
||
|
York, 1887. Revised 1903.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jones, Frederick R. History of Taxation in Connecticut. Johns Hopkins
|
||
|
University Studies in Political Science, series 14, no. 8. Baltimore,
|
||
|
1896.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Journal of the Proceedings of the Convention of Delegates Convened at
|
||
|
Hartford, August 26, 1818. Hartford, 1873. Reprinted by order of the
|
||
|
state comptroller, Hartford, 1901.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kilbourne, P. K. Sketches and Churches of the Town of
|
||
|
Litchfield. Historical, biographical, statistical. Hartford, 1859.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An excellent account, drawing in part upon Woodruff's (George C.)
|
||
|
History of Litchfield, 1845, and Morris' Statistical Account of
|
||
|
Litchfield County, 1818, with additional matter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kingsley, F. J. Old Connecticut. See New Haven Historical Society
|
||
|
Papers, vol. iii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kingsley, James Luce. Sketch of Yale College. Boston, 1835.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lambert, Edward R. History of the Colony of New Haven, before and
|
||
|
after the Union with Connecticut. New Haven, 1838.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Larned, Ellen D. History of Windham County. Worcester, 1874. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the best of the local histories.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Vol. 1, book iii. Account of Canterbury Church difficulties and of the
|
||
|
Clevelands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Historic Gleanings in Windham County, Connecticut. Providence,
|
||
|
1899.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Levermore, Charles H. The Republic of New Haven. Also in Johns
|
||
|
Hopkins University Studies, extra vol. i. Baltimore, 1886.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Litchfleld Book of Days, A collection of the historical, biographical
|
||
|
and literary reminiscences of Litchfleld, Connecticut. Edited by
|
||
|
George C. Boswell. Litchfield, 1899.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Litchfleld County Centennial Celebration, August 13-14,
|
||
|
1851. Hartford, 1851.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Loomis (Dwight) and Calhoun (J. Gilbert). The Judicial and Civil
|
||
|
History of Connecticut. Boston, 1895.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Orcutt, Samuel. History of New Milford and Bridgewater, Connecticut,
|
||
|
1703-1882. Hartford, 1882.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of Old Town of Derby. Springfield, 1880.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Prepared with great fidelity and thoroughness, and to take rank
|
||
|
with the best town histories," wrote Noah Porter on Feb. 1,
|
||
|
1880. Biography and Genealogy, pp. 523-785.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of
|
||
|
Bridgeport. New Haven, 1886. 2 pts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates from the states of
|
||
|
Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, the Counties of Cheshire and
|
||
|
Grafton in the State of New Hampshire and the County of Windham in the
|
||
|
State of Vermont convened at Hartford in the State of Connecticut,
|
||
|
December 15, 1814. Hartford, 1815.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sanford, Elias B. A History of Connecticut. Hartford, 1887.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A school history.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Selleck, Charles M. History of Norwalk. Norwich, 1886.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Statistical Account of the Towns and Parishes in the State of
|
||
|
Connecticut, published by Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences,
|
||
|
vol. i, no. 1. New Haven, 1811.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Steiner, Bernard Christian. A History of the Plantation of Menunkatuck
|
||
|
and of the Original Town of Guilford, Connecticut (present towns of
|
||
|
Guilford and Madison) written largely from the manuscripts of The Hon.
|
||
|
Ralph Dunning Smyth. Baltimore, 1897.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The book draws upon the preceding histories of Guilford, namely that
|
||
|
of the Rev. Thomas Kuggles, Jr., and the later sketch of Guilford
|
||
|
and Madison by Daniel Dudley Field, first written in 1827 for the
|
||
|
Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences. It was revised by
|
||
|
R. D. Smyth in 1840 and published in 1877 after his
|
||
|
death. Mr. Sterner has added matter derived from a study of the town
|
||
|
records and other sources, making a history that covers all points
|
||
|
of development.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Governor William Leete and the absorption of New Haven by the
|
||
|
Colony of Connecticut. American Historical Association, Annual Report,
|
||
|
1891, pp. 209-222.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of Slavery in Connecticut. (See Johns Hopkins Historical
|
||
|
Studies, ii, 30 et seq.) Baltimore, 1893.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stiles, Ezra. A Discourse on the Christian Union. Brookfield, 1799.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Literary Diary of Ezra Stiles, edited under the authority of
|
||
|
the corporation of Yale University by F. B. Dexter, M. A. New York,
|
||
|
1901. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stiles, Henry Reed. Ancient Windsor. Hartford, 1891. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Swift, Zephaniah. System of the Laws of the State of
|
||
|
Connecticut. Windham, 1795.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trumbull, Benjamin. A Complete History of Connecticut, Civil and
|
||
|
Ecclesiastical, 1639 to 1713, continued to 1764. New Haven, 1818. 2
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reprint with Introductory Notes and Index by Jonathan Trumbull. New
|
||
|
London, 1898.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trumbull, J. Hammond (Editor). Hartford County Memorial
|
||
|
History. Hartford, 1886. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Vol. i, part i, The County of Hartford treated topically, as early
|
||
|
history, the colonial period, "Bench and Bar," "Medical History,"
|
||
|
etc. Part ii, Hartford, Town and City. Vol. ii, Brief Histories of the
|
||
|
different towns.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trumbull, J. Hammond. Historical Notes of the Constitutions of
|
||
|
Connecticut, 1639 to 1818; and Progress of the Movement which resulted
|
||
|
in the Convention of 1818, and the Adoption of the present
|
||
|
Constitution. Hartford, 1873. Reprinted by order of State
|
||
|
Comptroller, Hartford, 1901.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Origin and Early Progress of Indian Missions in New
|
||
|
England. Worcester, 1874.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Defense of Stonington (Connecticut) against a British
|
||
|
Squadron. Hartford, 1864.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The True Blue Laws of Connecticut and New Haven and the False Blue
|
||
|
Laws invented by the Rev. Samuel Peters. To which are added specimens
|
||
|
of the Laws of other Colonies and some of the Blue Laws of
|
||
|
England. Hartford, 1876.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----List of Books printed in Connecticut, 1709-1800 (edited by his
|
||
|
daughter Annie E. Trumbull). The list contains 1741 titles and also a
|
||
|
list of printers. Hartford, 1904.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Webster, Noah. Collection of Papers on Political, Literary and Moral
|
||
|
Subjects. New York, 1843.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. LOCAL BIOGRAPHIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bacon, Leonard. Sketch of Life and Public Services of James
|
||
|
Hillhouse. New Haven, 1860.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Blake, B.L. Gurdon Saltonstall. In New London Historical Society
|
||
|
Papers, part 5, vol. i.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dexter, Franklin B. Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Yale. 3
|
||
|
vols. May, 1701-May, 1745; New York, 1885. May, 1745-May, 1763; New
|
||
|
York, 1896. May, 1763-May, 1778; New York, 1903.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kilbourne, P. K. Biographical History of the County of Litchfield. New
|
||
|
York, 1851.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mitchell, Donald G. American Lands and Letters. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
First volume, for early newspapers, the Hartford Wits and literati
|
||
|
of the colonial period.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sprague, W. B. Annals of the American Pulpit. New York, 1857-69. 9
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Biographical Sketches in chronological order, contributed by 540
|
||
|
writers of sectarian prominence, and with intent to show development
|
||
|
of churches and the power of character.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Vols. i and ii, Trinitarian-Congregationalists. Vols. iii and iv,
|
||
|
Presbyterian. Vol. v, Episcopalians (reference for the Episcopal
|
||
|
Republican coalition in 1818 in Connecticut). Vol. vi, Baptists.
|
||
|
Vol. vii, Methodists. Vol. viii, Unitarians. Vol. ix, Lutherans, Dutch
|
||
|
Reformed, etc.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tyler, Moses Coit. Three Men of Letters (George Berkeley, Timothy
|
||
|
Dwight and Joel Barlow). New York and London, 1895.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
B. CONNECTICUT NEWSPAPERS
|
||
|
|
||
|
_w_. abbreviation for weekly
|
||
|
|
||
|
HARTFORD
|
||
|
|
||
|
American Mercury, _w_. Anti-Federal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded July 12, 1784, with Joel Barlow, editor, and Elisha Babcock,
|
||
|
publisher. In 1833 merged into the Independent Press.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yale University Library has a file practically complete to 1828,
|
||
|
only 20 numbers missing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut Courant. _w_. Federal, Whig, Republican.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded 1764, by Thomas Green as organ of the Loyal Sons of Liberty;
|
||
|
later supported Washington and Adams; continued as the weekly and
|
||
|
now daily Hartford Courant. Said to be the oldest newspaper still
|
||
|
published in the United States. Connecticut Courant and the Weekly
|
||
|
Hartford Intelligencer, 1774.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut Courant and the Weekly Intelligencer, Feb. 1781.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The latter part of title dropped March 21, 1791.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1837 the Daily Courant was established. This paper bought out the
|
||
|
Independent Press (which in turn had absorbed the American Mercury);
|
||
|
and the staff of the Press, including Charles Dudley Warner,
|
||
|
Gen. J. K. Hawley and Stephen A. Hubbard, joined William
|
||
|
H. Goodrich, who was the business manager of the Couraut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut Mirror, _w_. Federal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded July 10, 1809, by Charles Hosmer, publisher. During the War
|
||
|
of 1812, it was the organ of the "extreme right" of the Federal
|
||
|
party. It was continued until about 1835.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yale University Library contains an almost complete file up to 1831.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Times. _w_. Democratic-Republican.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded Jan., 1817, with Frederick D. Bolles, publisher, and
|
||
|
M. Niles, editor. Its slogan was "Toleration" and the New
|
||
|
Constitution.
|
||
|
|
||
|
March 2,1841, it became the Daily Times, and still continues.
|
||
|
|
||
|
NEW HAVEN
|
||
|
|
||
|
Columbian Register, _w_. Democrat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded Dec. 1, 1812, Joseph Barber, publisher, to give "proceedings
|
||
|
of Congress, latest news from Europe and history of New England,
|
||
|
particularly of Connecticut." Daily edition, 1845; Sunday edition,
|
||
|
1877.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yale University has a continuous file.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Connecticut Gazette, _w_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Printed by James Parker, April, 1755. Suspended April 14,1764.
|
||
|
Eevived by Benjamin Mecom, July 5, 1765. Ended Feb. 19, 1768.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut Herald, _w_. Federal, Republican.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded 1803, by Corostock, Griswold & Co., publishers, Thomas Green
|
||
|
Woodward, editor. A Daily Herald, issued Nov. 16,1832. In 1835 its
|
||
|
publishers, Woodward & Carrington, bought the Connecticut Journal.
|
||
|
The Daily Herald and Journal of 1846 soon became, by buying out the
|
||
|
Courier, The Morning Journal and Courier, as now, and its weekly
|
||
|
edition, the Connecticut Herald.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yale University has a continuous file.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Connecticut Journal and New Haven Post Boy. _w_. Federal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded 1767 by Thomas and Samuel Green. It was started about four
|
||
|
months before the Connecticut Gazette (New Haven). It failed April
|
||
|
7,1835, and was sold to Woodward & Carrington, owners of the Daily
|
||
|
Herald.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The title "and New Haven Post Boy" was omitted about 1775. It was
|
||
|
known in 1799, for a few months only, as the Connecticut Journal and
|
||
|
Weekly Advertiser, and in 1809, for a few months only, as the
|
||
|
Connecticut Journal and Advertiser.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yale's file dates from 1774 to 1835.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The New Haven Gazette and the Connecticut Magazine, _w_. Meigs &
|
||
|
Dana, Feb. 16, 1786-1798.
|
||
|
|
||
|
NEW LONDON
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Connecticut Post and New Haven Visitor, _w_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded Oct. 30, 1802, as the Visitor; title changed Nov. 3, 1803.
|
||
|
Ended its existence about Nov. 8, 1834.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The New London Gazette, _w_. (Connecticut Gazette.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Founded by Timothy Green, November, 1763. The earlier Connecticut
|
||
|
Gazette, published at New Haven, April, 1755-April 14, 1763, having
|
||
|
ended February, 1768, the New London Gazette adopted the New Haven
|
||
|
paper's name. The firm became Timothy Green & Son, 1789-1794. Samuel
|
||
|
Green (the son) conducted the paper to 1841, except the year 1805,
|
||
|
and from 1838 to 1840. Known as the Connecticut and Universal
|
||
|
Intelligencer, Dec. 10, 1773-May 11, 1787.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yale University flies are from 1765 to 1828, except 1775, '76, '77,
|
||
|
and '78.
|
||
|
|
||
|
OUTSIDE OF CONNECTICUT
|
||
|
|
||
|
Niles' Weekly Register, _w_. Baltimore, 1811-1849.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was known from 1811 to 1814 as the Weekly Register; from 1814 to
|
||
|
August, 1837, as Niles' Weekly Register, and from 1837 to 1849 as
|
||
|
Niles' National Register. It devoted itself to the record of public
|
||
|
events, essays and documents dealing with political, historical,
|
||
|
statistical, economic and biographical matter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
C. PUBLIC RECORDS AND OTHERS TOUCHING UPON CONNECTICUT HISTORY
|
||
|
|
||
|
New Haven Colonial Records, ed. by C. J. Hoadly. 2 vols. 1638-1649;
|
||
|
1653-1664. Hartford, 1857-58.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut, Colonial Records of, ed. by C. J. Hoadly and J. Hammond
|
||
|
Trumbull. 15 vols. 1635-1776,. Hartford, 1850-90.
|
||
|
|
||
|
State of Connecticut, Records of the, ed. by C. J. Hoadly. 2
|
||
|
vols. 1776-1778; 1778-1780. Hartford, 1894-95.
|
||
|
|
||
|
United Colonies of New England, Records of the, in vol. ii. of
|
||
|
E. Hazard's "Historical Collections consisting of State Papers and
|
||
|
other authentic Documents, etc."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Plymouth Colony, Records of, ed. by N. R. Shurtleff and
|
||
|
D. Pulsifer. 12 vols. Boston, 1855-61.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Records of the General Association of Connecticut, June 20, 1738, June
|
||
|
19, 1799; Hartford, 1888. 8 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Minutes of Proceedings of the General Association, 1818, on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Proceedings of Connecticut Missionary Society, 1801-1819.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Report of the Superintendent of Common Schools of Connecticut, 1853.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This annual report has a detailed account of the Western Land Bill
|
||
|
appropriations, pp. 64-108.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Constitutions of Connecticut, with Notes and Statistics regarding
|
||
|
Town Representation in the General Assembly, and Documents relating to
|
||
|
the Constitutional Convention of 1902. Printed by Order of the State
|
||
|
Comptroller. Hartford, 1901.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Code of 1650. In Hinman's "Antiquities of Connecticut."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Public Statute Laws of the State of Connecticut. Hartford, 1808.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Acts and Laws, 1784-1794. (Supplements to Oct., 1795, laid in.) New
|
||
|
London, 1784.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Acts and Laws, 1811-1821.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
D. HISTORICAL SOCIETY PUBLICATIONS
|
||
|
|
||
|
American Historical Association Annual Report. 1889-1904.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connecticut Historical Society Collections. 8 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Especially vol. i, Extract from Hooker's Sermon. Vol. ii, Hartford
|
||
|
Church Papers. Vol. iii, Extract from Letter to the Rev. Thomas
|
||
|
Prince. Vols. v and vi, Talcott Papers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Massachusetts Historical Society Collections, 1792-1904. 64 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Volumes containing the Mather, Sewall, and Winthrop Papers were
|
||
|
especially useful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Narragansett Club Publications. Providence, 1866. 6 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Correspondence of Roger Williams and John Cotton, vols. i and ii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
New Haven Colony Historical Society Papers. 6 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rhode Island Historical Society Collections. 8 vols. 1827-92.
|
||
|
Proceedings, 4 vols., 1871-92, and Publications, 1892, onwards.
|
||
|
|
||
|
MANUSCRIPTS
|
||
|
|
||
|
Judge Church's MS. in New Haven Historical Society Library.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A sketch prepared for the historian Hollister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Manuscript Records of the Newport Yearly Meeting, deposited in the
|
||
|
Friends' School, Providence, R. I.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Manuscript Minutes of the Hartford North Association, deposited in
|
||
|
Yale library.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stiles, Ezra. Itinerary and Memoirs, 1760-1794, deposited in Yale
|
||
|
College.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
E. DENOMINATIONAL LITERATURE
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. BAPTIST
|
||
|
|
||
|
Asplund, John. The Annual Register of the Baptist Denomination in
|
||
|
North America ... to Nov. 1,1790; containing an account of the
|
||
|
Churches and their Constitutions, Ministers, Members, Associations,
|
||
|
their Plan and Sentiments, Rule and Order, Proceedings and
|
||
|
Correspondence. Worcester, 1791-94.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Backus, Isaac. A History of New England with Particular Reference to
|
||
|
the Denomination of Christians called Baptists. Newton, Mass., 1871. 2
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This edition by D. Weston includes Isaac Backus' prefaces to vol. i,
|
||
|
finished 1777; vol. ii, 1784; and vol iii, 1796.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This contemporary writer is regarded as an authority, as much of his
|
||
|
work was founded upon the court, town, and church records and upon
|
||
|
the minutes of ecclesiastical councils. He searched diligently the
|
||
|
records of Plymouth, Taunton, Boston, Essex, Providence, Newport,
|
||
|
Hartford and New Haven. The book has a chronological record of the
|
||
|
Connecticut churches. It is very discursive.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Benedict, David. A General History of the Baptist Denomination in
|
||
|
America and other parts of the world. Boston, 1813.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This contains a more complete list of the associations and churches
|
||
|
than that given by Backus. There is a valuable chapter, "Baptist
|
||
|
Communities who differ from the main body of the denomination and
|
||
|
who are also distinguished by some peculiarities of their own."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Burrage, Henry S. A History of the Baptists in New
|
||
|
England. Philadelphia, 1894.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Particularly useful in tracing the progress of the denomination in
|
||
|
the different states, and in its contribution to the history of
|
||
|
religious liberty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cathcart, William (Editor). The Baptist Encyclopedia: A Dictionary of
|
||
|
the Doctrines ... of the Baptist Denomination in all
|
||
|
Lands. Philadelphia, 1883. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Curtis, Thomas F. The Progress of Baptist Principles in the Last
|
||
|
Hundred Years. Boston, 1856.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Denison, Frederic. Notes of the Baptists and their Principles in
|
||
|
Norwich. Norwich, 1859.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This contains the famous Separatist Petition to the King in 1756.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Guild, Reuben A. History of Brown University, with Illustrated
|
||
|
Documents. Providence, 1867.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hovey, Alvah. A Memoir of the Life and Times of the Reverend Isaac
|
||
|
Backus, A. M. Boston, 1858.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Newman, Albert H. A History of the Baptist Churches in the United
|
||
|
States. New York, 1894.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. CONGREGATIONALIST
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Confession of Faith, Owned and Consented to by the Elders and
|
||
|
Messengers of the Churches in the Colony of Connecticut in New England
|
||
|
Assembled by Delegates at Saybrook, Sept. 9, 1708.
|
||
|
|
||
|
First Edition (first book printed in Connecticut), New London, 1710.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Second Edition, New London, 1760, with Heads of Agreement; Edition
|
||
|
of Hartford, 1831. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God in the Conversion
|
||
|
of Many Hundred Souls in Northampton and the Neighboring Towns.... In
|
||
|
a letter to the Rev'd. Doctor Benjamin Colman of Boston, written by
|
||
|
the Rev'd. Mr. Edwards, Minister of Northampton, on Nov. 6,
|
||
|
1736. London, 1737.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Autobiography of Lyman Beecher, D. D. New York, 1864. 3vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Especially valuable for the attitude of the Congregational clergy
|
||
|
during the first constitutional reform movement in Connecticut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bacon, Leonard. The Genesis of the New England Churches. New York,
|
||
|
1874.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Thirteen Historical Discourses, on completion of Two Hundred Years
|
||
|
from the beginning of the First Church, New Haven. New Haven, 1839.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Baldwin, Simeon E. Ecclesiastical Constitution of Yale College. In New
|
||
|
Haven Historical Society's Papers, vol. iii.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Contributions to the Ecclesiastical History of Connecticut: prepared
|
||
|
under the direction of the General Association, to commemorate the
|
||
|
completion of one hundred and fifty years since its first annual
|
||
|
Assembly. New Haven, 1861.
|
||
|
|
||
|
See under L. Bacon, the history of David Brainerd.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Barrowe, Henry. Answer to Mr. Gifford.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----A Briefe Discoverie of the False Church. Date, 1590. London
|
||
|
ed. 1707.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----A True Description of the Word of God, of the Visible Church, 1589.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Briggs, Charles Augustus. American Presbyterianism: Its Origin and
|
||
|
Early History. New York, 1885.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browne, Robert. An Answer to Master Cartwright His Letter for Joyning
|
||
|
with the English Churches. London, 1585.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----A True and Short Declaration. Middelburg, 1584.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----A Treatise of Reformation without tarrying. Middelburg, 1582.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Book which Sheweth the life and manners of all true Christians,
|
||
|
and how unlike they are unto Turkes and Papists and Heathen folk. Also
|
||
|
the pointes and partes of all Divinitie that is of the revealed will
|
||
|
and words of God, and declared by their severall Definitions and
|
||
|
Divisions in order as followeth. Middelburg, 1582.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browne, Robert. "A New Years Guift:" an hitherto lost
|
||
|
treatise. (Letter of Dec. 31, 1588, to his uncle, M. Flower.) Edited
|
||
|
by Champlin Burrage. London, 1904.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Clap, Thomas. Religious Constitution of Colleges, with Special
|
||
|
Reference to Yale. New London, 1754.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cotton, John. Civil Magistrates Power in Matters of Religion. London,
|
||
|
1655.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven and Powers thereof according to
|
||
|
the Word of God. London, 1644.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Questions and Answers upon Church Government. London, 1713.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Way of the Churches of Christ in New England. London, 1645.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Way of the Congregational Churches Cleared. London, 1648.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cotton, John. In title, but a misprint for:--
|
||
|
|
||
|
Davenport, John. A Discourse about Civil Government in a New
|
||
|
Plantation whose design is Religion, written many years
|
||
|
since. Cambridge, 1643.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dexter, Henry Martyn. The Congregationalism of the last Three Hundred
|
||
|
Years: as seen in its Literature with special reference to certain
|
||
|
Recondite, Neglected or Disputed Passages. New York, 1880.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lectures, with Bibliography of over 7000 titles and Index. An
|
||
|
historical review of Congregationalism from its earliest forms to the
|
||
|
last half of the nineteenth century.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----History of Congregationalists. Hartford, 1894. Brief popular
|
||
|
history.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Story of the Pilgrims. Boston and Chicago, 1894. Dunning, Albert
|
||
|
E. Congregationalists in America. New York, 1894.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dutton, S. M. S. History of the North Church, New Haven, from its
|
||
|
Formation in May 1742, during the Great Awakening, to the Completion
|
||
|
of the Century, in May 1842. New Haven, 1842.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Edwards, Jonathan. Works of, with Memoir by S. E. Dwight. New York,
|
||
|
1829. 10 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fisher, George P. Discourses ... Church of Christ in Yale College,
|
||
|
November 22, 1857. New Haven, 1858.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frequent citations from the diaries of the Cleveland brothers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fitch, Thomas. Explanation of the Saybrook Platform. The Principles
|
||
|
of the Consociated Churches in Connecticut; Collected from the Plan of
|
||
|
Union. By one that heartily desires the Order, Peace and Purity of
|
||
|
these Churches. Hartford, 1765.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hobart, Noah. An Attempt to illustrate and confirm the Ecclesiastical
|
||
|
Constitution of the Consociated Churches in the Colony of
|
||
|
Connecticut. New Haven, 1765.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hooker, Richard. Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity. London, 1648.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hooker, Thomas. Survey of the Summe of Church Discipline. London,
|
||
|
1648.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lechford, Thomas. Plaine Dealing. London, 1642.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Letter of Many Ministers in Old England requesting the Judgment of
|
||
|
their Brethren in New England concerning Nine Positions
|
||
|
... 1637.... Together with their Answer thereunto returned Anno 1639
|
||
|
(by J. Davenport). London, 1643.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mather, Cotton. Magualia Christi Americana; or, The Ecclesiastical
|
||
|
History of New England 1620-1698. London, 1702. Hartford, 1855. 2
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Ratio Discipline Fratrum Nov-Anglorum; A Faithful Account of the
|
||
|
Discipline Professed and Practised in the Churches of New
|
||
|
England. Boston, 1726. Mather, Richard. Church Government and Church
|
||
|
Covenant Discussed. London, 1643.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Prince, Thomas. The Christian History of the Revival and Propagation
|
||
|
of Religion. Boston, 1743.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Purchard, George. History of Congregationalism from about 250 A. D. to
|
||
|
1616. New York and Boston, 1865-1888. 5 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Walker, George Leon. History of the First Church of
|
||
|
Hartford. Hartford, 1884.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Some Aspects of the Religious Life of New England with special
|
||
|
reference to Congregationalists. New York, Boston and Chicago, 1897.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Walter, Williston. The Creeds and Platforms of Congregationalism. New
|
||
|
York, 1893.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----A History of the Congregational Churches in the United
|
||
|
States. (American Church History Series). New York, 1894.
|
||
|
|
||
|
White, Daniel Appleton. New England Congregationalism in its Origin
|
||
|
and Purity: illustrated by the foundation and early records of First
|
||
|
Church in Salem. Salem, 1861.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wolcott, Roger. A Letter to Rev. Mr. Noah Hobart. [The New English
|
||
|
Congregational Churches.... Consociated Churches.] Boston, 1761.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3. EPISCOPALIAN
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beardsley, E. Edwards, D. D. History of the Episcopal Church in
|
||
|
Connecticut. New York, 1865-68. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An account of the church in Connecticut with strong church bias and
|
||
|
inclination to excuse the Tory sentiments of the early
|
||
|
rectors. Second volume gives the Episcopal side of the "Toleration"
|
||
|
conflict of 1817-18. Much interesting detail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church Review and Ecclesiastical Register. In American Quarterly
|
||
|
Church Review, vol. x, p. 116. New Haven and New York, 1848-91.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Collections of the Protestant Episcopal Historical Society, The. New
|
||
|
York, 1851-53. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These MSS. are found in Perry and Hawks's Documentary History, and
|
||
|
include a valuable article on the Episcopate before the Revolution,
|
||
|
by F. L. Hawks, also "Thoughts upon the present state of the Church
|
||
|
of England in the Colonies," [1764] by an unknown contemporary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cross, Arthur Lyon. The History of the Anglican Episcopate and the
|
||
|
American Colonies. New York and London, 1902.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hawkins, E. Historical Notices of the Missions of the Church of
|
||
|
England in the North American Colonies. London, 1845.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chiefly drawn from MS. documents of the Society for the Propagation of
|
||
|
the Gospel.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hawks (Frances Lister) and Perry (William Stevens). Documentary
|
||
|
History of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United
|
||
|
States. Containing ... documents concerning the Church in
|
||
|
Connecticut. New York, 1863-34. 2vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
See Perry, William Stevens.
|
||
|
|
||
|
McConnell, Samuel Davis. History of the American Episcopal Church. New
|
||
|
York, 1890.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A brief general history with a number of pages devoted to the
|
||
|
attempts to establish the Episcopate in America and to the political
|
||
|
hostility that it roused.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Perry, William Stevens (Bishop of Iowa). [See F. L. Hawks.]
|
||
|
Documentary History of the Protestant Episcopal Church. New York,
|
||
|
1863-64. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Unbiased; arranged under topical heads; has illustrated monographs
|
||
|
by different authors; illustrations, including facsimiles; and also
|
||
|
critical notes, frequently referring to original sources. It
|
||
|
contains many letters from the missions established by the London
|
||
|
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shaw, W. A. A History of the Church of England. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
4. METHODIST
|
||
|
|
||
|
Asbury's (Francis) Journal. New York, 1821. 3 vols. A brief diary of
|
||
|
all Bishop Asbury's American journeys: Vols. ii and iii concern New
|
||
|
England, with comments on his surroundings, his preaching and the
|
||
|
people.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bangs, Nathan. History of the Methodist Episcopal Church. New York,
|
||
|
1841-45. 4 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Clark, Edgar F. The Methodist Episcopal Churches of Norwich. Norwich,
|
||
|
1867.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Convenient secondary authority gives, pp. 6-21, a connected account
|
||
|
of the early days of Connecticut Methodism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Scudder, Moses Lewis. American Methodism. Hartford, 1870.
|
||
|
|
||
|
General attitude of New England towards the introduction of
|
||
|
Methodism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stevens, Abel. Memorials of the Introduction of Methodism into the
|
||
|
Eastern States. Boston, 1848.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Biographical notices of the early preachers, sketches of the earlier
|
||
|
societies, and reminiscences of struggles and successes. "Some
|
||
|
account of every Methodist preacher who was regularly appointed to
|
||
|
New England during the first five years" of New England Methodism,
|
||
|
derived from original sources, letters, and from books now out of
|
||
|
print. The fullest account of Connecticut Methodists. It contains
|
||
|
frequent citations from Jesse Lee's diary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Appendix A contains valuable statistics; appendix B has a scurrilous
|
||
|
pamphlet, "A Key to unlock Methodism, or Academical Hubbub," etc.,
|
||
|
published in Norwich, 1800.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Centenary of American Methodism: a Sketch of its History,
|
||
|
Theology, Practical System, and Success. New York, 1866.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The History of the Religious Movement of the Eighteenth Century,
|
||
|
called Methodism. New York, 1858-61. 3 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. QUAKERS, OR THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
|
||
|
|
||
|
Besse, Joseph. A Collection of the Sufferings of the People called
|
||
|
Quakers, for the Testimony of a Good Conscience, etc., to the year
|
||
|
1689. London, 1753. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Vol. ii contains a full account of their persecutions, together with
|
||
|
copies of the proceedings against them and letters from the
|
||
|
sufferers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bowden, James. History of the Society of Friends in America. New York
|
||
|
and London, 1845. 2 vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A history of the sect throughout New England, containing many short
|
||
|
biographies. It is fair and frank in its record of New England
|
||
|
persecutions. The author adopts the unique plea that the excesses of
|
||
|
the converts were inspired by the Holy Spirit as a reproof to their
|
||
|
persecutors for the kind of persecution and punishment that was
|
||
|
meted out to innocent persons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Evans, Charles. Friends in the Seventeenth Century. Philadelphia,
|
||
|
1876.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gough, John. History of the People called Quakers. Dublin, 1789-90. 4
|
||
|
vols.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hallowell, Richard Price. The Pioneer Quakers. Boston and New York,
|
||
|
1887.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Manuscript Records of Early Newport Yearly (Friends') Meetings--at
|
||
|
Friends' School, Providence, R. I.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Minutes of meetings, reports of cases of oppression, of converts, etc.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sewel, William. The History of the Rise, Increase and Progress of the
|
||
|
Christian People called Quakers, Intermixed with Several Remarkable
|
||
|
Occurrences. Written originally in Low Dutch by W. S. and by himself
|
||
|
translated into English.
|
||
|
|
||
|
1st ed., Amsterdam, 1717; 2d ed., London, 1722; 3d ed., 1725, 2
|
||
|
vols. Philadelphia, 1728, etc. New York, 1844. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wagstaff, William R. History of the Friends (compiled from standard
|
||
|
records and authentic sources). New York and London, 1845.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A defense of the excesses in Quaker eccentricities as religious
|
||
|
enthusiasm in persons who were driven by persecution to the verge of
|
||
|
madness. A similar view is expressed by R. P. Hallowell and by
|
||
|
Brooks Adams in his "Emancipation of Massachusetts."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
F. TRACTS (RELIGIOUS, POLITICAL OR BOTH)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of these, several titles that are found at full length either in the
|
||
|
text or footnotes are omitted here. Many more might have been added,
|
||
|
but it is thought best to omit them because of their cumbrous titles,
|
||
|
their scant interest to the average reader, and their inaccessibility,
|
||
|
being found only in the largest libraries or among rare Americana. For
|
||
|
similar reasons, works strictly theological in character are also not
|
||
|
listed. Any sizable library possesses a copy of H. M. Dexter's
|
||
|
"Congregationalism as seen in the Literature of the last Three Hundred
|
||
|
Years." Its bibliography of over 7000 titles gives all the religious,
|
||
|
ecclesiastical or politico-ecclesiastical tracts, and theological
|
||
|
works touching upon Congregationalism. Yale University library has a
|
||
|
large amount of the Americana collected by Mr. Dexter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trumbull's list of books published in Connecticut before 1800 gives
|
||
|
the titles of books and pamphlets of strictly local import
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Baptist Confession of Faith; first put forth in 1648; afterwards
|
||
|
enlarged, corrected and published by an Assembly of Delegates (from
|
||
|
the churches in Great Britain) met in London, July 3, 1689; adopted by
|
||
|
the Association at Philadelphia, September 22, 1742, and now received
|
||
|
by churches of the same denomination in most of the American States,
|
||
|
to which is added a System of Church Discipline. Portland, 1794.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bartlett, Moses. False and Seducing Teachers. New London, 1757.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beecher, Lyman. Sermon. A Reformation of Morals practicable and
|
||
|
indispensible. ... New Haven, 1813. Andover, 1814.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bishop, Abraham. Connecticut Republicanism. An Oration on the extent
|
||
|
and power of Political Delusion. Delivered in New Haven, September,
|
||
|
1800.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Proofs of a Conspiracy against Christianity and the Government of
|
||
|
the United States; exhibited in several views of the Church and State
|
||
|
in New England. Hartford, 1802.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----The Oration in honor of the election of President Jefferson and the
|
||
|
peaceful acquisition of Louisiana, 1801.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bishop, George. New England Judged, Not by Man's, but the Spirit of
|
||
|
the Lord: And the Summe sealed up of New England's Persecutions. Being
|
||
|
a Brief Relation of the Sufferings of the People called Quakers in
|
||
|
these Parts. London, 1661.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bolles, John. Concerning the Christian Sabbath. 1757.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----To Worship God in Spirit and in Truth is True Liberty of
|
||
|
Conscience. 1756.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----A Relation of the Opposition which some Baptist People met at
|
||
|
Norwich. 1761.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Booth, Abraham. Essay on Kingdom of Christ. London, 1788. New London,
|
||
|
1801. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
American edition edited by John Sterry of the Norwich "True
|
||
|
Republican," together with notes containing his strictures on the
|
||
|
Connecticut and English Established Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bragge, Robert. Church Discipline. London, 1739. Republished, New
|
||
|
London, 1768. [a]
|
||
|
|
||
|
"A Defence of simple Congregationalism and disestablishment."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browne, Joseph. Principles of Baptism. A Letter to Infant Baptisers in
|
||
|
the North Parish of New London. New London, 1767.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quoted by Rev. E. H. Gillett, Hist. Mag. 2d series, vol. iv, p. 28.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browne, Robert. A Treatise of reformation without tarrying for
|
||
|
Magistrates and of the wickednesse of those Preachers which will not
|
||
|
reforme till the Magistrates commande or compell them. Middelburg,
|
||
|
1582. Only three copies known. Reprint at Boston and London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chauncy, Charles, Rev. Seasonable Thoughts. Boston, 1743.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Treats of the Great Awakening, of which the author was a determined
|
||
|
opponent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Clap, Thomas. Brief History and Vindication of the Doctrines received
|
||
|
and established in the Churches of New England. New Haven, 1755.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Daggett, David. Argument, before the General Assembly of Connecticut,
|
||
|
Oct. 1804, in the case of Certain Justices of the Peace.... New Haven,
|
||
|
1804.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Count the Cost. An Address to the People of Connecticut.... By
|
||
|
Jonathan Steadfast. Hartford, 1804.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Facts are Stubborn Things, or Nine Plain Questions to the People of
|
||
|
Connecticut. By Simon Holdfast. Hartford, 1803.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Steady Habits Vindicated. Hartford, 1805.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----Sun-Beams may be extracted from Cucumbers, but the process is
|
||
|
tedious. An Oration, pronounced 4 July, 1799.... New Haven, 1799.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Darling, Thomas. Some Remarks on President Clap's "History and
|
||
|
Vindication." New Haven, 1757.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Foster, Isaac. Defence of Religious Liberty. Worcester, 1779.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frothingham, Ebenezer. A Key to unlock the Door, That leads in, to
|
||
|
take a Fair View of the Religious Constitution, Established by Law, in
|
||
|
the Colony of Connecticut ... with a short Observation upon the
|
||
|
Explanation of Saybrook Plan, etc. and Mr. Hobart's attempt
|
||
|
etc. Reviewing R. Ross, Plain Address. Boston, 1767.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hobart, Noah. An Attempt to Illustrate and Confirm the Ecclesiastical
|
||
|
Covenant of the Connecticut Churches,--occasioned by a late
|
||
|
Explanation of the Saybrook Platform. New Haven, 1765.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Holly, Israel. A Plea in Zion's Behalf: The Censured Memorial made
|
||
|
Public ... to which is added a few Brief Remarks upon ... an Act for
|
||
|
Exempting ... Separatists from Taxes, etc. 1765.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quoted by Rev. E. H. Glllett, Hist. Mag., 2d series, vol. iv.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Huntington, R. (Editor). Review of the Ecclesiastical Establishments
|
||
|
of Europe (by William Graham). 1808.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Special reference to the bearing of the book on the Connecticut
|
||
|
Establishment, and particularly upon its Parish System.
|
||
|
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Judd, William. Address to the People of the State of Connecticut, on
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the removal of himself and four other Justices from Office.... New
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Haven, 1804.
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Leland, John. A Blow at the Root. Being a fashionable Fast-Day
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Sermon. New London, 1801.
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----The Connecticut Dissenters' Strong Box: No. I. Containing, The
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High-flying Churchman stript of his legal Robe appears a Yaho. New
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London, 1802.
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----Van Tromp lowering his Peak with a Broadside: Containing a plea for
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the Baptists of Connecticut. Danbury, 1803.
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----The Rights of Conscience inalienable; ... Or, The high-flying
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Churchman, stript of his legal Robe, appears a Yaho.
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See The Connecticut Dissenters' Strong Box.
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Martin-Mar-Prelate Tracts. See H. M. Dexter's Congregationalism as
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|
seen in Literature, Lecture iii, pp. 131-205.
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Norton, John. The Heart of New England rent at the Blasphemies of the
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|
Present Generation. Or a brief Tractate concerning the Doctrine of the
|
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|
Quakers etc. Cambridge, New England, 1659.
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|
Paine, Solomon. A Short View of the Difference between the Church of
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|
Christ, and the established Churches in the Colony of Connecticut in
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|
their Foundation and Practice with their Ends: being a Word of Warning
|
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|
to several Ranks of Profession; and likewise Comfort to the Ministers
|
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|
and Members of the Church of Christ. 1752.
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|
Richards, George H. The Politics of Connecticut; by a Federal
|
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|
Republican. New London, 1817.
|
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|
Rogers, John. A Midnight Cry from the Temple of God to the Ten
|
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|
Virgins. See F. M. Caulkins' History of New London, pp. 202-221.
|
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|
|
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|
----John Rogers, A Servant of Jesus Christ ... giving a Description of
|
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|
True Shepherds of Christ's Flocks and also of the Anti-Christian
|
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|
Ministry. 4th ed. Norwich, 1776.
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|
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|
----New London Prison.
|
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|
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|
See F. H. Gillett, Hist. Mag., 2d series, vol. iv.
|
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|
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|
Ross, Robert. Plain Address to the Quakers, Moravians, Separatists,
|
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|
Separate Baptists, Rogerines, and other Enthusiasts on Immediate
|
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|
Impulses and Revelations, etc. New Haven, 1752.
|
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|
Stiles, Ezra. A Discourse on Christian Union. (Appendix containing a
|
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|
list of New England Churches. A. D. 1760.) Boston, 1761.
|
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|
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|
Stoddard, Solomon. The Doctrine of Instituted Churches Explained and
|
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|
Proved from the Word of God. 1700. Webster, Noah. A Rod for the
|
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|
Fool's Back. New Haven, 1800.
|
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|
|
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|
Being a reply to Abraham Bishop.
|
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Williams, Nathan. An Inquiry Concerning the Design and Importance of
|
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|
Christian Baptism and Discipline. Hartford, 1792.
|
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|
Wolcott, Roger. The New-English Congregational Churches are and always
|
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|
have been Consociated Churches, and their Liberties greater and better
|
||
|
founded, in their Platform of Church Discipline agreed to at
|
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|
Cambridge, 1648, than what is contained at Saybrook, 1705,
|
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|
etc. Boston, 1761.
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FOOTNOTES:
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[a] This is the edition referred to in text.
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