Democracy, Liberty, and Property: Readings in the American Political TraditionFrancis William Coker |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 77
Page 22
... Church of England , Cotton took the more liberal side : Williams contended that only persons who had explicitly renounced the Church of England should be heard or admitted to membership in the new Congregations , while Cotton maintained ...
... Church of England , Cotton took the more liberal side : Williams contended that only persons who had explicitly renounced the Church of England should be heard or admitted to membership in the new Congregations , while Cotton maintained ...
Page 23
... church and of commonwealth be ) may be close and compact , and co - ordinate one to another , and yet not confounded . God hath so framed the state of church government and ordinances , that they may be com- patible to any commonwealth ...
... church and of commonwealth be ) may be close and compact , and co - ordinate one to another , and yet not confounded . God hath so framed the state of church government and ordinances , that they may be com- patible to any commonwealth ...
Page 24
... church , in ordine ad spirit- ualia ( seeing the church is to determine who shall be members , and none but a member may have to doe in the government of a commonwealth ) be pleased ( I pray you ) to conceyve , that magis- trates are ...
... church , in ordine ad spirit- ualia ( seeing the church is to determine who shall be members , and none but a member may have to doe in the government of a commonwealth ) be pleased ( I pray you ) to conceyve , that magis- trates are ...
Contents
PREFACE | 1 |
From A Modell of Christian Charity 1603 | 17 |
THE FUNDAMENTAL AGREEMENT OF NEW HAVEN 1639 | 26 |
Copyright | |
66 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action Adams American aristocracy authority body capital church citizens civil colony common Congress Constitution Convention corporation court danger Declaration democracy democratic depend despotism doctrine duty economic Edwin Lawrence Godkin effect elected England equal ernment established executive exercise existence favor Federalist Fisher Ames force freedom give human individual industry interest John Adams judges justice king labor land legislative legislature liberty living majority mankind Massachusetts means men's rights ment moral nation natural rights nature necessary never nomic opinion oppression organization party Paul Leicester Ford persons political popular possess President principles production protection question reason republican revolution rich rule Senate slavery social society statute suffrage Supreme things Thomas Jefferson tion true truth United universal suffrage Vernon L Virginia virtue vote wages wealth whole