On Religious Liberty: Selections from the Works of Roger Williams

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Harvard University Press, 2008 M01 31 - 288 pages

Banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for his refusal to conform to Puritan religious and social standards, Roger Williams established a haven in Rhode Island for those persecuted in the name of the religious establishment. He conducted a lifelong debate over religious freedom with distinguished figures of the seventeenth century, including Puritan minister John Cotton, Massachusetts governor John Endicott, and the English Parliament.

James Calvin Davis gathers together important selections from Williams’s public and private writings on religious liberty, illustrating how this renegade Puritan radically reinterpreted Christian moral theology and the events of his day in a powerful argument for freedom of conscience and the separation of church and state. For Williams, the enforcement of religious uniformity violated the basic values of Calvinist Christianity and presumed upon God’s authority to speak to the individual conscience. He argued that state coercion was rarely effective, often causing more harm to the church and strife to the social order than did religious pluralism.

This is the first collection of Williams’s writings in forty years reaching beyond his major work, The Bloody Tenent, to include other selections from his public and private writings. This carefully annotated book introduces Williams to a new generation of readers.

From inside the book

Contents

Roger Williams and the Birth of an American Ideal
1
1 Mr Cottons Letter Lately Printed Examined and Answered
46
2 Queries of Highest Consideration
73
3 The Bloody Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience
85
4 Christenings Make Not Christians
157
6 The Fourth Paper Presented by Major Butler
227
7 The Examiner Defended in a Fair and Sober Answer
237
8 The Hireling Ministry None of Christs
249
9 George Fox Diggd out of His Burrowes
261
10 Selected Letters
270
Index
285
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About the author (2008)

James Calvin Davis is Professor of Religion at Middlebury College.

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