RW stayed in London several more months.
The battle was on full tilt for Separation or
State Religion.
Cotton's tract The Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven
became the Bible of national church forces.
Then on July 15th
appeared RW's The Bloody Tenent of Persecution
for Cause of Conscience, his most far-reaching tract.
Defending freedom of religion,
he outlined a political philosophy
in which government was not divinely engineered,
but man-made
to suit the purposes of civilization -
the common peace and welfare of the people:
civic virtue
was a natural attainment, available to all,
and not an attribute of theological ordinance.
Spiritual achievement, soul
liberty, was something yet again, far beyond the reach
of civil authorities to promote or require, except
through tolerance.
Since government was by nature humane and civil, "it must
consequently be of a humane and Civill operation." Secular
authorities were bound to promote civic virtue, but it was an
abomination if they confused good citizenship with religious
sanctification. Magistrates or rulers were not stewards of the
Lord but civil servants of the people; their duty toward religion
was to protect the right of the citizen to freedom of worship,
not to determine whether the citizen's religion was true or false.
These demands for a secular state Williams grounded solidly on
his deep faith in the common man and the power of reason in a
free people; and on page after page he drove home the
revolutionary democratic doctrine that governments derived
their powers solely from consent of the governed: "From this
Grant I infer...that the Soveraigne, originall, and foundation of
civill power lies in the people... And if so, that a People may
erect and establish what forme of Government seemes to them
most meete for their civill condition: It is evident that such
Governments as are by them erected and established, have no
more power, nor for no longer time, then the civill power or people
consenting and agreeing shall betrust them with. This is cleere
not only in Reason, but in the experience of all commonweales,
where the people are not deprived of their naturall freedome
by the power of Tyrants."
- Brockunier, Irrepressible Democrat
On September 17th (Constitution Day)
1644 RW disembarked (boldly)
in Boston,
and presented the magistrates with a letter
signed by prominent lords and commoners
(Northumberland, St. John,
Masham, Barrington, etc.) praising RW's
"Indian labours" and expressing sorrow
over the disagreements
with the Bay colonists. RW requested
safe passage to the border;
it was granted.
At Seekonk, fourteen canoes
full of friends from Providence
escorted RW,
"hemmed in the middle", across
to home. With him from London came
Gregory Dexter,
the radical printer from Stationer's Hall.
Condemned by censors in parliament
for certain tracts,
he followed RW overseas. His final
London publication:
Almanack for Providence Plantations in New England for 1644.
(February 4 - I'm thinking of Naguib Mahfouz
in a Cairo hospital, with a neck wound -
and Sheik Rahman
on trial for bombing New York - and Egypt
fissuring, decaying
between imperial strings,
and a secular state full of rich mafiosi,
and priestly politicians
tyrannizing the slums -
2.4.95
11.20.2003
A little more from an old "documentary" (In RI).
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