[A History of American Christianity by Leonard Woolsey Bacon]@TWC D-Link book
A History of American Christianity

CHAPTER X
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It came when the "standing order" encountered the Baptist and the Quaker conscience.

It came again when the missionaries of the English established church, with singular unconsciousness of the humor of the situation, pleaded the sacred right of dissenting and the essential injustice of compelling dissenters to support the parish church.[129:1] The protest may have been illogical, but it was made effective by "arguments of weight," backed by all the force of the British government.

The exclusiveness of the New England theocracies, already relaxed in its application to other sects, was thenceforth at an end.

The severity of church establishment in New England was so far mitigated as at last to put an actual premium on dissent.

Holding still that every citizen is bound to aid in maintaining the institutions of public worship, it relieved any one of his assessment for the support of the parish church upon his filing a certificate that he was contributing to the support of another congregation, thus providing that any disaffection to the church of the town must be organized and active.


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