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THE BLOUDY TENENT OF PERSECUTION.
A BIOGRAPHICAL INTRODUCTION.
A TABLE OF THE PRINCIPAL CONTENTS OF THE BOOK.
TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE BOTH HOUSES OF THE HIGH COURT OF PARLIAMENT.
TO EVERY COURTEOUS READER.
SCRIPTURES AND REASONS, WRITTEN LONG SINCE BY A WITNESS OF JESUS CHRIST, CLOSE PRISONER IN NEWGATE, AGAINST PERSECUTION IN CAUSE OF CONSCIENCE; AND SENT SOME WHILE SINCE TO MR. COTTON, BY A FRIEND, WHO THUS WROTE:
THE ANSWER OF MR. JOHN COTTON, OF BOSTON, IN NEW ENGLAND, TO THE AFORESAID ARGUMENTS AGAINST PERSECUTION FOR CAUSE OF CONSCIENCE, PROFESSEDLY MAINTAINING PERSECUTION FOR CAUSE OF CONSCIENCE.
A REPLY TO THE AFORESAID ANSWER OF MR. COTTON, IN A CONFERENCE BETWEEN TRUTH AND PEACE.
A MODEL OF CHURCH AND CIVIL POWER; COMPOSED BY MR. COTTON AND THE MINISTERS OF NEW ENGLAND, AND SENT TO THE CHURCH AT SALEM, AS A FURTHER CONFIRMATION OF THE BLOODY DOCTRINE OF PERSECUTION FOR CAUSE OF CONSCIENCE, EXAMINED AND ANSWERED.
This work opens with a vivid picture of the early 1600s, when a group of Puritan settlers crossed the Atlantic seeking refuge from religious oppression. Their arrival in Massachusetts Bay sparked a fierce debate over how a church should be organized and what true liberty of conscience meant. The author traces the settlers’ covenant, their choice of congregational governance, and the clash with those who clung to familiar rites and hierarchical structures.
Against this backdrop, the pamphlet turns to a heated exchange surrounding Mr. Cotton’s letter, dissecting his arguments and offering a measured response. Readers are invited to hear the early colonists’ struggles to balance communal order with individual belief, and to glimpse the passionate discourse that shaped America’s early ideas of religious freedom. The narrative remains rooted in the first act of this historic controversy, setting the stage for deeper reflection on conscience and persecution.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (827K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2021-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1683
A fierce defender of liberty of conscience, this 17th-century writer helped shape the idea that government should not control religion. His life and writings grew out of exile, debate, and the founding of Providence in colonial New England.
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