CHAPTER
III
THE PERSECUTIONS OF THE BAPTISTS
IN MASSACHUSETTS
Charter
Rights—A Christian State—Violations of the Charter—Peter
Oliver—Episcopal Worship not Allowed—The Browns—The Rise of the
Baptists—The Baptists Denounced—Petitions Against Them—Lady
Moody—William Witter—Thomas Painter—The Governor Acts—A Severe
Law—Baptists Punished—The Law Explained—Goodman Johnson—Letters
on Severity—Letter to Plymouth Colony—The Persecution of the
Quakers—Dissenters Forced to Pay Taxes—The Opinion of Ruffini.
The chartered
rights of the Massachusetts Bay colony have been variously
interpreted. The position has been taken that it was a mere
commercial transaction; while others have placed much emphasis
upon the spiritual bearings of the charter. Some hold that its
intention was the foundation of a Christian State. Perhaps both
parties have too far pressed their conclusions.
President
Styles, in 1783, said:
It is certain
that civil dominion was but the second motive, religion the
primary one, with our ancestors in coming hither and settling
this land. It was not so much their design to establish religion
for the benefit of the State, as civil government for the
benefit of religion, and as subservient, and even necessary, for
the peaceable enjoyment and unmolested exercise of religion—of
that religion for which they fled to these ends of the earth.
They understood
that the charter under Charles left them on the basis pointed
out by Governor Matthew Craddock, July 28, 1629, namely, "with
the transfer of the government of the plantation to those who
shall inhabit there," as well as with liberty of conscience, so
they could be as liberal as they pleased in religious matters.
They neither were nor could be chartered as a purely civil nor
as a purely spiritual body, but all that related to the rights
of man; body and soul, was claimed and enjoyed by them under
their charter.
John Cotton
understood that the colony possessed all the rights of a "body
politic," with its attendant responsibilities. He says:
By the patent
certain select men, as magistrates and freemen, have power to
make laws, and the magistrates to execute judgment and justice
amongst the people according to such laws. By the patent we have
power to erect such a government of the Church as is most
agreeable to the word, to the estate of the people, and to the
gaining of natives, in God’s time, first to civility, and then
to Christianity. To this authority established by this patent,
Englishmen do readily submit themselves; and foreign
plantations, the French, the Dutch, the Swedish, do willingly
transact their negotiations with us, as with a colony
established by the royal authority of the State of England
(Armitage, A History of the Baptists).
However the
charter may be explained, there is no question that the
government as organized had embedded in it religious
persecution. There are those who hold that this was contrary to
the charter rights. On this line Peter Oliver says:
I have thus
sketched, in outline, a glowing picture, wherein the whip, the
pillory, and the gallows are exhibited as weapons of defence in
the hands of the elders of Massachusetts. I have explored the
long silent recesses of the Puritan Inquisition, and repeopled
its dungeons with the victims of a narrow and austere faith. I
have exhibited those great principles of intolerance, which our
ancestors recorded in their histories and enrolled among their
laws. And, regarded simply in a legal view, it is a startling
fact, that every execution was a murder; every mutilation, a
maiming; every whipping, a battery; every fine, an extortion;
every disfranchisement, an outrage; and all were breaches of the
charter. There were no laws in England for hanging, or
mutilating, or flogging the king’s subjects because they did not
profess the Puritan faith; while to disfranchise a member of the
corporation for any case unconnected with the objects for which
the charter was given, was a clear violation of justice and
authority (Bagg’s Case, 11 Co., 99, a. Tedderly’s Case, 1 Sid.
Rep., 14. 1 Burn. Rep., 517. Kent, Commentaries, 297. Willcox,
Mun. Cer., 271, 272). Unless then, we lay aside abstract right
and wrong, and disregard the nature of the charter, the liberty
of the subject, the supremacy of parliament, the jurisdiction of
the royal courts, the authority of the law, and the prerogative
of the king, we cannot consider the persecutions of the elders
of Massachusetts merely as an act of intolerance. They were, in
any proper legal sense, violations of, and crimes against, the
laws of England. For the king did not bestow upon the grantees
of the charter the power of removing from the kingdom his
‘loving subjects,’ in order that they might deprive them of
their ears, or their liberties, for refusing to conform to a
sectarian religion. Nor was the Famalist, or the Quaker, or the
Anabaptist, so much to blame as those who persecuted a royal and
sacred franchise to purposes which were hostile to the best
interests of the empire. And, above all, it should be remembered
that the Puritan Church is chiefly responsible for the guilt of
those proceedings. The state was merely particeps criminis. For
all the doubts, and she maintained many as to her authority to
act under the charter, she even applied to the elders for
counsel, and the elders uniformly supported her claims and
removed her indecision (Oliver, The Puritan Commonwealth, an
Historical Review of the Puritan Government of Massachusetts,
pp. 227, 228. Boston, 1856).
One of the
first acts of the colony and of the church was a violation of
the rights of conscience. John Endicott, who had previously been
in the Bay, was chosen the first governor and, with a company,
soon set out for Salem, where he organized the colony in 1628.
Five councilors were chosen in England, and the remaining eight
were to be subsequently chosen.
In June, 1629,
several vessels reached Salem bearing a company of emigrants,
among whom were the ministers Higginson and Skelton. On July 20
they were chosen ministers of the congregation. On the heads of
these ministers "the hands of three or four grave members were
laid, with solemn prayer." August 6 the church was formed of
thirty persons, and the ministers were again "ordained." This
church instituted great reforms in the ritual and practices of
the Church of England.
Among the five
councilors chosen in England to associate with Endicott were two
brothers, John Brown and Samuel Brown, the one a merchant and
the other a lawyer. These men were of the highest character. At
the close of a long and important document sent by Governor
Craddock, President of the Company in England, these brothers
were particularly commended to the regard of Governor Endicott.
The brothers
were not impressed with the changes made in the church, and with
some others they met and read the Book of Common Prayer. They
were immediately summoned by the governor and the ministers. The
Browns expressed the opinion that the church and ministers were
"separatists," and would become "Anabaptists." The ministers
declared they had not separated from the church, but only left
off its corruptions. "The governor and council, and the
generality of the people," says Morton, "did not approve the
answer of the ministers." It was, however, decided that what the
Browns had done "tended to mutiny and faction," and they were
sent home on the returning ships. Such was the early act of
oppression.
This act of the
governor and the ministers brought letters of caution from
England. "It is possible some undigested councells have too
sodainely bin put in execucon . . . in introducing any lawes or
comands which may render yourself or us distasteful to the state
here." They also expressed their fears that the ministers have
"overshot themselves" by "attempting some inovacons"
(Massachusetts Records, I., p. 407).
At an early
date in the Massachusetts colony attention began to be taken of
the rise of the Baptists, or, as they were invariably caked by
their enemies, Anabaptists. A few of these early notices are
here transcribed.
Hubbard,
speaking of the year 1638, remarks:
Amongst those,
who at this time that removed from about Boston, divers inclined
to rigid separatism, and favored Anabaptism, and they removed to
Providence to join Mr. Williams and those of his company (A
General History of New England, I., p. 336. Boston, 1815).
E. Z. Rogers
wrote to Governor Winthrop, Rowly, December 8, 1839, as follows:
We have
certainly many Anabaptisticall spiritts among us, and other base
persons, who would diligently & yet secretly be searched out
(The Winthrop Papers. The Collection of the Massachusetts
Historical Society, Fourth Series, VII., p. 210).
Richard
Bellingham, of Boston, wrote to the governor of the Bay, 1, 28,
1642, as follows:
We have had
some experience here of some of their undertakings, who have
lately come amongst us, and have made public defiance against
magistracie, ministrie, churches, & church covenants, &c. as
antichristian; secretly also sowing the seeds of Familisme, and
Anabaptistrie, to the infection of some, and danger of others,
so we are not willing to joyne with them in any league or
confederacie at all, but rather that you would consider & advise
with us how we may avoyd them, and keep ours from being infected
by them (Bradford, History of Plymouth Plantation.
Collections of Massachusetts Historical Society, Fourth Series,
III., pp. 386, 387).
In 1643 a
petition was presented to the General Court to repeal the cruel
laws against the Baptists, which was flatly rejected
(Publication of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, III., p.
161). The records of the Suffolk county Court, 1643, make
mention of the prosecutions of the Anabaptists (Publications of
the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, III., p. 323).
The frequent
references to the Baptists in sundry communities would indicate
something of their activities. Their views were "secretly"
promulgated, and there was much danger of "infection" to many
persons.
One of these
instances was Lady Moody, an eminent woman of the colony, and
widely known. She was cited to appear before the Quarterly Court
of Salem, December 14, 1642, along with others. The record is:
"The Lady Deborah Moody, Mrs. King, and the wife of John Tilton
were presented for holding that the baptizing of infants is noe
ordinance of God" (Lewis and Newhall, History of Lynn).
Winthrop mentions the case of Lady Moody as follows: "The Lady
Moodye, a wise and anciently religious woman, being taken with
the error of denying baptism to infants, was dealt withal by
many of the elders and others, and admonished by the church at
Salem (whereof she was a member); but persisting still, and to
avoid further trouble, etc., she removed to the Dutch, against
the advice of all of her friends. Many others infected with
anabaptism removed thither also. She was afterward
excommunicated" (Ellis, The Puritan Age and Rule in the
Colony of Massachusetts Bay, p. 381. 1888). She played a
considerable part in the introduction of Baptist views in New
York.
The mother of
David Yale, the father of the founder of Yale College, and the
wife of Governor Theophilus Eaton, was tried by the New Haven
Church for "divers scandalous offences." "By toying with the
Anabaptist doctrines she had come to entertain scruples which
interfered with conformity in church practices" (Publication of
the Colonial Records of Massachusetts, XXI., p. 27) .
One William
Witter was arraigned, February 28, 1644, before the Salem Court.
The record of the case is as follows: "For entertaining that the
baptism of infants was sinful, now coming to Salem Court,
answered humbly and confessed his ignorance, and his willingness
to see light, and (upon Mr. Morris, our Elder, his speech)
seemed to be staggered." It was said he called "our ordinance of
God a badge of the whore." The sentence was that "on some
lecture day, the next fifth day being a public fast, to
acknowledge his fault . . . and enjoined to be here next Court
at Salem."
William Witter
did not change his opinions so the record of a later Court
reads: "At the Court at Salem, held the 18th of the 12th month,
1645, William Witter of Lynn, was presented by the grand jury
for saying that they who stayed whiles a child is baptized do
worship the devil. Henry Collins and Nat. West dealing with him
thereabouts, he further said that they who stayed at the
baptizing of a child did take the name of the Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost in vain, broke the Sabbath, and confessed and
justified the former speech" (Records of the Colony of
Massachusetts Bay, III., p. 67) . He was sentenced to answer at
another session of the Court. Also on June 24, 1651, he was
again before the Court "for absenting himself from the public
ordinances nine months or more, and for being re-baptized"
(Felt, II.). Several years later he will appear in this history.
Thomas Painter,
of Hingham, who had lived in several other places, had become a
Baptist. He would not suffer his wife, a member of the church,
to have his child baptized. He was presented, and required to
cease from such opposition. But "still refusing and disturbing
the church," and asserting that the baptism of the colony was
anti-christian, and affirming the same before the court, they
sentenced him to be whipped, because not able to pay a fine.
Winthrop adds: That this punishment was "not for his opinion,
but for reproaching the Lord’s ordinance, and for his bold and
evil behaviour both at home and in the court" (Felt, I.).
Hubbard adds: "It may be, that some others at that time came
down from Providence and Rhode Island, and entered into the
assemblies in some places in Massachusetts, would in time of
singing keep on their hats, as it were to brave it out with
them, and so occasion disturbance, and breach of the peace. If
any such have by that means been brought to suffer corporal
punishment, they will certainly in the account of all
indifferent and prudent people have cause to find no fault with
any thing but their own obstinacy and folly" (Hubbard, I.).
These instances
and other activities of the Baptists stirred up the governor of
the province. "Mr. Endicott began to be a sovereign against all
the sects," says William Bentley, "and as a magistrate did not
bear his sword in vain . . . Persons addicted to the tenets of
the Anabaptists were deprived of personal liberty, by being
confined to town, or by being under severe prohibitions. The
whole number did not exceed nine. Mr. Norris never appeared
active in such proceedings; and the comparative tranquility of
the town, during his ministry, is an evidence of his moderation.
The alarm against the Anabaptists had been so great, that, in
1644, a law had been made against them" (Bentley, A
Description and History of Salem, Collections of the
Massachusetts Historical Society, VI., p. 255).
The following
is the law passed against the Baptists in Massachusetts,
November 13, 1644:
Forasmuch as
experience hath plentifully and often proved that since the
first arising of the Anabaptists, about a hundred years since,
they have been the incendiaries of commonwealths, and the
infectors of persons in maine matters of religion, and the
troublers of churches in all places where they have bene, and
that they have held the baptizing of infants unlawfull, have
usually held other errors in heresies together therewith, though
they have (as other hereticks use to do) concealed the same,
till they spied out a fair advantage and opportunity to vent
them, by way of question or scruple, and whereas divers of this
kind have, since our coming into New England, appeared amongst
ourselves, some whereof have (as others before them) denied the
ordinance of magistracy, and the lawfulness of making warr, and
others the lawfulness of magistrates, and their inspection into
any breach of the first table, which opinions, if they should be
connived at by us, are like to be increased amongst us, and so
must necessarily bring guilt upon us, infection and trouble to
the churches, and hazard to the whole commonwealth.
It is ordered
and agreed, that if any person or persons within this
jurisdiction shall either openly condemne or oppose the
baptizing of infants, or go about secretly to seduce others from
their approbation or use thereof, or shall purposely depart the
congregation at the administration of the ordinance, or shall
deny the ordinance of magistracy, or their lawful right or
authority to make warr, or to punish the outward breaches of the
first table, and shall appear to the Court wilfully and
obstinately to continue therein after due time and meanes of
conviction, every such person or persons shall be sentenced to
banishment (Records of the Colony of Massachusetts, II. 85).
As might be
expected, the enactment of such a law produced conflicts of
opinion. There were various petitions presented to the Court for
and against its enforcement. To give a view of the situation
some of these petitions and opinions are here recorded.
A petition to
the General Court, October 18, 1645, is as follows:
In answer to
the petition of Em. Douning, Nehe. Bourne, Robt. Seducke, Thos.
Foule, with others, for the abrogation or alteration of the
lawes against the Anabaptists, and the law that requires
speciall allowance for new comers residing here, itt is ordered,
that the lawes in the petition mentioned shall not be altered or
explayned at all (Records of the Governor and Company of the
Massachusetts Bay, III., p. 51. Boston, 1854).
The Robert
Foule mentioned above is described by the General Court as a
church member who "will be no freeman" since "he likes better to
be eased of that trouble and charge" (Hutchinson Papers, I., p.
239) . He was truly an advocate of liberty of conscience, or at
least of a large toleration (Publications of the Colonial
Society of Massachusetts, XXI., p. 23) .
John Josselyn,
Gentleman, writing under date of 1646, says:
Anabaptists
they imprison, fine and weary out (Josselyn, An Account of
Two Voyages to New England, second edition, Collections of
the Massachusetts Historical Society, Third Series, III., p.
331).
The following
law was enacted in 1646:
That if any
Christian within this jurisdiction, shall go about to subvert
and destroy the Christian faith or Religion, by broaching and
maintaining any Damnable Heresies; as denying the
immortality of the soule, or resurrection of the body, or any
sin to be repented of in the regenerate, or any evil done by the
outward man to be accounted sin, or denying that Christ gave
himselfe a ransom for our sins, or shall affirm that we are not
justified by his death and righteousness, but by the perfection
of our own works, or shall deny the morality of the fourth
commandment, or shall openly condemn or oppose the Baptizing of
Infants, or shall purposely depart the Congregation at the
administration of that Ordinance, or shall deny the ordinance of
magistracy, or the Lawful Authority to make war, or to punish
the outward breaches of the first commandment, or shall endeavor
to seduce others to any of these errors or heresies above
mentioned, every such person continuing obstinate therein, after
due meanes of conviction, shall be sentenced to Banishment
(Colonial Laws, 1660-1672, p. 154).
May 6, 1646,
the following is taken from the Records of Massachusetts:
In answer to a
petition, subscribed by seventy-seven inhabitants of this
colony, humbly requesting all dew strengthening and keeping in
force such laws as has binn made by this Court, for the
preventing the increse of many dangerous errors, Anabaptists,
Antinomians, &c., as also for the dew punishment thereof, the
Court gratefully accepts of their acknowledgement, granting
their request in the continuance of those wholesome lawee
(Records of the Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay,
III., p. 64).
There came also
a petition from Roxbury, Dorchester and other points, dated May
13, 1646, praying that the laws against the Baptists might be
strengthened. The petition says:
As the
prevaylinge of errors and heresies is noted by our Saviour in
the gospel, and elsewhere in the Scriptures, as a forerunner of
God’s judgments, and in as much as the errors of the
Anabaptists, where they do prevayle, are not a little dangerous
to church and commonwealth, as the lamatable tumults in Germany,
when the said errors were grown into a height, did too
manifestlie witnesse, and such good laws or orders are enacted
amongst us, against such persons havinge alreadie bene, as we
are informed, a special meanes of discouraging multitudes of
erroneous persons from comminge over into this countrie, which
wee account noe small mercie of God unto us, and one sweet and
wholesome fruite of the sayd lawes, it is therefore our humble
petition to this honorable court, that such lawes or orders as
are in force amongst us against Anabaptists or other erroneous
persons, whereby to restraine the spreadinge and divulginge of
their errors amongst people here, may not be abrogated and taken
away, nor any waise weakened, but may still be continued.
As might have
been expected the law of 1644 brought about many reactions.
"This enactment bore severely," says Felt, "upon a denomination
whose subsequent precept and example manifested that they were,
in general, far from indulging in the reckless and ruinous
notions of German adherents of Stuber and Jack of Leyden, though
honestly suspected of such indulgence by most of the leading men
of New England. The authors and abettors of it were desirous to
tolerate religious freedom, as far as they deemed best for the
highest good of the commonwealth, They, however, found this, as
Christian legislators ever have, a very difficult point to be
settled. They felt, as many do now, that they must bound their
toleration short of atheism and infidelity; but where to fix the
line exactly, they were not fully satisfied" (Felt, 1.).
Whatever may
have been the pressure brought to bear the General Court,
November 4, 1646, made the following explanation:
The truth is,
the great trouble we have been putt unto and hazard also by
Famalisticall and Anabaptisticall spirits, whose conscience and
religion bath been only to sett forth themselves and raise
contentions in the country, did provoke us to provide for our
safety by a lawe that all such should take notice how unwelcome
they should be to us either coming or staying. But for such as
differ from us only in judgment in point of baptism or some
other points lease consequence, and live peaceably among qs
without occasioning disturbance . . . such have no cause to
complaine, for it hath never beene as yet putt in execution
against any of them, although such are knowne to live among us
(Hutchinson Papers).
Goodman
Johnson, writing about this time, gives the reasons for the
enactment of this law. He says:
To the end that
the laws might be the most agreeable with the rules of
Scripture, in every county there were appointed members of the
committee two magistrates, two ministers and two able persons
from among the people. In the year 1648 these laws were printed,
so that they might "be seen of all men," and that none might
plead ignorance; and that all persons intending to transport
themselves to the colonies might know exactly what to expect:
"For it is no wrong to any man, that a people, who have spent
then estates, many of them, and ventured their lives for to keep
the faith and a pure conscience (should) use all means, that the
word of God allows, for maintenance and continuance of the
same." Still further, these colonists "have taken up a desolate
wilderness to be their habitation, and not deluded any by
keeping their profession in huggermug, but print and proclaim to
all the way and course they intend (God willing) to walk in;-If
any will, yet notwithstanding, seek to jostle them out of their
own right, let them not wonder if they meet with all the
opposition a people put to their greatest straights can make
(Goodman Johnson, Wonder-working Providence in Zion’s
Saviour in New England).
Probably these
explanations were brought about by much opposition to the law.
There is evidence that friends of New England felt that the
harshness against the Baptists, and others, was bad for the
colony. On March 1, 1644-45, Stephen Winthrop wrote to his
brother, John: "Here is great complaint against us for our
severity against Anabaptists. It doth discourage many people
from coming to us for fear they should be banished if they
dissent from us in opinion" (Winthrop Papers, IV., p. 200). On
September 4, 1646, Hugh Peter wrote to the younger Winthrop:
"None will come to us because you persecute" (Ibid, p. 109); and
Coddington refers to this remark in a letter November 11, 1646:
"Mr. Peters writes in that you sent to your son that you
persecute" (Deans, Some Notices of Samuel Gorton, p.
41, Boston, 1850). Giles Firmin wrote to the elder Winthrop,
July 1, 1646, with regard to Hugh Peter: "I could wish he did
not too much countenance the Opinionists, which we did so cast
out of N. England. I know he abhors them in his heart, but he
hath many hang upon him; being a man of such use" (Winthrop
Papers, II., p. 277). Cotton says: "Surely the way that is
practiced in New England cannot justly be taxed for too much
connivance at all kinds of sects; wee here rather hear ill for
too much rigour" (Cottons, The Way of Congregational Church
Cleared, p. 22. London, 1648. Publications of the Colonial
Society of Massachusetts, XXI., p. 30 note).
The law was not
relaxed on account of these criticisms; but rather enforced with
more rigor. One of the deputies of the Court at Dover was fined
for three weeks’ absence. The Court in October, 1648, "being
informed of great misdemeanor committed by Edward Starbuck, of
Dover, with profession of Anabaptistery for which he is to be
proceeded against, set the next court of assistance if evidence
can be prepared by that time" (Records of the Colony of
Massachusetts, II. 253).
The far-famed
Cambridge Platform, 1648, declared:
It is the duty
of the magistrate to take care of matters of religion, and to
improve his civil authority for the observing of the duties
commanded in the first as well as the second table. The end of
the magistrate’s office is not only the quiet and peaceable life
of the subject in matters of righteousness and honesty, but also
in matters of Godliness. Idolatry, blasphemy, heresy . . . are
to be restrained and punished by the civil authority.
Massachusetts
was not satisfied with persecution on its own account; but wrote
the Plymouth Colony to join them in this practice. The following
letter was written by the Court of Massachusetts Bay, October
18, 1649, to the Colony of Plymouth:
Honnored and
beloved Brethren:
We have
heretofore heard diverse Anabaptists, arisen up in your
jurisdiction, and connived at; but being but few, wee well hoped
that it might have pleased God, by the endeavors of yourselves
and the faithful elders with you, to have reduced such erring
men againe into the right way. But now, to our great griefe, wee
are credibly informed that your patient bearing with such men
has produced another effect, namely, the multiplying and
encreasing of the same errors, and wee feare of other errors
also, if timely care be not taken to supresse the same.
Particularly wee understand that within a few weeks there have
binne in Sea Cuncke thirteen or fourteen persons rebaptized (a
swift progress in one towne; yett wee heare not of any
effectuall restriction is entended thereabouts). Lett it not,
wee pray you, seem presumption in us to mind you heereof, nor
that wee earnestly intreate you to take care as well of the
suppressing of errors, as the maintenance of the truth, God
equally requiring the performance of both at the hands of
Christian magistrates, but rather that you will consider our
interest is concerned therein. The infection of such diseases,
being so near us, one likely to spread into our jurisdiction;
tunc tua res agitur paries cum proximeus ardet. Wee are
united by confoedaracy, by faith, by neighborhood, by fellowship
in our sufferings as exiles, and by other Christian bonds, and
wee hope that neither Sathan nor any of his instruments shall,
by thes or any other errors, disunite us of our so neere
conjunction with you, but that wee shall both aequally and
zealously uphold all the truths of God revealed, that wee may
render a comfortable account to Him that hath
sett us in our places, and betrusted us with the keeping of both
tables, of which will hoping, wee cease you further trouble, and
rest,
Your-very loving Friends and Brethren,
(Records of the Colony of Massachusetts, III. 173, 174).
Comment upon
this frightful letter is not necessary. Not satisfied with
excluding persons from its own territory, persecution was urged
upon a neighboring colony.
E. Downinge,
Salem, March 7, 1651, wrote to John Winthrop, Jr., as follows:
There is an act
to punishe all heresyes with death that raise foundations, and
all Anabaptists to be banished, and if they retorne to England
to be hanged unless they recant (The Winthrop Papers, Collection
of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Fourth Series, VI., p.
78).
The Quakers
first appeared in New England in 1656. The government, both in
Massachusetts and Plymouth, set itself instantly in the attitude
of intolerance. Massachusetts took the lead. In the year 1656,
the General Court urged the General Commissioners to recommend
to the several colonies the adoption of severe measures against
the Quakers, and itself began a course of barbarous legislation,
which extended through several years, for imposing a heavy fine
for bringing in Quakers, "the cursed sect of hereticks," and
ordering that every Quaker who arrived should be sent to the
House of Correction, severely whipped and kept in hard labor, no
person being allowed to have any intercourse with him; also
imposing a fine of five pounds for bringing in, spreading, or
concealing Quaker books or "writings concerning their devilish
opinions"; a fine of forty shillings for receiving such books or
embracing their sentiments, the penalty for the second offense
being four pounds; and for further persistence, confinement in
the House of Correction, and banishment.
The next year a
fine of forty shillings was imposed for every hour of
entertainment of a Quaker, and imprisonment until the fine was
paid; and any Quaker who came into the jurisdiction was to have
one ear cut off and put to work in the House of Correction, the
penalty to be repeated for the second offense. Any Quaker who
had before "suffered the law" and returned, was to be severely
whipt and sent to the House of Correction, and for the third
offense his tongue was to be bored with a hot iron, besides his
being imprisoned. The next year a fine of ten shillings was
imposed upon any one professing Quakerism, or meeting with the
Quakers; for speaking in their meetings a fine of five pounds. A
little later it was enacted that every Quaker found within the
jurisdiction, and any person who defended Quaker doctrines, was
to be committed to prison, and if found guilty, after trial by
special jury, to be banished on pain of death; and every
"inhabitant" who should favor Quakers was to be imprisoned one
month and banished on pain of death. In carrying out the
sentence of banishment, even women, stripped to the waist, and
tied to a cart’s tail, were whipped from town, to town, and
carried on a two days’ journey into the wilderness, among wolves
and bears. To cap the climax of intolerance, Quakers were hanged
in 1659, 1660, and 1661. Governor Endicott was among the most
vindictive enemies of these "hereticks," and when in 1661 the
Court hesitated to pass sentence of death, he said: "You will
not consent, record it; I thank God I am not afraid to give
judgment." He had previously said to certain Quakers: "Take heed
ye break not our ecclesiastical laws, for then you are sure to
stretch by halter" (J. Chaplin, The Pilgrim and the Puritans,
The Baptist Quarterly, July, 1873. VII. pp. 286, 287) .
The laws of Plymouth were equally severe, only no Quaker was
executed.
One of the
chief grievances of the Baptists, and other dissenters, was that
the people were taxed to support the ministry of the standing
order. At first there did not appear to be much difficulty in
regard to the support of the ministry, but as time wore on there
were serious objections in many quarters. The remark of Johnson,
in his "Wonder-working Providence," that "it is as unnatural for
a right New England man to live without an able ministry, as a
smith to work ‘his iron without fire," is still true; but there
are those coming in who differ very considerably from the "right
New England man." Antinomians, Anabaptists, Quakers-a few
individuals bearing these names have lately appeared, and are
zealously entering upon their vocation of crying down the
standing order, and their hireling priesthood. Faint whispers,
swelling into audible words, and growing by degrees into ranting
tirades, against learned and pious divines, began at length to
operate on a certain class of otherwise well disposed persons,
who could see no objection to a "freer-gospel," if that would
quiet the newcomers and cause the disturbance to cease. As these
views spread, contributions naturally fell off, and the deacons’
labor to make up the deficit increased. About 1654 ministers
began to leave the country, so the General Court of
Massachusetts appointed a commission to investigate the matter,
which resulted in passing the order
That the civil
court in every shire, shall, upon information given them of any
defect or any congregation or township within the shire, order
and appoint what maintenance shall be allowed to the ministers
of that place, and shall issue out warrants to the selectmen to
assess, and the constable of the said town to collect the same,
and to distraine the said assessment upon such as shall refuse
to pay (Massachusetts Colonial Records. IV., pt. ii., p. 199).
The first law
bearing on ministerial support in the Plymouth colony was passed
the same year, and the same reason for it is given in its
preamble, namely, "railing and renting." The law was not
seriously enforced until 1657 (The Congregational Quarterly,
April, 1859, I., pp. 160, 161) . Thus was added an additional
grievance against the Baptists.
Some of the
things recorded in this chapter are almost incredible. That men
should be whipped, imprisoned, banished, ears cut off, tongue
bored with a hot iron and put to death in a barbarous manner;
that women should be tied to the tail end of a cart, dragged
from town and whipped along the way, stripped to the waist, and
finally carried into the wilderness and left among wolves and
bears to die, all for some religious belief, now held by most of
men to be harmless, all happening in this country in the last
three hundred years, requires the fullest confirmation. Yet the
facts are not disputed.
The situation
has well been summed up by the Italian writer, Ruffini. "If the
intolerance of these earliest Puritan colonists," says Ruffini,
"becomes indubitably apparent from the extremely severe
dispositions which they adopted against the Baptists, the
Quakers, the Catholics, and even against the members of the
Anglican Church, who were put into a boat by the colonists of
Massachusetts and sent back to England, the close union between
the civil and ecclesiastical powers is shown by these not less
evident signs. In 1631 the Court of Massachusetts explicitly
ordained that the quality of a free man, that is to say, the
enjoyment of full rights, should not be granted except to the
members of one of the churches of the colony. The same
exclusivism prevailed, if not everywhere as a written law, still
less as a custom in the other colonies. The civil affairs of the
community were settled in the congregations of the faithful
(Masson, Life of Milton, II., p. 552). In the
fundamental ordinances of the colony of New Haven, Connecticut
(1639), it is laid down as a supreme principle that the
Government must conform in everything to the Word of God. The
colony, as Bancroft observes, thus adopted the Bible as its
fundamental statute. Moreover, the compulsion of conscience and
the confusion of the two powers blemished those colonial laws
which imposed serious punishments upon citizens who did not
scrupulously fulfill their religious duties and punctually pay
the contributions belonging to the church and its ministers"
(Ruffini, pp. 256, 257).
Books for
further reading:
Isaac Backus, A History of New England, with Particular
Reference to the Denomination of Christians called Baptists.
Newton, Mass., 1871. 2 volumes.
Daniel Neale, The History of New England containing an Impartial
Account of the Civil and Ecclesiastical Affairs of the Country
to the Year of our Lord, 1700. London, 1720. 2 volumes.
Benjamin Franklin Bronson, Palfrey on Religious Intolerance in the
Colony of Massachusetts Bay, The Baptist Quarterly, VI., pp.
147-180, 280-300.
Lucius E. Smith, The New England Ecclesiastical Legislation, The
Baptist Quarterly, I., pp. 81-101. Philadelphia, 1871.
Norman Fox, George Fox and the Early Friends, The Baptist
Quarterly, XI., pp. 433-453. Philadelphia, 1877.
|