| 1904 - 550 sivua
...power. The crisis was probably brought about by the election sermon of Cotton, in which he declared that "a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause, and to be publicly convict."49 The answer of the general court of 1634 was the... | |
| Albert Elijah Dunning - 1894 - 596 sivua
...He preached a sermon at the first Court of .Elections after he came to Boston, in May, 1634, to show "that a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause ; " and Governor Winthrop also favored that view. It took practical form two years... | |
| Albert Elijah Dunning - 1894 - 598 sivua
...He preached a sermon at the first Court of Elections after he came to Boston, in May, 1634, to show "that a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause ; " and Governor Winthrop also favored that view. It took practical form two years... | |
| Ezra Hoyt Byington - 1896 - 466 sivua
...office for life, or until removed for cause. John Cotton preached before the General Court, in 1634, " that a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause." It was at one time proposed that a number of the great Puritan noblemen should... | |
| William Dummer Northend - 1896 - 380 sivua
...the subject was increased by the election sermon by Mr. Cotton, in which he laid down the doctrine " that a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause, and to be publicly convict, no more than the magistrates may not turn a private... | |
| Ezra Hoyt Byington - 1897 - 480 sivua
...office for life, or until removed for cause. John Cotton preached before the General Court, in 1 634, " that a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause." It was at one time proposed that a number of the great Puritan noblemen should... | |
| Daniel Wait Howe - 1899 - 476 sivua
...as the best forme of government in the commonwealth, as well as in the church."1 Cotton also thought that "a Magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause and to be publicly convict," and some years later (1639) one of the elders "declared... | |
| John Metcalf Taylor - 1900 - 206 sivua
...setting up a separate clerico-magisterial estate, defined in spirit and purpose in Cotton's postulate : " A magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause, and to be publicly convict, no more than the magistrates may not turn a private... | |
| 1904 - 546 sivua
...power. The crisis was probably brought about by the election sermon of Cotton, in which he declared that "a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man without just cause, and to be publicly convict."" The answer of the general court of 1634 was the election... | |
| William Farrand Felch, George C. Atwell, H. Phelps Arms, Francis Trevelyan Miller - 1905 - 1120 sivua
...Cotton in his sermon at the opening of this general court of May, 1634, who "delivered the doctrine" that "a magistrate ought not to be turned into the condition of a private man" by the people any more than a "freeman ought to be turned out of his free hold" by the magistrate,... | |
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