Thesis advisor: James M. O'TooleThis dissertation examines the religious environment in nineteenth-century Massachusetts created by church disestablishment and a theological schism. Congregationalists, bound to God and to one another with a sacred covenant, were the traditional beneficiaries of the state's constitutional requirement that towns raise tax revenue for "the support and maintenance of public Protestant teachers of piety, religion, and morality." The nation's last church establishment system was not removed until a statewide referendum in 1833, but, in practice, it had eroded earlier as Congregational churches encountered internal and external religious dissent. The mechanics of the establishment system had often been used by res...
This dissertation charts the emergence of a newly gendered model of authority within the Baptist chu...
Most of the attention directed at the churches of New England in the seventeenth and eighteenth cent...
This chapter examines the shifting language of conversion in New England Congregationalism - the bas...
The Puritans ventured to Massachusetts to establish the balanced form of church government which, th...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013This dissertation explores the relationship between ge...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of History, Washington State UniversityThis study examines the importance...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, Education, 2012Due to the sometimes contentious nature of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
This dissertation uses the lens afforded by the Puritan officer corps to understand how orthodox rel...
Copyright (c) Religious Research AssociationThe market model of religion asserts in part that clergy...
Published also as thesis, University of Illinois (Ph. D.), 1913.Bibliography: p. 195-202.Microfiche....
This dissertation examines Unitarian and Congregational religious societies in northern New England ...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois, 1908.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
This dissertation explains Protestant religious motives for attacking the rise of liberal democratic...
Thesis advisor: James M. O'TooleThis dissertation examines the ways in which Catholics, Mormons, Pen...
This dissertation charts the emergence of a newly gendered model of authority within the Baptist chu...
Most of the attention directed at the churches of New England in the seventeenth and eighteenth cent...
This chapter examines the shifting language of conversion in New England Congregationalism - the bas...
The Puritans ventured to Massachusetts to establish the balanced form of church government which, th...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013This dissertation explores the relationship between ge...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of History, Washington State UniversityThis study examines the importance...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, Education, 2012Due to the sometimes contentious nature of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
This dissertation uses the lens afforded by the Puritan officer corps to understand how orthodox rel...
Copyright (c) Religious Research AssociationThe market model of religion asserts in part that clergy...
Published also as thesis, University of Illinois (Ph. D.), 1913.Bibliography: p. 195-202.Microfiche....
This dissertation examines Unitarian and Congregational religious societies in northern New England ...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois, 1908.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
This dissertation explains Protestant religious motives for attacking the rise of liberal democratic...
Thesis advisor: James M. O'TooleThis dissertation examines the ways in which Catholics, Mormons, Pen...
This dissertation charts the emergence of a newly gendered model of authority within the Baptist chu...
Most of the attention directed at the churches of New England in the seventeenth and eighteenth cent...
This chapter examines the shifting language of conversion in New England Congregationalism - the bas...