THE TITLE OF THIS ARTICLE may seem somewhat paradoxical, or at the very least to require some definition of terms. If the government of the colony of Massachusetts Bay in early New England was indeed a Bible Commonwealth, or even a theocracy, as it has also been characterized, is that not inconsistent with its being a representative government in any broad, or even literal sense? Alternatively, even if the government contained a recognizable representative element, was its voice so small, so insignificant, or so manipulated that it merely supported an entrenched religiously inspired oligarchy? The paradox, if there is one, can be resolved to some extent through an analysis of the degree to which the colony\u27s governmental structure, a...
In 1639, Massachusetts Bay colonists pressed Governor John Winthrop to adopt a “body of laws” that w...
The early nineteenth century in America was a period in which the idea of religious liberty came to ...
What accounts for the “new” 1818 Connecticut Constitution that repudiated the theocracy of the state...
The Puritans ventured to Massachusetts to establish the balanced form of church government which, th...
New-Modelling English Government: Biblical Hermeneutics, Jewish Polity and Constitutional Forms Duri...
On April 26, 1607, about one hundred English men landed on the Atlantic shore of North America near ...
The Massachusetts Bay Colony settlement had a substantial impact on the development of American law,...
From Alexis de Tocqueville onward, the seventeenth-century New England town has been associated with...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityWhen the thirteen American colonies won their independence from Gre...
This essay examines the use of Hebrew sources in debates on church and state in civil war England. I...
Copyright (c) Religious Research AssociationThe market model of religion asserts in part that clergy...
This essay traces colonial American institutional development between 1570 and the 1720s. An America...
The subject of constitutionalism is of considerable topical importance in Canada today, and it is ho...
This paper addresses the long and structuring impact of the Puritan paradigm on early New England hi...
It is a survey of negative consequences caused by the structure of the U.S. Constitutionalism and it...
In 1639, Massachusetts Bay colonists pressed Governor John Winthrop to adopt a “body of laws” that w...
The early nineteenth century in America was a period in which the idea of religious liberty came to ...
What accounts for the “new” 1818 Connecticut Constitution that repudiated the theocracy of the state...
The Puritans ventured to Massachusetts to establish the balanced form of church government which, th...
New-Modelling English Government: Biblical Hermeneutics, Jewish Polity and Constitutional Forms Duri...
On April 26, 1607, about one hundred English men landed on the Atlantic shore of North America near ...
The Massachusetts Bay Colony settlement had a substantial impact on the development of American law,...
From Alexis de Tocqueville onward, the seventeenth-century New England town has been associated with...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityWhen the thirteen American colonies won their independence from Gre...
This essay examines the use of Hebrew sources in debates on church and state in civil war England. I...
Copyright (c) Religious Research AssociationThe market model of religion asserts in part that clergy...
This essay traces colonial American institutional development between 1570 and the 1720s. An America...
The subject of constitutionalism is of considerable topical importance in Canada today, and it is ho...
This paper addresses the long and structuring impact of the Puritan paradigm on early New England hi...
It is a survey of negative consequences caused by the structure of the U.S. Constitutionalism and it...
In 1639, Massachusetts Bay colonists pressed Governor John Winthrop to adopt a “body of laws” that w...
The early nineteenth century in America was a period in which the idea of religious liberty came to ...
What accounts for the “new” 1818 Connecticut Constitution that repudiated the theocracy of the state...