Religion and the State: Or, The Bible and the Public SchoolsDodd, Mead, 1876 - 385 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 24
Page 23
... of the Democratic party to solve is to decide what shall be its attitude on this subject . Shall they accept or oppose the amendment pro- posed by Mr. Blaine ? With such an issue , if made , as a The New Political Programme . 23.
... of the Democratic party to solve is to decide what shall be its attitude on this subject . Shall they accept or oppose the amendment pro- posed by Mr. Blaine ? With such an issue , if made , as a The New Political Programme . 23.
Page 35
... accept the last propo- sition ; yet the School question can be placed in no form that will be satisfactory to Catholics , without at once awakening the earnest and most intense opposition of the great majority of Protestants . While the ...
... accept the last propo- sition ; yet the School question can be placed in no form that will be satisfactory to Catholics , without at once awakening the earnest and most intense opposition of the great majority of Protestants . While the ...
Page 42
... accepting it ; but it is not so for these other parties , who are taxed in common with them for the sup- port of public schools , and who under our theory of government have just as many and just as sacred rights as they have in these ...
... accepting it ; but it is not so for these other parties , who are taxed in common with them for the sup- port of public schools , and who under our theory of government have just as many and just as sacred rights as they have in these ...
Page 44
... accept its consequences . The extent to which it shall be exercised is simply a matter of legal discretion . Dr. Ralph Wardlaw declares that " the province of the State in respect to matters of religion is that it has no province at all ...
... accept its consequences . The extent to which it shall be exercised is simply a matter of legal discretion . Dr. Ralph Wardlaw declares that " the province of the State in respect to matters of religion is that it has no province at all ...
Page 54
... accept it as true , being willing , without qualification or reservation , to ex- tend it to all its legitimate applications . As a Pro- testant and a Presbyterian , we have no objection to the reading of King James's version of the Sa ...
... accept it as true , being willing , without qualification or reservation , to ex- tend it to all its legitimate applications . As a Pro- testant and a Presbyterian , we have no objection to the reading of King James's version of the Sa ...
Other editions - View all
Religion and the State, Or, the Bible and the Public Schools Samuel Thayer Spear No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
adopted affirmation Almighty God according amendment American argument atheist authority Bible blasphemy Catholic chaplain character Christian Church property citizens civil government civil oath common law constitutions of Vermont court of equity creed declares Deist dictates divine doctrine duty ecclesiastical enforce establishment of religion exclusively exempting Church exemption existence fact faith free exercise grateful to Almighty hence individual justice legislation legislature ligious matter ment moral Mormon offenses opinion ordain and establish organized peace person political practice preamble principle profanity propagation Protestant Protestantism public school punished purpose reason reference regard relation religion religious corporations religious instruction religious liberty religious societies religious test respect right to worship rights of conscience Roman Catholicism Sabbath says School question school system sects secular secure sense simply South Carolina statute Sunday swearing taxation teach temporal theology theory thereof things tion true United whole worship Almighty