FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3671   3672   3673   3674   3675   3676   3677   3678   3679   3680   3681   3682   3683   3684   3685   3686   3687   3688   3689   3690   3691   3692   3693   3694   3695  
3696   3697   3698   3699   3700   3701   3702   3703   3704   3705   3706   3707   3708   3709   3710   3711   3712   3713   3714   3715   3716   3717   3718   3719   3720   >>   >|  
church patronage--'jus patronatus'--a privilege which, as well as inherited or purchased advowsons, had been of late flagrantly interfered with. He was asked if he had not said that it had never been the intention of the States-General to carry on the war for this or that religion. He replied that he had told certain clergymen expressing to him their opinion that the war had been waged solely for the furtherance of their especial shade of belief, that in his view the war had been undertaken for the conservation of the liberties and laws of the land, and of its good people. Of that freedom the first and foremost point was the true Christian religion and liberty of conscience and opinion. There must be religion in the Republic, he had said, but that the war was carried on to sustain the opinion of one doctor of divinity or another on--differential points was something he had never heard of and could never believe. The good citizens of the country had as much right to hold by Melancthon as by Calvin or Beza. He knew that the first proclamations in regard to the war declared it to be undertaken for freedom of conscience, and so to his, own knowledge it had been always carried on. He was asked if he had not promised during the Truce negotiations so to direct matters that the Catholics with time might obtain public exercise of their religion. He replied that this was a notorious falsehood and calumny, adding that it ill accorded with the proclamation against the Jesuits drawn up by himself some years after the Truce. He furthermore stated that it was chiefly by his direction that the discourse of President Jeannin--urging on part of the French king that liberty of worship might be granted to the Papists--was kept secret, copies of it not having been furnished even to the commissioners of the Provinces. His indignant denial of this charge, especially taken in connection with his repeated assertions during the trial, that among the most patriotic Netherlanders during and since the war were many adherents of the ancient church, seems marvellously in contradiction with his frequent and most earnest pleas for liberty of conscience. But it did not appear contradictory even to his judges nor to any contemporary. His position had always been that the civil authority of each province was supreme in all matters political or ecclesiastical. The States-General, all the provinces uniting in the vote, had invited the Catholic pro
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3671   3672   3673   3674   3675   3676   3677   3678   3679   3680   3681   3682   3683   3684   3685   3686   3687   3688   3689   3690   3691   3692   3693   3694   3695  
3696   3697   3698   3699   3700   3701   3702   3703   3704   3705   3706   3707   3708   3709   3710   3711   3712   3713   3714   3715   3716   3717   3718   3719   3720   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

religion

 

conscience

 

opinion

 

liberty

 

carried

 

undertaken

 
freedom
 
replied
 

church

 
General

States
 

matters

 
furnished
 

stated

 

copies

 

Jesuits

 
commissioners
 
indignant
 

denial

 

charge


proclamation

 
Provinces
 

French

 

urging

 
President
 

Jeannin

 

worship

 
discourse
 
secret
 

direction


Papists

 

granted

 

chiefly

 

contemporary

 

position

 

authority

 

contradictory

 

judges

 

province

 

invited


Catholic

 

uniting

 

provinces

 

supreme

 

political

 
ecclesiastical
 
patriotic
 

Netherlanders

 
assertions
 

connection