ON LIBERTY OF CONSCIENCE AND PERSECUTION. 1614-1661. EDITED FOR The Hanserd Knollys Society, WITH AN HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION, BY EDWARD BEAN UNDERHILL. LONDON: PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY, BY J. HADDON, CASTLE STREET, FINSBURY. M.DCCC.XLVI. In the prospectus of the Hanserd Knollys Society it was stated, that "to the baptists belongs the honour of first asserting in this land, and of establishing on the immutable basis of just argument and scripture rule, the right of every man to worship God as conscience dictates, in submission only to divine command." The Council have now the pleasure of laying before the Subscribers the earliest writings extant in our language, on this deeply important subject. They were the first articulations of infant liberty. The voice of truth and Christianity was heard in the mild and gentle entreaties of their despised and calumniated authors unfortunately it was unheeded, and soon spake in the whirlwind and the storm of contending armies and national convulsion. Happier times have succeeded, and it is permitted us to reap the fruits of the humble, but noble and selfdenying labours of these pioneers of the soul's freedom. They fell martyrs "for conscience' sake;" it it were |