Page:Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1st ed, 1833, vol III).djvu/736

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CONSTITUTION OF THE U. STATES.
[BOOK III.

a criminal disobedience of the precepts of natural, as well as of revealed religion.

§ 1871. The real object of the amendment was, not to countenance, much less to advance Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects, and to prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment, which should give to an hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government. It thus cut off the means of religious persecution, (the vice and pest of former ages,) and of the subversion of the rights of conscience in matters of religion, which had been trampled upon almost from the days of the Apostles to the present age.[1] The history of the parent country had afforded the most solemn warnings and melancholy instructions on this head;[2] and even New-England, the land of the persecuted puritans, as well as other colonies, where the Church of England had maintained its superiority, would furnish out a chapter, as full of the darkest bigotry and intolerance, as any, which could be found to disgrace the pages of foreign annals.[3] Apostacy, heresy, and nonconformity had been standard crimes for public appeals, to kindle the flames of persecution, and apologize for the most atrocious triumphs over innocence and virtue.[4]

§ 1872. Mr. Justice Blackstone, after having spoken with a manly freedom of the abuses in the Romish church respecting heresy; and, that Christianity had been deformed by the demon of persecution upon the continent, and that the island of Great Britain had
  1. 2 Lloyd's Deb. 195.
  2. 4 Black. Comm. 41 to 59.
  3. Ante, Vol. I. §§ 53, 72, 74.
  4. See 4 Black. Comm. 43 to 59.