God, Government and Roger Williams' Big Idea
Banished from Massachusetts, the Puritan minister originated a principle that remains contentious to this day—separation of church and state
- By John M. Barry
- Illustration by Edward Kinsella III
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
Eventually, after Williams accepted a church post in Salem, north of Boston, and gathered a like-minded congregation, the authorities in the Bay feared that the foul error emanating from him could spread and corrupt the entire colony. In October 1635, the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony banished him, ordering him to leave the colony within six weeks. If he returned, he risked execution.
Williams was ill and winter was coming to New England, so the court extended him one mercy, suspending enforcement of the banishment order until spring. In return, he promised not to speak publicly. In his own home among his friends, however, he did not hold his tongue. Considering this a violation of his promise, the authorities in January 1636 abruptly sent soldiers to arrest him and put him on a ship bound for England. This went well beyond the banishment order: The best Williams could expect in England was life in prison; in English prisons such sentences were generally short.
Winthrop, though, did not believe Williams deserved that fate; in secret he warned him of the impending arrest. Williams acted immediately. Dressing against the winter, stuffing his pockets with the dried corn paste that Indians lived on for weeks at a time, he fled his home. He would never see it again.
The cold that winter struck with violence. Even some 35 years later Williams would refer to the cold and “the snow wch I feele yet.” For 14 weeks, he wrote, he did not know “what Bread or Bed did meane.” He would have died had not “the ravens...fed me,” meaning Indians, with whom he had long traded.
During that winter one of the Bay clerics wrote him letters, several of which Indians delivered. The last was marvelously taunting, saying that if Williams “perished” among the “Barbarians,” “your blood had been on your owne head; it was your sinne to procure it.” That the letter was sent at all, sent by someone who knew the desperate straits he was in, troubled him deeply—“stopt” him, Williams recalled decades later. It made him feel utterly isolated, even “cut off,” a phrase that generally meant “beheaded.”
Williams was no loner. He was a social creature, a man who made friends easily, yet he was now cast adrift emotionally, mentally and physically. But being unmoored in an entirely new world had one benefit: He began exploring, probing, thinking about what kind of society he wanted to create, for he now had, as Plymouth Gov. Edward Winslow told him, “the country free before me.”
Eventually, Williams made his way south to Narragansett Bay and chose a site for a settlement on a cove into which two small rivers emptied. He bought the land from the Narragansett Indians and wrote that “having, of a sense of God’s merciful providence unto me in my distress, [I] called the place PROVIDENCE, I desired it might be for a shelter for persons distressed for conscience.”
By “conscience” he meant religion. His family and a dozen or so men with their families, many of them followers from Salem, joined him. Few as they were, Williams soon recognized the need for some form of government. The Narragansetts had sold the land solely to him, and in all English and colonial precedent those proprietary rights gave him political control over the settlement. Yet he drafted a political compact for Providence, and in it he demonstrated that his thinking had taken him into a new world indeed.
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Comments (11)
Even church hierarchies too often are corrupted by power and dictate what their members and clergy must believe, and anyone who disagrees is a trouble-maker. Didn't Jesus tell us not even to pray in public to self-righteously demonstrate our faith? Matthew 6:6 This is an excellent article, and speaks to America today.
Posted by Rev. Judy Romero-Oak on January 24,2012 | 06:37 PM
> There is not nor has there ever been or an intended a Separation of Church and State.
And we have another "winner" who is ignorant of his own country's history and Constitution.
Posted by Watchman on January 18,2012 | 11:09 PM
Roger Williams did some great lobbying in London with Parliment according to this article.
Looks to me as though the Reverend Williams heavily influenced the Founders in the writing of our Constitution.
. upon it.
Williams believed that preventing error in religion was impossible, for it required people to interpret God’s law, and people would inevitably err. He therefore concluded that government must remove itself from anything that touched upon human beings’ relationship with God. A society built on the principles Massachusetts espoused would lead at best to hypocrisy, because forced worship, he wrote, “stincks in God’s nostrils.” At worst, such a society would lead to a foul corruption—not of the state, which was already corrupt, but of the church.
Posted by Pinky on January 13,2012 | 01:42 PM
Jim, see Jame's True Law of Free Monarchies and his Basilikon Doron.
Posted by Will Penn on January 12,2012 | 07:33 PM
Sorry, DirtyDave777, but European civilization has been characterized by separation of church and state at least since the Middle Ages. The Catholic Church formulated and articulated the doctrine, during the struggle of the Roman church against secular rulers' attempts to control the church. While both Church and temporal leaders differed on where the boundary lines should be drawn, the church was always clear that there be bright lines separating church and state.
The absolutist doctrine of the king as both secular and spiritual ruler was pushed by the kings themselves in the 17th century, during a loosening of religious faith among European elites due to the wars of religion, and in Russia, which inherited the Byzantine state's persistent intermingling of religious and secular rule in the system known as Caesaro-Papism.
The concept itself goes back to Jesus' "Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar, and to God what belongs to God." So it's an exaggeration to say that Roger Williams "invented" the concept.
Posted by David Murray on January 10,2012 | 12:32 PM
Just more Progressive Propaganda
There is not nor has there ever been or an intended a Separation of Church and State. This is a Progressive idea dredged up in the early 1900s. The Intent was has has always been to stop the Government imposing ANY Religion by law on Anyone. As in the mentioned Church of England.
Progressive Atheists have been trying to inflict their delusion on everyone for more than 100 years now.
There is little difference between extremists both progressive & Christian..... They are both bound and determined to FORCE Their Ideology down the throats of everyone else like it or not.
Posted by DirtyDave777 on January 7,2012 | 06:01 PM
Can anyone cite the basis for the authors belief that the KJV was created to encourage obedience to Earthly leaders?
I've often believed this to be the case and wonder what proof he bases his comment on
Posted by jim on January 6,2012 | 10:42 PM
How many fundamentalist Christians have read this? How many Republican presidential canditates have read it? Roger Williams was correct: when you mix politics and religion, you get politics. A succinct summation then....and now, perhaps even more so now. Every American who thinks the government should get involved in the way people approach spiritual matters, needs to get this book.
Posted by Lauren on January 1,2012 | 11:16 PM
The December article by John M. Barry on "God, Government and Roger Williams' Big Idea" had a missed opportunity in further educating mainstream America. The Church and State debate timeline certainly could have squeezed in, between 1878 and 1948, the fact that the government encouraged and allowed the education of Indian children by religionists (Catholics and Protestants alike) while ignoring the facts of kidnapping, abuse, cruelty, unexplained deaths, and the manual labor system that many of these young people experienced, which are contributing factors to the problems of several generations. Linda Bergeron Baker County, Oregon
Posted by Linda Bergeron on December 28,2011 | 06:59 PM
God, Government and Roger Williams is remiss in not mentioning John Clarke's part in religious tolerance. He was a physician and preacher who with William Coddington in 1698 founded Newport, RI where "no one was to be accounted a delinquent for doctrine". In 1651 Clarke and Williams went to England. Williams returned in 1654 but Clarke stayed on and it is he who is credited with drafting the 1663 Rhode Island Charter signed by King Charles and replacing the 1644 Charter credited to Roger Williams. It is the 1663 Charter that guarantees that no person in the colony would be molested or punished for differences in religious opinion. The Charter's "hold forth a lively experiment" is inscribed on the RI State House facade. John Clarke started a Baptist Church in Newport around 1638 and there is debate whether he or Roger williams founed the First Baptist Church in America.
Posted by Saul Ricklin on December 28,2011 | 04:44 PM
Freedom, without which you have nothing.
Posted by Ken Kerwin on December 27,2011 | 01:14 PM