Reformed Covenanter
Cancelled Commissioner
It is impossible, in my mind, for a reflecting and unprejudiced Christian to read the history of the progress of the Reformation on the continent of Europe and in our British isles, without perceiving that the doctrine of the Reformers, respecting the advantages of a National Establishment of Religion, had its orthodoxy manifested experimentally before the whole world,—in so much, that it is true beyond all question, that, but for the interposition of the civil state on behalf the Reformation, the current of intellectual, moral, and spiritual improvement would have been rolled backwards, and Papal Rome would have triumphed in every other land as she did in the case of ill fated Spain.
For the reference, see William MacKray on the importance of the establishment principle to the Protestant Reformation.
For the reference, see William MacKray on the importance of the establishment principle to the Protestant Reformation.