the strongest safeguard of both the civil and religious liberties of all citizens." It is apparently necessary for that party to


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DATE: July 23, 2017, 10:25 p.m.

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  1. the strongest safeguard of both the civil and religious liberties of all
  2. citizens."
  3. It is apparently necessary for that party to constantly "re-affirm"
  4. that this movement does not tend to a union of church and State; for
  5. as their actions and writings all betray that very tendency, a blind
  6. must be kept up by each convention re-affirming that it does not so
  7. tend. That such is its direct tendency we propose to prove.
  8. Mr. W. J. Coleman, one of the chief speakers in the movement, in
  9. explaining to "Truth Seeker" the change that will have to be made in
  10. the existing Constitution when the proposed amendment shall have
  11. been adopted, says:–
  12. "The first sentence of Article I. of Amendments reads, 'Congress
  13. shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
  14. prohibiting the free exercise thereof.' This would be made
  15. consistent with the proposed amendment by substituting the words
  16. 'a church' for 'religion,' making it read, 'Congress shall make no law
  17. respecting an establishment of a church.' This is what the Reform
  18. Association believes should be the rule in a rightly constituted
  19. State. There should be religion, but no church."
  20. "There shoulthe strongest safeguard of both the civil and religious liberties of all
  21. citizens."
  22. It is apparently necessary for that party to constantly "re-affirm"
  23. that this movement does not tend to a union of church and State; for
  24. as their actions and writings all betray that very tendency, a blind
  25. must be kept up by each convention re-affirming that it does not so
  26. tend. That such is its direct tendency we propose to prove.
  27. Mr. W. J. Coleman, one of the chief speakers in the movement, in
  28. explaining to "Truth Seeker" the change that will have to be made in
  29. the existing Constitution when the proposed amendment shall have
  30. been adopted, says:–
  31. "The first sentence of Article I. of Amendments reads, 'Congress
  32. shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
  33. prohibiting the free exercise thereof.' This would be made
  34. consistent with the proposed amendment by substituting the words
  35. 'a church' for 'religion,' making it read, 'Congress shall make no law
  36. respecting an establishment of a church.' This is what the Reform
  37. Association believes should be the rule in a rightly constituted
  38. State. There should be religion, but no church."
  39. "There should be religion, but no church." Wh

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