| Great Britain. Sovereign - Governors - 1913 - 466 pages
...Protected and Defended soe as their good life and orderly Conversation may win the Indians Natives of the Country to the knowledge and obedience of the onely true God and Saviour of Mankinde and the Christian Faith which his Royal! Majestic our Royall Grandfather king Charles the... | |
| Court records - 1913 - 458 pages
...Protected and Defended soe as their good life and orderly Conversation may win the Indians Natives of the Country to the knowledge and obedience of the onely true God and Saviour of Mankinde and the Christian Faith which his Royall Majestie our Royall Grandfather king Charles the... | |
| James Shepard Dennis - Missions - 1913 - 362 pages
...peaceablie, and civilly governed, as their good life and orderlie conversation maie wynn and incite the natives of [that] country to the knowledge and obedience of the onlie true God and Saviour of mankinde, and the Christian fayth, which, in our royall intention and... | |
| Bruce Kinney - Missions, American - 1916 - 168 pages
...etc." The Massachusetts Charter of 1628 hopes the colony may be so governed as to " win and incite the natives of that country to the knowledge and obedience of the only TRUE God and Saviour of Mankind and the Christian faith, which in our Royal intention and in the... | |
| Martha Christena Armstrong - 1922 - 242 pages
...Protected, and Defended, soe as their good life and orderly Conversation may win the Indians, Natives of the Country, to the knowledge and obedience of the onely true God and Saviour of Mankinde and the Christian Faith which his Royall Majestie, our Royall Grandfather, King Charles the... | |
| Baptists - 1841 - 682 pages
...civilization of the Indians. The charter of the Massachusetts colony declares, that " to win and incite the natives of that country to the knowledge and obedience of the only true God and Saviour of mankind and the Christian faith, in our royal intention and the adventurers'... | |
| Joseph A. Leo Lemay - History - 2001 - 494 pages
...colonial charter in 1629, that the "principal end of the plantation" in New England was to "win and incite the natives of that country to the knowledge and obedience of the only true God."22 EXODUS: A PEOPLE AND A NATION The New England Puritans did not initially take very... | |
| Jon Allan Reyhner, Jeanne M. Oyawin Eder - History - 2006 - 386 pages
...Massachusetts Bay Colony declared in 1629 the "principall ende of this plantation" to be to "win and incite the natives of that country to the knowledge and obedience of the onlie true God and Savior of mankinde, and the Christian Fayth" (quoted in Vogel 1972, 46). While converting... | |
| David W. Hall - History - 2005 - 512 pages
...late as 1691, the Charter for Massachusetts Bay affirmed the intent to "win the Indians Natives of the Country to the knowledge and obedience of the onely true God and Saviour of Mankinde and the Christian Faith." This code permitted freedom of worship to all Christians except... | |
| Connecticut - 1846 - 238 pages
...civilly Governed as their good life and orderly Conversaton may wynn and invite the Natives of the Country to the knowledge and obedience of the onely true God and Saviour of mankind, and the Christian faith, which in our Royall intentons and the Adventurers free profession is the onely and... | |
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