Perez Zagorin, How the Idea of Toleration Came to the West, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003.
[$29.95 / £19.95 | ISBN: 0-691-09270-2]

Andrew Murphy, Conscience and Community: Revisiting Toleration and Religious Dissent in Early Modern England and America,
University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2001; PB 2003 [Hardback: $45.00 | ISBN 0-271-02105-5;
Paperback: $24.95 | ISBN 0-271-02348-1]

John Coffey
University of Leicester

1. In the 1930s, as the shadow of Fascism fell across Europe, the Harvard historian Wilbur K. Jordan chronicled the birth of early modern liberalism in his monumental omnibus, The Development of Religious Toleration in England, 4 vols (1932-40). More than half a century later, in the wake of 9/11, one of Jordan’s former students has returned to retell the tale of How the Idea of Toleration Came to the West.[1] Jordan’s magnum opus celebrated English tolerance in an age of European fascism, and Zagorin’s book reasserts Western tolerance in an age of Islamic fundamentalism. Both of these distinguished American scholars narrate a story intended to reinforce a liberal identity in the face of an ominous ‘other’. As Zagorin puts it, toleration is ‘one of the predominant and most cherished attributes of modern and contemporary Western societies’ (13). His book is a tribute to ‘the collective achievement of the courageous minds of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries who created the intellectual and moral foundations for the long-term development of religious tolerance, freedom and pluralism in Western culture’ (288).
Nowadays, historians often dismiss such sentiments with amused scepticism. Ever since Herbert Butterfield’s iconoclastic attack on The Whig Interpretation of History (1931), and especially since the rise of ‘revisionist’ historiography in the 1970s, the weaknesses of the traditional Whig history of toleration have been well rehearsed: it canonises tolerationist saints and offers an anachronistically secularised and liberalised account of early modern intellectual history; it fails to do justice to the ‘losers’ who defended uniformity; it gives the impression that toleration was so obviously right that its rise was inevitable; it exaggerates the impact of tolerationist ideas and underplays the force of political contingency. Zagorin is not invulnerable to these criticisms, for this is a strikingly traditional account of the rise of toleration. As in the classic Whig histories, the execution of Servetus and the controversy it provoked is treated as a turning point in Western history.[2] ‘If this book has any kind of hero’, Zagorin confesses, ‘it is Castellio’ (97). Calvin, by contrast, takes the stage as a pantomime villain, and the audience is practically invited to hiss at this man ‘of severe and inflexible character’, devoid of ‘Luther’s human warmth, spontaneity, or peasant humour’, who succeeded in ‘dominating everyone around him’, set up ‘a theocracy’ in Geneva, and achieved ‘an almost pontifical authority in his city’ (77-78). Although Zagorin admits that the theory of persecution was ‘embraced by men of high moral character’ who acted out of a ‘sense of duty’ (16), he makes no attempt to hide his sympathies. This is committed historical writing by a scholar who knows where he stands. It is a very long way from Stuart Clark’s dispassionate and avowedly relativist exploration of the ideas of early modern demonologists.[3]
For all its traditional Whiggishness, How the Idea of Religious Toleration Came to the West is an impressive book. Although there has been a flood of publication on early modern toleration controversies over the past decade or so, we have lacked an up-to-date single-author survey of the emergence of European tolerationist thought.[4] As a distinguished early modern historian, with an authoritative command of intellectual history, Zagorin is well placed to deliver such an overview. Whilst his book holds few surprises for specialists, it can be recommended as an elegant and reliable introduction to its theme. It is a worthy successor to earlier works of synthesis by Joseph Lecler and Henry Kamen.[5]

2. Zagorin sets the scene in chapter 2 on ‘The Christian Theory of Persecution’, where we learn about the rise of heresy prosecutions in the Christianised West, and the development of a theory of religious coercion in Augustine and later theologians. Zagorin is not convinced by the recent work of Cary Nederman and John Laursen, which claims to have uncovered medieval theories of toleration.[6] Rightly, I think, he argues that ‘the critical test of such a theory [of toleration] in Christian and Catholic Europe is its attitude to heresy and heretics and hence its willingness to argue against the long-standing Christian theory of religious persecution’. Since most of the thinkers discussed by Nederman fail this test, Zagorin stands by the view that ‘it was not until the religious conflicts generated in the sixteenth century by the Protestant Reformation...that genuine theories of religious toleration first made their appearance in Europe’ (313-14). Chapter 3 on ‘The Advent of Protestantism and the Toleration Problem’, shows that it was not the mainstream Protestant Reformers who overthrew the traditional theory of persecution. They remained firmly committed to the ideal of religious uniformity. In condemning the persecution of Protestants, they did not reject the use of religious coercion against heresy and false religion. Even Erasmus was ‘a pioneer not of toleration but of the ideal of religious concord’ (67-68).
It was only after 1550, Zagorin suggests, that the idea of toleration came to the West, thanks to the writings of a remarkable group of intellectuals: Castellio (ch. 4); Coornhert, Grotius, Episcopius and Spinoza (ch. 5); Williams, Milton, Goodwin and Walwyn (ch. 6); Locke and Bayle (ch. 7). This is a predictable cast, but each writer is carefully contextualised, and their careers and key texts are explored in some depth. If the book is traditional in its methodology and approaches, Zagorin is fully abreast of contemporary research, and he draws on recent work by scholars like Hans Guggisberg, Gerhard Voogt, Barbara Lewalski and Jonathan Israel.[7] Moreover, unlike W. K. Jordan, he resists the temptation to secularise early modern tolerationists – ‘the idea of toleration’, he argues, ‘was itself very largely inspired by religious values and was fundamentally religious in character’ (289). As one might expect from a Whiggish history, all but two of the tolerationists surveyed in chapters 4-7 are Protestants. The exceptions are Coornhert (a ‘most unorthodox Catholic’ affiliated to the Spiritualist Family of Love) and Spinoza (a Jew expelled from the synagogue and in regular contact with Collegiants, Remonstrants and Quakers). Zagorin’s book lends support to the view that prior to the eighteenth century, tolerationist theory only really flourished in the Protestant world, and that England and the Netherlands were the lead societies when it came to religious toleration. This may well be a defensible position, but the neglect of Catholic Europe is regrettable. Zagorin notes that the terms tolerance and la liberté de la conscience ‘first began to be used in France in 1561-62’ (90), but thereafter Catholic lands largely disappear from view. There is clearly a need for more research on toleration debates in the Catholic context.
Zagorin is inclined to think that ‘in a certain sense ideas rule the world’ (8), and he wishes to reassert the importance of the idea of toleration over against those historians (like Butterfield) who think that toleration emerged merely as a result of religious indifference or political expediency. This is all well and good, but it is hard to see how this book could trouble the sceptic. Zagorin’s traditional approach to the history of ideas, with its patient discussion of key books by outstanding thinkers, ultimately proves inadequate to the task. The exposition of eloquent tolerationist texts is not sufficient to show that ideas rule the world. A more compelling case could be made for his thesis through a newer kind of intellectual history, one that focuses on the reception of major texts, and the development of a discourse of toleration. As it stands, Zagorin’s book does not explain how the writings of leading tolerationists transformed social attitudes, or shaped political events. Nevertheless, his ‘main thesis’ is a plausible one – that the attainment and stability of toleration in modern Western societies depended on the widespread acceptance of ‘an underlying rationale’ provided by tolerationists (13).

3. Andrew Murphy’s Conscience and Community offers an intriguing counterpoint to Zagorin’s book. It is Murphy’s first monograph, not the grand overview of a senior scholar. Instead of sweeping across several hundred years in the history of ‘the West’, it focuses on England and America in the seventeenth century. Whereas Zagorin sets out to reinforce a liberal identity, Murphy wants to challenge conventional liberal myths. He joins a growing group of scholars who approach seventeenth-century toleration controversies from the perspective of modern political theory.[8] In Murphy’s case, the concern is to question the assumptions of liberal political theorists who too easily assume that they are simply extending the arguments of their tolerationist predecessors. As a consequence, this is an ambitiously constructed book, which builds a bridge between the seventeenth-century and the early twenty-first. After an introductory chapter, Murphy devotes the major part of the book to ‘Revisiting Early Modern Toleration and Religious Dissent’. He focuses on four Anglo-American case studies: the Puritan colony of Massachusetts Bay (chapter 2); the English Revolution, 1640-1660 (chapter 3); the Restoration and Glorious Revolution (chapter 4); and early Pennsylvania (chapter 5). The Pennsylvania chapter is the most original, but all four of these case studies are richly detailed and soundly judged. Chapter 6 draws out the main conclusions from the case studies, and argues against the three modern myths about toleration identified in the introduction.
Myth 1 is that ‘Religious toleration is a self-evident and unqualified good; those who (historically) opposed it were either ignorant, narrow-minded, or concerned with preserving their own positions of social power’. In each of his case studies, Murphy drives home the point that ‘Anti-tolerationists were not dour, repressive killjoys dedicated to stomping out dissent at all costs, but individuals and groups deeply concerned about social order...’ (11). In Massachusetts Bay, for example, dissenters like Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson represented a fundamental challenge to the authority of the magistrates and a threat to the established order. John Winthrop and the other magistrates emerge not as bigoted theocrats stamping on freethinkers, but as moderate conservatives faced by perfectionist zealots. Murphy also shows that though tolerationists insisted on the compatibility of religious pluralism and political order, their own colonies dramatised the tension between conscience and community. In Rhode Island, Roger Williams lamented the almost anarchic state of affairs created by rival sectarian factions, whilst in Pennsylvania the dissident Quaker George Keith was prosecuted for sedition after denouncing the Quaker magistrates.
By emphasising the genuine fear of disorder, Murphy (unlike Zagorin) helps us to understand why tolerationist claims were so controversial and implausible. To contemporaries it was far from obvious that religious diversity was compatible with political cohesion. ‘Antitolerationists often had good reasons for being concerned about the social and political consequences of toleration’ (213). However, in laying such stress on the concern for order and community, Murphy tends to underplay the importance of the specifically theological case for persecution. During the Puritan Revolution, for example, the issue of heresy dominated the toleration controversies, and conservative Calvinists emphasised their otherworldly passion for the welfare of souls. Heresy was a less prominent issue during the Restoration period, though Thomas Hobbes was still very worried about the prospect of new heresy trials. It is revealing that Zagorin (who offers a more Whiggish picture of the controversy) highlights the heresy hunting of antitolerationists, whereas Murphy (who presents a more revisionist analysis) foregrounds the antitolerationist concern for cohesive community. Modern readers can grasp the concern for order, but find it harder to appreciate the passion for theological truth. A rounded account, however, needs to emphasise both.

4. Myth 2 is that ‘Religious toleration came about as the result of the efforts of sceptical Enlightenment rationalists – for example, Locke, Voltaire, Jefferson, Madison – who were generally religiously indifferent or moderate’ (12). In taking issue with this claim, Murphy is singing from the same hymn-sheet as Zagorin, for both emphasise the decidedly Christian character of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century tolerationism.[9] In chapter 3, on the English Revolution debates, Murphy provides an admirably lucid account of the theological, philosophical and political arguments advanced by tolerationists. He observes correctly that this was ‘a Protestant argument carried on in a Protestant society’, a debate in which each side marshalled ‘an impressive scriptural arsenal’ (96-97). In a striking phrase, he suggests that ‘Seventeenth-century tolerationists...attempted nothing less than a massive reconstruction of what it meant to be a Christian’ (12-13). He notes that tolerationist arguments were often advanced by ‘religious extremists (concerned to keep their worship pure and free from the state)’. These sectarian Protestants promoted religious voluntarism, and by championing individual conscience against the demands of community, they contributed to a more subjective view of conscience. Murphy’s discussion of ‘the subjectification of conscience’ (226) is one of the highlights of the book. He shows that conscience was being redefined in procedural rather than substantive terms – according to the new view, a good conscience was not necessarily a well-informed conscience, for ‘one sinned by going against conscience even if one’s substantive beliefs [were] mistaken’ (112). Liberty of conscience could apply to people who believed the wrong thing (false religion) for the right reason (because it was a dictate of their conscience). Hence Roger Williams’s reference to ‘paganish, Jewish, Turkish, or anti-Christian consciences and worships’.
Although Murphy offers a fine guide to the main lines of tolerationist argument, there are a couple of significant features of the case for toleration that deserve more attention. Firstly, he is keen to downplay ‘natural rights’ arguments for toleration, and he rather neglects the importance of natural law contract theory. Leading tolerationists in the English Revolution worked on the assumption that the authority of magistrates comes from the people, who transfer certain powers to their rulers by means of a contract. The radical Independent John Goodwin (who is cited by both Zagorin and Murphy) argued that in the state of nature, the people had no coercive power over religion and were therefore unable to delegate such a power to the magistrate. The power of magistrates was essentially civil not spiritual, and a Christian ruler had no more authority over religion than a pagan. ‘Nothing more accrues unto him, by way of Duty, in his Office, by his being Christian’, wrote Goodwin. Magistrates could punish violations of natural law, but they had no power in ‘matters of religion’. As Goodwin put it, ‘God reserves the legislative power over the consciences of men unto himself alone’.[10]
Secondly, Murphy could have said more about millenarianism, which becomes such a powerful force among Independents and sectaries in the English Revolution. At one level, the millenarian expectations of some early modern tolerationists can make them seem less modern and less liberal. Had they come to terms with intractable religious pluralism or were they anticipating the rapid emergence of millennial unity? Were they more interested in the imminent rule of God and his saints than in modern liberties? At another level, millenarianism fuelled tolerationist convictions, persuading radical Protestants that the centuries of Antichristian tyranny were drawing to a close and that the age of Christian liberty was about to dawn. A greater focus on millenarianism would have complemented Murphy’s emphasis on the perfectionist ideals of religious radicals.

5. Richard Popkin once provocatively suggested that millenarianism and skepticism were two major sources of tolerationism in this period. If Murphy has relatively little to say about the former, his treatment of skepticism is compelling. He observes that whilst tolerationists did deploy skeptical arguments against persecuting dogmatists, theirs was generally a ‘Christian skepticism’ allied to a ‘Christian minimalism’ – they stressed human fallibility and condemned doctrinal dogmatism. Moreover, skepticism could also underpin a programme of conformity. If some antitolerationists (like Samuel Rutherford) were fiercely antiskeptical, others (like Thomas Hobbes) were ‘skeptical, starkly Erastian advocates of uniformity’. Like Zagorin, Murphy is not persuaded by recent efforts to enrol Hobbes in the ranks of the tolerationists, and for good reason. Tolerationists denied the magistrate’s authority over religion; Hobbes insisted upon it. Tolerationists demanded the free exercise of conscience in public worship; Hobbes merely guaranteed internal liberty of thought.[11]
The final part of the book (chapters 7 and 8) forms a bridge between seventeenth-century history and modern political theory. It tackles Myth 3: ‘Religious toleration generalizes fairly easily and unproblematically to divisive social and political issues such as gender, race, ethnicity and sexuality and provides a basis for multicultural and ‘identity’ politics’ (14). In a surprising move, Murphy turns the arguments of early modern tolerationists against contemporary political theorists. His claim is that modern liberals like John Rawls and David Richards have failed to understand early modern liberalism, and have consequently betrayed or misapplied it. On Murphy’s reading, the great achievement of early modern tolerationists was to develop a modus vivendi politics, ‘a way of negotiating differences without resorting to the bloodshed that had littered the European landscape for years’. In contrast to Erasmus and earlier proponents of concord, they recognised that deep religious differences were intractable, but that society could learn to live with pluralism and disagreement. This modus vivendi approach, Murphy suggests, is ‘one of the great legacies of toleration for the history of liberal thought and practice’ (242). However, it stands in contrast with the more ambitious goals of modern identity politics, which declares that toleration is not enough, and calls for equality of respect or recognition for alternative lifestyles. Whereas early modern tolerationists asked their fellow citizens to put up with pluralism and difference, identity theorists ask them to celebrate it. Murphy believes that the early moderns were more realistic. ‘Citizens must be willing to live with each other; they need not approve of each other’s commitments, religious or otherwise’ (289). Instead of expecting ‘overlapping consensus’ on controversial matters like religion or sexuality, we should settle for ‘a chastened politics, a politics that realizes that deeply held and fundamentally conflicting values are with us to stay’ (291).

6. In a related argument, Murphy takes Rawls to task for restricting liberty of conscience. The Rawlsian doctrine of public reason requires liberal citizens to set aside their ‘comprehensive doctrines’ (not least religious ones) when participating in public life. For Murphy, this introduces a dangerous dichotomy, ‘a split between belief and action that has historically worked against liberty of conscience’ (249). Early modern tolerationists always insisted that liberty of conscience requires free ‘exercise’ of conscience, and they rebuked regimes which required outward conformity and so turned dissenters into ‘hypocrites’. Murphy alleges that this is precisely the effect of ‘Rawls’s restrictive, repressive system’ (268). Traditional religious believers, in particular, are left with limited options: they can either alter their comprehensive doctrine, dissemble, protest at the rules, or accept a schizophrenic divide between their private beliefs and their public actions. Far from extending and completing the liberty of conscience advocated by Locke, Murphy concludes that Rawlsian liberalism shrinks it.
Murphy’s stringent critique of Rawls sits rather awkwardly alongside his sympathetic treatment of early modern antitolerationists. Rawls after all, shares with these earlier writers a common concern about disorder and the divisive potential of controversial religion in public life. But perhaps this is Murphy’s point. Rather than expanding the tolerationist emphasis on the free exercise of religious conscience, Rawls is actually following the logic of antitolerationists and pursuing a Hobbesian trajectory – restricting the free exercise of religion on grounds of public order. Were Rawls still alive, it would be intriguing to hear his verdict on the recent French ban on Islamic headscarves and other religious symbols in schools. Of course, in sharp contrast to early modern anti-tolerationists, neither Rawls nor the French state has the slightest intention of undermining freedom of worship or freedom of the press. Do their attempts to secularise public life really constitute a violation of liberty of conscience? Some would argue not, but Murphy is surely correct in thinking that seventeenth-century tolerationists would disagree.
Conscience and Community is a dense and richly rewarding work. It is the most searching examination of seventeenth-century Anglophone toleration debates to be published in the half century since W. K. Jordan’s magnum opus. Unlike Jordan’s work, it is conceptually sophisticated, and its willingness to revisit conventional liberal assumptions about early modern toleration gives it a provocative edge. Nevertheless, for all his revisionist tilting at liberal myths, Murphy concurs with Zagorin and Jordan and Rawls that ‘the early liberal struggle for religious toleration’ lies at the roots of the liberal tradition (247). It seems that for both historians and political theorists, early modern toleration debates still matter.

[1] In the preface to his first book, A History of Political Thought in the English Revolution (1954), Zagorin notes that Jordan ‘has inspired me by his scholarship, and his friendship has meant much to me’.

[2] For a popular overview and refurbishment of the Servetus myth, see Lawrence and Nancy Goldstone, Out of the Flames: The Story of One of the Rarest Books in the World, and How it Changed the Course of History (London: Century, 2003).

[3] S. Clark, Thinking with Demons: The Idea of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe (Oxford University Press, 1997).

[4] Zagorin is able to build on a series of edited collections on early modern toleration published in the second half of the 1990s: O. P. Grell and R. Scribner, eds, Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation (Cambridge: CUP, 1996); Cary Nederman and John C. Laursen, eds, Difference and Dissent: Theories of Toleration in Medieval and Early Modern Europe (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 1996); C. Berkvens-Stevelinck, J. Israel, and G. H. M. Posthumus Meyjes, eds, The Emergence of Tolerance in the Dutch Republic (Leiden: Brill, 1997); John C. Laursen and Cary J. Nederman, eds, Beyond the Persecuting Society: Religious Toleration before the Enlightenment (Philadelphia: Penn State University Press, 1998); John C. Laursen, ed., Religious Toleration (New York: St Martin’s Press, 1999); Alan Levine, ed., Early Modern Skepticism and the Origins of Toleration (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 1999); O. P Grell and R. Porter, eds, Toleration in Enlightenment Europe (Cambridge: CUP, 1999).

[5] Joseph Lecler, Toleration and the Reformation, 2 vols (1955; English Translation: New York: Association Press, 1960); Henry Kamen, The Rise of Toleration (London: Weidenfield and Nicholson, 1967).

[6] See especially Cary J. Nederman, Worlds of Difference: European Discourses of Toleration, c. 1100-c.1550 (University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000).

[7] Although Zagorin draws on French, German and Italian scholarship, he is clearly most familiar with English-language historiography. For example, he does not cite the international research project promoted and headed by Professor Antonio Rotondò, Europe et Pays-Bas. Évolution, réélaboration et diffusion de la tolérance aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (Firenze, Università degli Studi, Dipartimento di Storia, 1992). See also Henry Méchoulan, Richard H. Popkin, Giuseppe Ricuperati, and Luisa Simonutti, eds, La formazione storica della alterità: studi di storia della tolleranza nell'età moderna offerti a Antonio Rotondò, 3 vols (Firenze: Olschki, 2001).

[8] The others include Richard Vernon, The Career of Toleration: John Locke, Jonas Proast and After (Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, 1997); Alex Tuckness, Locke and the Legislative Point of View: Toleration, Contested Principles, and the Law (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002); Ingrid Creppell, Toleration and Identity: Foundations in Early Modern Thought (New York: Routledge, 2003).

[9] I have made the same point in my book Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England, 1558-1689 (Harlow: Longman, 2000), ch. 3.

[10] I discuss Goodwin’s tolerationist thought in some detail in my forthcoming book, John Goodwin and the Puritan Revolution (Boydell and Brewer).

[11] For a tolerationist reading of Hobbes see Alan Ryan, ‘Hobbes, toleration and the inner life’, in D. Miller and L. Siedentrop, (eds.), The Nature of Political Theory (Oxford: OUP, 1983); Ryan, ‘A more tolerant Hobbes’, in S. Mendus, (ed.), Justifying Toleration (Cambridge: CUP, 1988), ch. 2; Richard Tuck, ‘Hobbes and Locke on toleration’, in M. Dietz, (ed.), Thomas Hobbes and Political Theory (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1990), ch. 8. The case against Hobbes as a tolerationist is well presented in Johann Sommerville, Thomas Hobbes: Political Ideas in Historical Context (London, 1992), ch. 6.