tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37589721331585843.post7770386003601831967..comments2024-03-26T11:33:59.219-06:00Comments on Religion in American History: The Evolution Inquisition: An Occultist’s Response to the Scopes TrialPaul Harveyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13881964303772343114noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37589721331585843.post-58772392110338825022013-07-03T06:10:03.286-06:002013-07-03T06:10:03.286-06:00Thanks so much for sharing these texts, John. Real...Thanks so much for sharing these texts, John. Really great stuff. I've often thought there could be a really good project in looking at how the evolution debates, and the larger modernist/fundamentalist conflicts that encompassed them, were viewed by non-Protestant or marginal players. I've seen a few articles here and there, but nothing larger and substantial. We generally read it as a intra-Protestant conflict, or a secular/religious conflict, but don't often think about how and why other groups might have responded.Trevor Burrowshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09152840020978882789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37589721331585843.post-61426966813904809792013-06-30T17:41:39.452-06:002013-06-30T17:41:39.452-06:00Pretty ugly.
BTW, the quote
“If you don’t follow...Pretty ugly.<br /><br />BTW, the quote<br /><br /><i>“If you don’t follow me, you will become captives, you and your wives, your children and your beasts of burden, of these dissenters of God’s law. They will destroy our Bible and disrupt our religion.”</i><br /><br />appears nowhere else on the internet, according to Google, although Bryan's general thrust was quite prescient. Tom Van Dykehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07121072404143877596noreply@blogger.com