church in Boston, and who was clerk of our committee, called them together to consider of this matter. And though they were far from desiring to enter into a news-paper controversy, yet they advised him to make some reply to that challenge: He did so; and on Dec. 27, pub|lished a brief and plain view of the case of Ash|field: but instead of any fair and manly treat|ment upon it, he in the Evening-Post o•• Jan. 7, 1771, was not only insulted with the names of,
A little upstart gentleman; enthusiastical big|got; and, this stripling high-fliar;
but had it also insinuated that he was employed
by the enemies of America to defame and blacken the colonies, and this town in particular.
And they had the impudence to pretend to the world, that all this was wrote by a CATHOLIC BAPTIST. And they inflamed the populace so against Mr. Davis, that his most judicious friends were a|fraid of his being mobbed. But can it be in the power of others to
blacken any people so much, as by this treatment of a worthy stranger (now at rest) they have blackened themselves! Instead of honestly
coming to the light (which our Lord gives as the criterion to know him
that doth truth, John 3. 21.) how do they hover in the works of darkness.
The first article in our committee's petition to the legislature, being for Ashfield, they were or|dered to notify the proprietors thereof: They did so; and in the spring session of the assembly, they came with a long address against us, in which they begin, with saying more generally of the baptists in that part of the province,
The