In 1635 Mary and William Dyer sailed from England to America. Within a few years, the two conservative Puritans began shifting their religious views. They were drawn toward the controversial antinomian movement, downplaying the importance of outward morality and giving prominence to God's loving forgiveness instead.
When Mary came back to Boston, they immediately arrested her and ordered her to leave. She refused, denouncing their harsh religious laws. In 1659 she was sent to the gallows, but while the noose was around her neck, she was given a reprieve and forced out of the colony. Enraged all the more by the torturous punishments given to fellow Quakers, Mary returned with a vengeance and was again arrested and sentenced to death.
Standing on the ladder, with a noose around her neck, people begged her to reconsider her views. Instead, Mary reprimanded the leaders for such immoral laws, declaring that she could not recant but would remain obedient to God's will and "abide faithful to the death." Unable to sway her, on June 1, 1660, the ladder was removed and Mary Dyer hung until she died. Soon after, the colony began reevaluating its laws regarding the Quakers.
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βHe hath showed thee, O man, what is good, and what the Lord requireth of thee: surely to do justly, and to love mercy, and to humble thyself, to walk with thy God.β
(Micah 6:8; 1599 Geneva Bible)