84 DUTCH AND ENGLISH ON THE HUDSON their own way; and to say that their own way of worship was as dear to them as their beliefs is not strikingly to differentiate them from the rest of mankind. They brought with them from the home country a tenacious reverence for their fathers' method of worship and for the Calvinistic polity of the Dutch Reformed Church. They looked with awe upon the synod,, the final tribunal in Holland for ecclesiastical disputes. They regarded with respect the classis, composed of ministers and elders in a certain district; but their hearts went out in a special affection to the consistory, which was made up of the ministers and elders of the single local kerk. This at least they could repro- duce in the crude conditions under which they labored, and it seemed a link with the home which they had left so far behind them. They had no intention, however, of forcing this church discipline on those who could not con- scientiously accept it. The devout wish of William the Silent that all his countrymen might dwell to- gether in amity regardless of religious differences was fulfilled among the early settlers in New Netherland. Their reputation for tolerance was spread abroad early in the history of the col- ony, and Huguenots, Lutherans, Presbyterians,