The First American Evangelical: A Short Life of Cotton Mather
By Rick Kennedy
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About this ebook
A fresh retelling of Cotton Mather's life, this biography corrects misconceptions and focuses on how he sought to promote, socially and intellectually, a biblical lifestyle. As older Puritan hopes in New England were giving way to a broader and shallower Protestantism, Mather led a populist, Bible-oriented movement that embraced the new century -- the beginning of a dynamic evangelical tradition that eventually became a major force in American culture.
Incorporating the latest scholarly research but written for a popular audience, The First American Evangelical brings Cotton Mather and his world to life in a way that helps readers understand both the Puritanism in which he grew up and the evangelicalism he pioneered.
Watch a 2015 interview with the author of this book here:
Rick Kennedy
Rick Kennedy is professor of history at Point LomaNazarene University, secretary of the Conference on Faithand History, and author of various books and articles on thehistory of colonial New England. His previous books includeJesus, History, and Mount Darwin: An AcademicExcursion.
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The First American Evangelical - Rick Kennedy
LIBRARY OF RELIGIOUS BIOGRAPHY
Edited by Mark A. Noll
The Library Of Religious Biography is a series of original biographies on important religious figures throughout American and British history.
The authors are well-known historians, each a recognized authority in the period of religious history in which his or her subject lived and worked. Grounded in solid research of both published and archival sources, these volumes link the lives of their subjects — not always thought of as religious
persons — to the broader cultural contexts and religious issues that surrounded them. Each volume includes a bibliographical essay and an index to serve the needs of students, teachers, and researchers.
Marked by careful scholarship yet free of footnotes and academic jargon, the books in this series are well-written narratives meant to be read and enjoyed as well as studied.
LIBRARY OF RELIGIOUS BIOGRAPHY
William Ewart Gladstone: Faith and Politics in Victorian Britain
David Bebbington
Aimee Semple McPherson: Everybody’s Sister • Edith L. Blumhofer
Her Heart Can See: The Life and Hymns of Fanny J. Crosby
Edith L. Blumhofer
Abraham Kuyper: Modern Calvinist, Christian Democrat • James D. Bratt
Orestes A. Brownson: American Religious Weathervane
Patrick W. Carey
Thomas Merton and the Monastic Vision • Lawrence S. Cunningham
Billy Sunday and the Redemption of Urban America • Lyle W. Dorsett
The Kingdom Is Always but Coming: A Life of Walter Rauschenbusch
Christopher H. Evans
Liberty of Conscience: Roger Williams in America • Edwin S. Gaustad
Sworn on the Altar of God: A Religious Biography of Thomas Jefferson
Edwin S. Gaustad
Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President • Allen C. Guelzo
Charles G. Finney and the Spirit of American Evangelicalism
Charles E. Hambrick-Stowe
Francis Schaeffer and the Shaping of Evangelical America
Barry Hankins
The First American Evangelical: A Short Life of Cotton Mather
Rick Kennedy
Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Spiritual Life • Nancy Koester
Emily Dickinson and the Art of Belief • Roger Lundin
A Short Life of Jonathan Edwards • George M. Marsden
The Puritan as Yankee: A Life of Horace Bushnell • Robert Bruce Mullin
Prophetess of Health: A Study of Ellen G. White • Ronald L. Numbers
Blaise Pascal: Reasons of the Heart • Marvin R. O’Connell
Occupy Until I Come: A. T. Pierson and the Evangelization of the World
Dana L. Robert
God’s Strange Work: William Miller and the End of the World
David L. Rowe
The Divine Dramatist: George Whitefield and the
Rise of Modern Evangelicalism • Harry S. Stout
Assist Me to Proclaim: The Life and Hymns of Charles Wesley
John R. Tyson
The First American Evangelical
A Short Life of Cotton Mather
Rick Kennedy
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
Grand Rapids, Michigan / Cambridge, U.K.
© 2015 Rick Kennedy
All rights reserved
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
2140 Oak Industrial Drive N.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49505 /
P.O. Box 163, Cambridge CB3 9PU U.K.
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kennedy, Rick, 1958-
The first American evangelical: a short life of Cotton Mather / Rick Kennedy.
pages cm. — (Library of religious biography)
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-8028-7211-1 (pbk.: alk. paper)
eISBN 978-1-4674-4310-4 (ePub)
eISBN 978-1-4674-4270-1 (Kindle)
1. Mather, Cotton, 1663-1728.
2. Puritans — Massachusetts — Biography.
3. Massachusetts — History — Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775.
4. Evangelicalism — United States — History.
I. Title.
F67.M43K46 2015
285.8092 — dc23
[B]
2015004724
www.eerdmans.com
To Mathew, Steven, Lebari, Elizabeth, and Bariza
Quench not the Spirit.
Despise not prophesyings.
Prove all things; hold fast to that which is good.
(1 Thess. 5:19-21, KJV)
Cotton Mather in 1727 at age 65. Peter Pelham painted a portrait for the family, then created this mezzotint to sell to the public. Kenneth Silverman writes that Mather seems to have been the first American whose portrait others wanted and bought for their homes.
(Used by permission of the American Antiquarian Society)
Contents
Preface
1. The Last Decades of Puritan Boston
The Pastor’s Study
Home School and Catechism
Ezekiel Cheever and the Latin School
2. Cambridge: City of Books
in the Republic of Letters
Saving Harvard
The Bible in Logick
Stammerer in the Library
The Eclectic American Scholar
3. Listening for a Call
Closure with the Lord Jesus Christ
A Long Obedience in the Same Direction
Angelic Encounters
Accepting Vocations
Healer of Whole Persons
Historian of Demon Possession
4. Entanglements of Church and State
Friendships, Fellowship, and Neighbors
April 18, 1689: Eleutherians in Revolt
The Protestant Interest
The Devil in Salem
The Levitation of Margaret Rule
American Historian and Boston Ebenezer
5. The Birth of the American Evangelical Tradition
The Evangelical Interest Tugs at the Protestant Interest
An All-Day-Long Faith
Charles Morton, the Spirit of Man, and Sanctification
God Threw My Daughter in the Fire
Thwarted from the Presidency of Harvard
6. A Biblical Enlightenment
Defining Enlightenment
Eat This Book
Was Nebuchadnezzar a Werewolf?
Humanitarian Acts and Institutions, Freedom, and Liberty
The Month That Devoured My Family
7. The Practice at the Top of Christianity
Winter Piety
An Accomplished Singer
A Burning Bush
Acknowledgments and Bibliography
The Cotton Mather Trail: A Walking Tour in Boston Connected to the Freedom Trail
Index
Preface
Search the internet for Cotton Mather
and you will get an amazing array of material — much of it about the Salem witch trials and most of that information rooted in one source, Robert Calef, a man who hated Mather so much, and portrayed him so wildly, that reputable historians discount most of what he reports. Calef created a Mather that people love to hate. Type in Marvel Comics Database
and you will find a cartoon image of Cotton Mather as a threatening, be-muscled villain whose cape spreads wide behind him as he leaps toward you brandishing a glowing sword. The database offers the following biographical information: Alias: Witchslayer; Citizenship: American; Origin: Human; Alignment: Bad. A better source on Cotton Mather, Benjamin Franklin, warmly remembered Cotton Mather as a generous man eager to do good. Mather was, in truth, one of the most energetic do-gooders in colonial America. He was a family man much respected in his native Boston, a pastor who was considered a leader of the churches of New England, and a scholar with a transatlantic reputation. If it had been up to him, the Salem witchcraft problem would have been handled without hysteria. Before the trials began, he recommended that the girls who professed to be afflicted by witches and demons should be separated and distributed to good homes where their diet and sleep could be regulated. He also advised the judges that the testimony of the girls about what they saw was very weak evidence, and did not alone warrant the conviction of any of the accused witches. Aligning himself with most of the other ministers of colonial Boston, Cotton did not support the court’s rush to execute witches.
Such matters will be more fully discussed later. Here I simply introduce the theme by noting that calling Cotton Mather the first American evangelical Christian is a deliberate echo of an earlier book on Cotton Mather’s father by Michael Hall titled Increase Mather: The Last American Puritan. Between the 1680s and 1720s New England was transitioning out of a narrow but deep Puritanism into the British Empire’s broader and shallower Protestantism. Many scholars have written about how the loss of Massachusetts’ distinctive Puritan charter, the fiasco of the Salem witch trials, the controversy surrounding the founding of the Brattle Street Church, and finally the struggle for the presidency of Harvard all drove New England through a cultural transition that integrated it better into the British Empire. Out of this transition was born the broadminded imperial Protestantism that supported the beginnings of a moderate intellectual enlightenment in America. Also born was something else, a Protestantism of a different sort, one that refused to be lukewarm, and one that is recognizable as a root to what would grow into the American evangelical tradition.
Increase Mather and his son Cotton were involved at every stage of this transition. Of the two, however, Cotton more eagerly embraced the new and expansive possibilities of a Boston more connected with global evangelism. Whereas Increase often preached harsh Jeremiads
against the decline of Puritan society, Cotton was softer, more humanitarian. He preached more about Heaven’s call than God’s judgment. He regularly called his listeners to be daily filled with joy and embrace a moment-by-moment conversational relationship with God. There is nothing,
he preached, that will bring you so near Heaven, or help you lead a Heavenly life, as to keep alive a comfortable persuasion of this, that God your savior has loved you.
During the years surrounding 1700 when leaders in New England were promoting what Cotton called the empire’s Protestant interest,
Cotton wrote that people of the evangelical interest
were looking to him alone as their leader. We do not want to read too much of modern evangelical perspective into Cotton’s use of the term, but he increasingly distinguished Protestants of an evangelical
lifestyle from those with merely a genteel faith. Cotton supported the generic imperial Protestantism growing in Boston for ecclesiastical and political purposes; however, he temperamentally could not preach so minimalist a faith. He was a maximalist to the point of exasperating even his friends. When Cotton talked of an evangelical interest
looking to him as leader, he meant a faction within the Protestant interest that rallied to his exuberant call for a distinctively Bible-oriented, day-by-day relationship with a remarkably active and communicative God.
The evangelical interest was not opposed to the Protestant interest; rather, it enlivened it to higher purpose and higher values. The old City on a Hill was gone. Boston was now merely an increasingly important outpost of the British Empire. Cotton Mather saw his job as, in part, to motivate citizens to be better, while encouraging those of the evangelical interest to lead in public education, Indian outreach, prison ministry, widow and orphan support, African American uplift, care for transient sailors, and the love that held households together. Cotton Mather rightly believed that those of the evangelical interest looked to him as their leader, and he prompted action on all these issues. In this book, I will focus on Cotton and his self-conscious desire to tug against the slide of genteel Protestantism. Doug Sweeney has described the birth of the evangelical tradition in America as a twist
within Protestantism after the fall of Puritan New England. In this book I will show how that cultural twist had a person, Cotton Mather, rallying those causing the contortion.
The American evangelical tradition is best understood as a populist movement that has been most evident to historians in self-perpetuating networks of people, books, churches, Sunday school curricula, worship songs, colleges, and religious organizations. As a tradition, it changes through time. In the Great Awakening of the middle of the eighteenth century the American version merged with other evangelical traditions in England and Europe. Today the tradition is being transformed as part of a global evangelical movement. This short book does not claim that Cotton Mather’s life sets a template for the tradition; rather, it is merely an essay on the tradition’s earliest American form in the decades just prior to the Great Awakening. As a tradition, we must also understand that it was not created by one man; rather, it coalesced around one man during an unstable transition in post-Puritan New England. Thousands of people and a large number of churches rallied to the way Cotton Mather articulated and modeled what he called an all day long faith
and described as a way of walking to the very top of Christianity.
During the Great Awakening that soon developed after Cotton’s death, those who had appreciated his work gathered themselves into a much wider movement: a movement identified mostly by appreciation for the exceptionally active and intimately personal God who was at work in inter-colonial revivals.
What Cotton lived and preached, and what people rallied to, was a religiously zealous lifestyle lived in the light of a radically communicative God. While others were increasingly living as if God was rather taciturn and humans were left to their own devices, Cotton lived and preached as if God enjoyed conversation with humans and was ready to intervene on their behalf, even in seemingly inconsequential matters. Cotton Mather’s life was not dedicated to figuring out God; rather, he was dedicated to being attentive, to listening, because he was sure God is always communicating. Nowhere is the communication more constant, clear, and important than in the Bible. Around 1693 Cotton began to compile his most massive and wide-ranging work, the Biblia Americana. In it we find the foundation for a type of information-rich biblical enlightenment that was broader, deeper, and more collegial than the narrower, shallower, and more individualistic enlightenment of genteel British Protestantism. In the Biblia, along with many other works, Cotton taught that reasonableness, not rationalism, was the foundation of understanding. Reasonableness supported the belief that God communicated directly with humans in the Bible. Reiner Smolinski, general editor of the modern ten-volume edition of the Biblia Americana, has described how Mather sought to synthesize, and — if possible — to reconcile . . . scholarship with his abiding faith in the authority of the Bible.
Cotton believed it was reasonable to abandon himself to the Bible. Throughout his life Cotton was widely appreciated for exuberantly modeling a lively relationship with Christ that was grounded in the Bible, a life that resisted the genteel tendencies of the new imperial Protestantism and moderate enlightenment.
As for the scholarly shoulders that this book stands upon, I must first note Richard Lovelace’s The American Pietism of Cotton Mather: Origins of American Evangelicalism, published in 1979. I believe it is still one of the best books on Cotton Mather. Of the many biographies of Cotton Mather, my favorite is one written from a pastor’s perspective by the Rev. Abijah P. Marvin and published in 1892. More recently from the perspective of literature professors, the best are David Levin’s 1978 intellectual biography of the younger Mather and Kenneth Silverman’s 1984 psychologically-oriented biography that won the Pulitzer Prize. Now at the beginning of the twenty-first century, Reiner Smolinski is writing what will be the standard intellectual biography of Mather for Yale University Press (to be published in 2016). My biography here is meant to be something different than these. The virtue of my book is in its smallness and in its focus on the roots of the evangelical tradition.
My own relationship with Cotton Mather did not begin well. In the middle 1980s I wrote a Ph.D. dissertation about two of Cotton’s schoolmates: Thomas and William Brattle. From boyhood on into their forties, something kept Cotton Mather and Thomas Brattle from seeing eye to eye. Maybe the sixteen-year-old Thomas was one of the bullies that made the eleven-year-old Cotton flee Harvard. Whatever the cause, the two most significant people in colonial American science, both of them religious leaders and humanitarians, lived at odds with each other. As we will see, the tension between these two men exemplifies the wider tension between a genteel Protestant interest and a zealous evangelical interest.
Back when I was writing my dissertation, I viewed everything from the perspective of the Brattle brothers and did not understand Cotton. My best opportunity back then to learn to appreciate Cotton Mather was in reading Robert Middlekauff’s The Mathers: Three Generations of Puritan Intellectuals, a book that won the Bancroft Prize and helped 1960s-style academics to understand that Cotton was an intricate, insightful, and innovative thinker. When I was close to finishing my dissertation, I met Dr. Middlekauff at the Huntington Library in Pasadena, California. He was exceedingly gracious to me, and, by association, I belatedly gained a soft spot for the Mathers.
On another day at the Huntington Library, a couple of decades later, Reiner Smolinski lined out for me his plan for publishing Mather’s Biblia Americana in ten volumes. This project has opened up a whole new international range of scholarly perspectives on Mather. At present there is a cadre of professors and graduate students uncovering new material about Cotton Mather at the Universities of Tubingen and Heidelberg, and across the United States under the inspiration of Professors Smolinski and Jan Steivermann. I am thankful to be part of that community of scholars, and much of what I have learned about Mather comes from dinner-table conversation with them.
Is it inappropriate here for me to tell you that I now like Cotton Mather? There are many excellent studies of Cotton that keep him at arm’s length. Here I think it best to simply embrace him. His exuberance has offended many scholars over the last three hundred and fifty years and his lively accounts of angels, miracles, and even levitation have raised many eyebrows; however, those who knew him best appreciated his wisdom, and his accounts of surprising spiritual activity are mostly founded upon his willingness to trust the credible testimony of his congregation. Much like being a member of an evangelical church, to embrace Cotton Mather is to embed oneself in a social network of shared exuberance and knowledge.
A Note on Quotes
In the interest of readability, I have usually modernized and stabilized Cotton Mather’s highly expressive use of capital letters, italics, and punctuation. I have also used snippets rather than long quotes. Mather is a roller coaster of fun to read, but it takes time and effort before a modern reader can enjoy the ride. My editors have also asked me to limit the number of quotes from scholarly articles and monographs. I have complied but the reader should know that no historian works alone. There is a very brief list of sources in the back of the book along with an overly short list of acknowledgments.
Walking Tour
A central idea in this book is that the American evangelical tradition can be traced back to a pastor and his congregation in the North End of Boston. There is a very popular tourist route in the North End of Boston called the Freedom Trail that teaches walkers about the beginnings of the American Revolution. Coincidentally, when tourists walking the Freedom Trail stop at Paul Revere’s House they are also standing on Ground Zero of the American evangelical tradition. Revere’s house stands on the site of the house in which Cotton Mather was raised. To the right of the house is the site of the church that Cotton Mather pastored. Given this coincidence, I add at the end of this book a guide to a Cotton Mather Trail.
Chapter One
The Last Decades of Puritan Boston
1663-1674
The Pastor’s Study
Cotton Mather was a pastor and a scholar. In his Diary he thanked God for his tender heart
and active mind.
Although his scholarship made him internationally famous, his deepest influence was as a local pastor. His whole career was rooted in a small district of Boston called the North End.
For decades, until the last five years of his life, he was what we would call an associate
pastor of North Church. His father, the senior pastor, was a powerful minister not known for friendliness. Because of this, much of the neighborhood work of visiting among church families went to his gregarious and enthusiastic son. Cotton Mather’s congregation, in general, loved him. When