Colonial Presbyterianism: Old Faith in a New Land
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Colonial Presbyterianism - Pickwick Publications
Colonial Presbyterianism
Old Faith in a New Land
Commemorating the 300th Anniversary of the First Presbytery in America
Edited by
S. Donald Fortson III
COLONIAL PRESBYTERIANISM
Old Faith in a New Land
Princeton Theological Monograph Series 71
Copyright © 2007 S. Donald Fortson III. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Eugene, OR 97401.
isbn 10: 1-59752-531-6
isbn 13: 978-1-59752-531-2
eisbn 13: 978-1-63087-864-1
Cataloging-in-publication data
Colonial Presbyterianism: old faith in a new land / S. Donald Fortson III
xiv + 236 p.; 23 cm.
Princeton Theological Monograph Series 71
isbn 10: 1-59752-531-6 (alk. paper)
isbn 13: 978-1-59752-531-2
1. Presbyterian Church – United States – History – 18th Century. 2. Presbyterians – United States – 18th Century 3. History – United States – 18th Century. I. Fortson, S. Donald III. II. Title. III. Series.
bx 8936 .f67 2007
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
Princeton Theological Monograph Series
K. C. Hanson, Series Editor
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Preface
The year 2006 is the three-hundredth anniversary of the first Presbytery in America. In 1706 the Irishman Francis Makemie and a handful of ministers met in Philadelphia to organize themselves into an ecclesiastical body much like the ones they had known in the old country. Makemie and his small band of clergymen initiated what would become a large family of churches that eventually populated the entire United States. Through church planting efforts the new world preachers established the first generation of Presbyterian churches in the American colonies. By 1789 the United States of America had adopted a Constitution and Presbyterians had formed a General Assembly with over 400 churches.
In a number of ways, the story of the colonial church mirrored the development of the new nation. Presbyterianism in America was a grassroots movement of immigrants who brought with them many old world values but also had new expectations about political participation and religious liberty. Committed to freedom of conscience and representative government, Presbyterians supported the War for Independence and participated in the political process that gave birth to the United States. That same set of ideals directed the formation of a national Presbyterian Church with voluntary participation by Christians of the Reformed persuasion. The American Presbyterian Church’s constitution would formally identify the separation of church and state as a safeguard for religious freedom.
Presbyterian colonists recognized that the new world environment would require that some of the ancient patterns would have to be adapted for a new day. Many of the old practices did have essential theological significance but this was a new context and called for innovation to meet current needs. Beginning with the colonial era, Presbyterians consistently maintained the freedom to change their constitutional documents to meet contemporary requirements and to respond to further light from Holy Scripture. Later generations of Presbyterians would differ over where exactly to draw those lines but the principle of ecclesia reformata semper reformanda was embraced by the earliest Presbyterians on American soil.
The colonial church was uniquely poised for mission in the new world. The fledgling first Presbytery along with her soon to emerge sister presbyteries would initiate mission work among native Americans and slaves as well as encourage frontier missions to white settlers in the Appalachian regions and the South. Evangelism and church planting were foundational to their identity as God’s people called to take the good news to their neighbors. Presbyterians find themselves in a similar context today in a culture that desperately needs the gospel of Jesus Christ and with many young ministers eager to plant new churches across the nation. While some modern-day American presbyteries may appear stagnant, new churches and expanding presbyteries are a reality—many with an evangelistic fervor similar to that of their colonial ancestors.
As the number of churches increased in the eighteenth century, one of the greatest challenges was providing ministers for all the new congregations; by 1789 there were over 400 churches but only 177 ministers. Presbyterians required education for ministers and training was not always readily available. The church would respond to this urgent need in the nineteenth century with regional seminaries. Even with the predicament of vacant pulpits, the colonial churches remained firm in their conviction that an educated ministry was necessary. Contemporary Presbyterians continue that tradition of ordaining ministers who are theologically trained and the examination of ministers’ piety and knowledge remains one of the chief roles of a regional presbytery.
A distinctive form of church government also continues as a fundamental element of Presbyterian identity. The ecclesiastical body known as the presbytery is the primary expression of common fellowship where the Reformed theology of the church is experienced. Corporate accountability and mutual participation in mission are the fruit of that doctrine. It was Reformed ecclesiology that first drew the colonial preachers together to form a presbytery in America. That same connectional commitment informs the present-day Presbyterian ethos.
Twentieth-century Presbyterianism experienced repeated divisions over the substance of its corporate theological standards. New confessions and new ordination vows would emerge as the church struggled with what it meant to confess the faith in a new age. Presbyterians of the last century had serious differences over the degree to which clergy should be held to the doctrinal standards of the church. This too was an old question that the colonial Presbyterians dealt with in the earliest decades of the new church in America. Historically, both structure and freedom have been important to Presbyterians and the tension between those two values has not dissipated over the last three hundred years. But one theme has remained constant for Presbyterians—doctrine is serious business.
Much has changed since the colonial era both in society and the church; churchly transformation to meet the demands of these new contexts is imperative. While acknowledging the necessity of ecclesiastical modification, it is also essential that the church maintain her conscious connection to the Christian heritage lest she lose her way in the sea of ever-changing modernity. There are certain Presbyterian core values that have remained unchanged and many of those enduring principles have come down to us from colonial times.
Readers may notice some diversity in the interpretations offered by the contributors as the story is narrated from different perspectives. This kind of variety is nothing new for Presbyterian historians. As early as the nineteenth century, Presbyterians would offer diverse interpretations on the colonial era as they continued to debate the residual issues that had been passed on to their generation.
The contributors to these essays commemorating the first American Presbytery deeply appreciate our ecclesiastical heritage and continue to value the witness of the colonial leaders of the church. While the authors come from different denominations within the Presbyterian family of churches, we all share the common history of this earliest period when Presbyterianism in American was born. Our hope is that these brief glimpses into the colonial period will encourage the contemporary church to faithful service in God’s vineyard. It is with a spirit of humility and gratitude for their labors that we offer these essays, believing that these founding fathers have something valuable to say to us.
In May of 1758, Presbyterian minister Francis Alison was asked to preach at the joint meeting of the Synods of Philadelphia and New York on the occasion of their reunion. He exhorted the two groups that day with these words: We must maintain union in essentials, forbearance in lesser matters, and charity in all things . . . . In a church like ours in America, collected from different churches of Europe, who have followed different modes and ways of obeying the ‘great and general command of the gospel,’ there is a peculiar call for charity and forbearance.
¹ We would do well to heed those words afresh in our time.
1 Quoted in Leonard Trinterud, The Forming of an American Tradition (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1949) 148.
Acknowledgments
The editor wishes to express his sincere appreciation to the contributors who have invested their valuable time to make this book possible. Each of these authors has been a student of Presbyterianism for many years and has added his important research to the accumulated knowledge we have of the Reformed Tradition in America. A special thank you to Dr. Donald K. McKim for his encouragement to pursue this project.
1
Puritans, Presbyterians, and Jonathan Edwards
Samuel T. Logan Jr.
Why this particular topic? Because the relationship between America’s premier theologian and the denomination which grew to prominence in America during his ministry is a crucial one. It is crucial for understanding Edwards; it is no less crucial for understanding the history of Presbyterianism in America.
Edwards spent most of his adult life in the ministry of what was, at the time, called the Congregational Church. It is true that he began his public ministry as the pastor of a Presbyterian Church in New York City. And it is true that, when he was fired from his Congregational pulpit in Northampton, Massachusetts, and invited to Scotland to pastor a Presbyterian congregation, he responded as follows: As to my subscribing to the substance of the Westminster Confession, there would be no difficulty . . . and the presbyterian way has ever appeared to me most agreeable to the word of God.
¹ Further, it is true that the last job Edwards held was as the President of a largely Presbyterian educational institution.
But Edwards was, in fact, for most of his life, a Congregational minister. Are the three events cited above, from the very beginning to the very end of Edwards’s ministry, the only reasons why his relationship to Presbyterianism bears examination?
Not at all. These three events actually point to more fundamental matters both in Edwards’s theology, in the structure of pre-Revolutionary Presbyterianism and Congregationalism, and in the influence of the institution which he served for the last couple of months of his life. It is those more fundamental matters that I will explore briefly here. Perhaps such an exploration will help to elucidate both what American Presbyterianism has been, what it could have been, and what it should be. Perhaps such an exploration will also suggest why it would be appropriate for modern Presbyterians to look to Edwards as their theologian.
Pre-Revolutionary Presbyterianism and Congregationalism
The early history of the Presbyterian Church in the United States is involved in great obscurity,
argues Charles Hodge. He continues,
The reason of this fact is obvious. Presbyterians did not at first emigrate in large bodies, or occupy by themselves extensive districts of country. In New England the early settlers were Congregationalists. The history of that portion of our country is, therefore, in a great measure, the history of that denomination. The same remark, to a certain extent, is applicable to the Dutch in New York, the Quakers in Pennsylvania, the Catholics in Maryland. The case was very different with regard to the Presbyterians. They came, as a general rule, as individuals, or in small companies, and settled in the midst of people of other denominations. It was, therefore, in most instances, only gradually that they became as sufficiently numerous in any one place to form congregations, or to associate in a presbyterial capacity.²
But if we are going to identify the Presbyterians when they do appear and if we are going to determine how Edwards influenced them and was influenced by them, we must agree upon a definition. Nothing particularly new here, or so it might seem. On the strictly theological side, Presbyterianism is Calvinistic in doctrine. The Westminster Confession of Faith defines thoroughly the Presbyterian theological perspective. But, of course, the theological thrust of the Westminster Confession is basically shared by numerous other groups, including New England Congregationalists.
Therefore, the focus of our attention must move from theology to ecclesiology. Here distinctions among various early settlers in America seem to become clearer. Here is where, traditionally, historians have drawn the sharpest distinction between Congregational Calvinists and Presbyterian Calvinists. For example, Leonard Trinterud summarizes the important difference between these two groups as follows:
The issues upon which Puritanism in England had finally divided into Congregationalists and Presbyterians grew out of two seemingly irreconcilable concepts of the Church. To those of the Congregationalist persuasion, the Church of Christ on earth existed only in its individual congregations. The Church Universal was but the totality of these congregations. To the Presbyterian wing of Puritanism, the Church Universal transcended all its local manifestations, being an entity greater even than the sum of its parts. It was the one body of Christ. From these two starting points, each group went on to differ with the other on a number of crucial issues.³
But is this interpretation correct? Or, to be more exact, does it correctly represent seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Presbyterianism and Congregationalism (as opposed to twentieth- and twenty-first-century Congregationalism and Presbyterianism)? If Trinterud is correct, it would seem that one would have to be either theologically confused or theologically naive to be able to move back and forth between Presbyterianism and Congregationalism, as Jonathan Edwards did. And I would be hesitant to call Edwards either theologically confused or theologically naive.
But what alternative to Trinterud’s view might there be? And would that alternative help to explain Edwards’s relationship to Presbyterianism? The answer, of course, is yes!
As Charles Hodge reminds us, Presbyterianism, separatism, and the middle way
of non-separating Congregationalism all originated in dissatisfaction with the extent of the Reformation under the auspices of the Church of England.⁴ The original break with Rome occurred for other than doctrinal reasons, and the subsequent history of the Anglican Church was, to say the very least, checkered. The regents of Edward moved the church in a more thoroughly Reformed direction, Mary sought to return it to the Roman Catholic fold, and Elizabeth, who ruled from 1558 to 1603, took a politically pragmatic attitude toward the church. Those who sought genuine reformation had experienced various forms of persecution under Elizabeth and, even more so, under her successors James I and Charles 1.⁵
What is fairly well known about this situation is that those who opposed the Anglican establishment became known as Puritans because they wanted to purify further the Church of England. What is perhaps not so well known is the degree to which Presbyterianism dominated the early Puritan movement. Once again, Hodge described the situation accurately when he says that the great majority of Puritans in England were Presbyterians. They were Presbyterians because intrinsic to their ecclesiology was the conviction that the fate of the church in England, rather than the fate of the various individual churches in England, was of paramount importance. This corporate sense continued to dominate Puritan thinking when individual Puritans moved from England to New England.
The only non-conformists who genuinely rejected the entire Presbyterian way of understanding the church were the separatists. Represented best by such individuals as Robert Browne, John Smyth, and John Robinson, the separatists despaired of achieving adequate purification of the Anglican establishment. They were determined to bring about, in Browne’s own words, reformation without tarying for anie
by forming their own separate congregations in which the appropriate purity was much more achievable.⁶ This was the first Anglo-American rending of the previously seamless regional church garment. Its impact has been felt by all Christians, even by those who today regard themselves as Presbyterians.
The Presbyterians and the non-separating Congregationalists among the Puritans rejected the separatists way. They both believed that the biblical teaching about the church required them to see it as an institution in need of reformation, to be sure, but one church nevertheless. The fascinating story is how the difference between Presbyterian Puritans and non-separating Congregational Puritans began and how it developed during this period. And it is this fascinating story which best sets the context for understanding the relationship between Edwards and Presbyterianism.
Basically, the difference between these two latter groups of Puritans arose out of the same pragmatic considerations that led the separatists to renounce completely any notion of the church universal. Both Presbyterians and non-separating Congregationalists recognized that the struggle to reform the Anglican establishment was a difficult one. Ecclesiological differences developed around the question of how difficult the task was perceived to be. To simplify but not, I believe, to oversimplify, those who remained Presbyterian in orientation had more confidence in the possibility of reforming the entire Anglican establishment than did those who became non-separating Congregationalists. Events in Scotland, particularly under John Knox’s leadership in 1560 and after, encouraged many of the Puritans to believe that the ongoing Reformation of the entire national church was possible. The single-minded resistance to such thorough reform by Elizabeth and her two successors convinced others among the Puritans that, while purification of the church as a whole in England was the ultimate goal (because the church was whole), real progress would only be made as individual parts of that whole conformed more completely to the Word of God. Those who took this view became what we now call non-separating Congregationalists.
Before proceeding, let me suggest just one modern application of this 400-year old problem. If one is in a denomination which appears fundamentally flawed and if thorough reform of the entire denomination appears highly unlikely, what does one do? Does one leave for more perfect pastures (separatists)? Or does one step back from the denomination as a whole and form smaller groups within the denomination which better exemplify what the denomination should be (non-separating congregationalism)? Or does one continue to engage fully with all of the power structures of the denomination in an attempt to bring about (unlikely) change (Presbyterianism)? Interesting questions, familiar to many Reformed Christians today. Perhaps the older struggles do have something to teach us after all!
Back to the past—another way to approach the distinctions among these various groups in Britain in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries is to focus on the selection of church officers and the degree to which church and state are co-extensive. Both Presbyterians and non-separating Congregationalists believed that the Anglican way of choosing church officers was unbiblical. Rather than appointing local church officials from the lofty reaches of an ecclesiastical hierarchy, both Puritan groups believed they were most appropriately chosen by church members. But the Presbyterians among the Puritans were actually closer to the Anglicans than they were to the non-separating Congregationalists in their understanding of the co-extensiveness of church and state.
Following the model that was being developed in Scotland, Presbyterians identified church and state quite closely, not in terms of jurisdiction or authority, but in terms of membership. For both Anglicans and Presbyterians, citizenship and church membership were correlative if not synonymous. Presbyterians determined to achieve what they regarded as necessary reformation by changing the method of selecting clergy and by taking the presbytery out from under the direct control of the political Sovereign.
Non-separating Congregationalists, in essence, did not believe that the Presbyterian method would work. They were convinced that as long as those who elected elders were themselves potentially un-Reformed, the officers they chose to lead them might very well continue to be un-Reformed. Therefore, non-separating Congregationalists earned their Puritan appellation by focusing initial attention on the purification of local congregations. They did not, however, in any way abandon the goal of reforming the national church. Since they continued to concentrate so much energy on that ultimate goal, it is quite proper to regard them as having very strong Presbyterian leanings.
Obviously, the process by which non-separating Congregationalism came to focus its purifying attention on local church membership was a very long and complicated one. What has just been suggested is a summary of ecclesiological developments over a half century and across three thousand miles of salt water. The details of this shift have been told thoroughly and quite well before.⁷ The objective here has been simply to summarize this development for the purposes of comparing Puritan non-separating Congregationalism to Puritan Presbyterianism. From this comparison, both differences and significant similarities between the two groups can be seen. And it is precisely these similarities and differences which determine our understanding of Edwards and Presbyterianism.
As a matter of fact, however, this comparison suggests in simplified form a point which cannot be stressed too strongly: Presbyterianism in early seventeenth-century Britain was a very different thing from Presbyterianism today (especially in the United States). Likewise, the non-separating Congregationalism of that same period should not be regarded as identical with Congregationalism (either United Church of Christ or Conservative Congregational Christian Conference) in the United States at the present time. As a matter of fact, it may well be that twentieth-century American Presbyterianism has more in common with seventeenth-century non-separating Congregationalism than it does with seventeenth-century Presbyterianism. This is just one of the reasons why Edwards was able to move so easily between the two.
As we move into the second quarter of the seventeenth century, the differences both between earlier and modern Presbyterianism and between earlier and modern Congregationalism become even clearer. A close examination, for example, of the political nature of the National Covenant signed at Greyfriars Kirk in Edinburgh in 1638 and the affirmation of the Solemn League and Covenant in 1643 reveal a concept of the co-extensiveness of church and state that has no place in modern Presbyterianism. Perhaps even more to the point of this essay is the degree to which non-separating Congregationalism represented both a corporate sense and a view of church membership with which modern Presbyterians would be both familiar and comfortable.
A central question, therefore, might very well be, why did English Puritans (of the non-separating Congregationalist variety) come to America in such large numbers at the beginning of the second quarter of the seventeenth century? Answering this question will illumine the degree to which they had Presbyterian leanings and address more directly the kinds of issues and commitments which we see emerging in the life and ministry of Edwards.
John Winthrop was a layman but he was also an extremely influential leader among the Puritans who migrated from England to Massachusetts Bay. A native of East Anglia (within which was located both Cambridge University and the greatest concentration of Puritan sentiment), Winthrop represents very well the classical non-separating Congregationalist mindset. Deeply distressed over the failure of the English church to complete the Reformation, he felt mandated by Scripture to deal with the results of that failure in corporate terms. Like most other Puritans, he believed that God related not just to individuals but also to corporate units of which various individuals were parts. Specifically, Winthrop shared the Puritan understanding of a national covenant. This meant he believed that a nation that lived in disobedience to God could expect to be judged by God.
While on business in London on May 15, 1629, Winthrop wrote the following letter to his wife.
My good wife, I prayse the Lorde for the wished newes of thy well-fare and of the rest of our companye, and for the continuance of ours heer: It is a great favour, that we may enioye so much comfort and peace in these so euill and declininge tymes and when the increasinge of our sinnes giues vs so great cause to looke for some heauye Scquorge and Judgment to be comminge vpon us: the Lorde hath admonished, threatened, corrected and astonished vs, yet we growe worse and worse, so as his spirit will not aliwayes striue with vs, he must needs giue waye to his furye at last: he hath smitten all the other Churches before our eyes, and hath made them to drinke of the bitter cuppe of tribulation, euen vnto death; we sawe this, and humbled not ourselues, to turne from our euill wayes, but haue prouoked him more than all the nationals rounde about vs: therefore he is turninge the cuppe towars vs also, and because we are the last, our portion must be to drinke the verye dreggs which remain: my deare wife, I am veryly perswaded, God will bringe some heauye Affliction vpon this lande, and that speedylye: but be of good Comfort, the hardest that come shall be a meanes to mortifle this bodye of Corruption which is a thousand tymes more dangerous to vs than any outward tribulation, and to bringe vs into neerer communion with our Lo: Jes: Christ, and more Assurance of his kingdome. If the Lord seeth it wilbe good for vs, he will prouide a shelter and a hidinge place for vs and ours. . . . ⁸
To Winthrop the individual was primary, but he was very conscious of the degree to which the group was also real before God. This affected his understanding of the church and the state and led to his decision to travel three thousand miles to try to set up a holy commonwealth in which both church and state would live in obedience to the Word of God. Paramount among the many reasons for the transition by the Puritans from England to New England was this corporate sense. This notion is in basic agreement with the Presbyterian understanding of the church and was at the very heart of what has been called the great migration.
It must also be remembered that the group of Puritans that came to Massachusetts Bay was different in some crucial ways from the group which settled at Plymouth. The Plymouth group (known to later generations as the Pilgrims) was comprised primarily of separatists. As one reads William Bradford’s journal, History of Plimoth Plantation, and contrasts it with Winthrop History of New England, one is struck continually with the degree to which the former breathes a spirit of individualism (both in personal and church life), while the latter is much more conscious of corporate realities. Therefore, when we speak of the movement of this Presbyterian-like corporate sense from England to New England, we must be very clear that we are referring, not to the settlers at Plymouth, but to the much larger colony established some ten years later around Boston, Massachusetts. It is this latter group that influenced in a major way the development of American Presbyterianism and within which Edwards lived and ministered.
But if Winthrop and those who came with him felt that the body of which they were part in England was increasingly corrupt, and that the sickness of that body threatened their own spiritual health, what exactly did they do after arriving in Massachusetts to achieve a healthy body? In a word, they sought to safeguard membership in both church and state in order to protect and provide for biblical holiness in both. The Puritans never confused church and state. To their way of thinking, each had its own distinct function and stood in a corporate relationship (in covenant) with God. Both church and state were required to be obedient to God’s Word. As reflected in Winthrop’s letter to his wife, both church and state should expect the favor of God if they obeyed his Word. His judgment was certain if they disobeyed it.
The actual structure of church and state in New England in the early 1630s is described in great detail in Edmund Morgan’s brilliant volume, The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop.⁹ To summarize that structure briefly, the franchise was restricted to male members of Puritan churches. Furthermore, membership (and the ability to participate in the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper) in those churches was limited to those individuals who demonstrated doctrinal orthodoxy, lived sanctified lives, and perhaps most important, were able to describe their experience of grace. The third requirement became a cause celebre
in later Puritanism and in the ministry of Edwards. It would not, in fact, be too much of a stretch to argue that it was his renewed insistence on this third requirement that led to Edwards being fired from his church. But more of this later.
Several things need to be said about this church-state structure. First of all, only those who could vote could hold political office. By structuring their society in this way, the Puritans hoped to make significant progress toward building a society that genuinely held the glory of God as its first priority. From the beginning, however, ministers were prohibited from holding political office. The official lines between church and state were drawn clearly for all to see. Winthrop’s journal traces in great detail the relationships between elected political officers and church officers. While frequent disagreements between the two groups arose, there was no confusion between them regarding their respective roles, rights, and responsibilities.
The second point focuses on the question of fairness. Many modern scholars question the restriction of the franchise to church members. They accuse the Puritans of narrow-minded bigotry. In response to such a charge, it must be stated clearly and openly that political liberty was not the highest priority for the Puritans. The highest priority was the glory of God. If achieving the glory of God required the sacrifice of other legitimate values, the Puritans were willing to make that sacrifice. Modern America, however, with its near deification of individual freedom cannot understand a mindset which genuinely sought to worship the Creator rather than the creature. Edwards, on the other hand, understood this as well as any human being who ever lived.
Having said this, nevertheless,