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Jonathan Edwards's Change of Position On Stoddardeanism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2011

John F. Jamieson
Affiliation:
California State UniversitySacramento, CA 95819

Extract

When Jonathan Edwards was installed as assistant to his grandfather Solomon Stoddard at Northampton in 1727, he not only assumed the major pastoral responsibility for the largest congregation in western Massachusetts, but he also became coadministrator of the “lax” mode of admission to the sacraments that had prevailed at Northampton and throughout the Connecticut River Valley for some thirty years. This system granted both baptism and communion to all persons of age who had historical knowledge of the gospel and were of a “non-scandalous” life, on the grounds that all divinely established ordinances were capable of “begetting” faith. Although Stoddard did not originate the “lax” system, the practice was generally referred to as “Stoddardeanism” because from the time of his celebrated dispute with Increase Mather in 1700 (the so-called “Stoddardean controversy”) Stoddard had been its most systematic, persistent, and influential proponent in New England.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1981

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References

1 see Miller, Perry, “Solomon Stoddard, 1643–1729”, HTR 34 (1941) 277320CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and also his later development in The New England Mind: From Colony to Province (Cambridge: Harvard University, 1953) chap. 15Google Scholar. Also very helpful are Schafer, Thomas A., “Solomon Stoddard and the Theology of the Revival”, in Henry, Stuart C., ed., A Miscellany of American Christianity: Essays in Honor of H. Shelton Smith (Durham: Duke University, 1963) 328–61Google Scholar, and Walsh, James P., “Solomon Stoddard's Open Communion: A Reexamination”, New England Quarterly 43 (1970) 94114CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On the English background and sources of Stoddardeanism, see Holifield, E. Brooks, The Covenant Sealed: The Devel opment of Puritan Sacramental Theology in Old and New England, 1570–1720 (New Haven/London: Yale University, 1974)Google Scholar. A recent full-length treatment of Stoddard is Coffman, Ralph J., Solomon Stoddard (Boston: Twayne, 1978)Google Scholar; but cf. the review essay of this book by Davis, Thomas M. in Early American Literature 14 (1979) 110–17.Google Scholar

2 For the necessary biographical background, see Winslow, Ola E., Jonathan Edwards, 1703–1758 (New York: Macmillan, 1941) esp. chap. 12Google Scholar. Writers generally call attention to the changed position and its results but do not trace its origins; e.g., Miller, Perry, Jonathan Edwards (New York: W. Sloan Associates, 1949) 197, 230Google Scholar; Carse, James, Jonathan Edwards and the Visibility of God (New York: Scribner's, 1967) 131Google Scholar; Scheick, William J., The Writings of Jonathan Edwards: Theme, Motif, and Style (College Station: Texas A&M University, 1975) 102–3Google Scholar; Flower, Elizabeth and Murphey, Murray G., A History of Philosophy in America (2 vols.; New York: Putnam, 1977) 1.141.Google Scholar

3 Allen, Alexander V. G., Jonathan Edwards (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1890) 258.Google Scholar

4 The Works of President Edwards: With a Memoir of His Life, in Ten Volumes, ed. Dwight, Sereno E. (New York, 1830) 1Google Scholar. 313 (hereafter cited as Edwards, Works [Dwight ed.]).

5 An Humble Inquiry into the Rules of the Word of God, Concerning the Qualifications Requisite to a Complete Standing and full Communion in the Visible Christian Church (Boston, 1749)Google Scholar, in The Works of President Edwards, in Four Volumes: A Reprint of the Worcester Edition (New York, 1854) 1Google Scholar. 86 (hereafter cited as Edwards, Works [Worcester ed.]).

6 Edwards, Works (Dwight ed.) 1. 122 and passim. For an excellent general analysis of the development and extent of Arminianism in New England, see Wright, Conrad, The Beginnings of Unitarianism in America (Boston: Starr King, 1955) 5Google Scholar, and chap. 1, “Arminianism before the Great Awakening”, 9–27. His statement that “Arminianism in Massachusetts resembled the prevailing English theology of the Age of Reason” (p. 10) is particularly appropriate for the 1750s.

7 The Life and Character of the Late Reverend Mr. Jonathan Edwards (Boston, 1765)Google Scholar, in Levin, David, ed., Jonathan Edwards: A Profile (New York: Hill & Wang, 1969) 52Google Scholar.

8 The Works of Jonathan Edwards, vol. 4, The Great Awakening, ed. Goen, C. C. (New Haven: Yale University, 1972) 148Google Scholar (hereafter cited as Edwards, Works [Yale ed.], 4).

9 Ibid., 503.

10 See Christie, Francis Albert, “The Beginnings of Arminianism in New England”, in Papers of the American Society of Church History, Second Series, vol. 3, ed. Rockwell, William Walker (New York: Putnam's, 1912) 153–72.Google Scholar

11 See Goodwin, Gerald J., “The Myth of ‘Arminian-Calvinism’ in Eighteenth-Century New England”, New England Quarterly 41 (1968) 213–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Cf. Fiering, Norman S., “Will and Intellect in the New England Mind”, William and Mary Quarterly 29 (1972) 515–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12 For further discussion of this early eighteenth-century usage, see Walker, George Leon, Some Aspects of the Religious Life of New England, with Special Reference to the Congregationalists (New York, 1897) 123Google Scholar; Walker, Williston, The Creeds and Platforms of Congregationalism (New York, 1893Google Scholar; reprint ed. Philadelphia: Pilgrim, 1969) 284; idem, “Jonathan Edwards” from Ten New England Leaders (New York, 1901Google Scholar; reprinted in David Levin, ed., Jonathan Edwards: A Profile) 95–96. Cf. also Perry Miller, Jonathan Edwards, 112, 124; Ramsey, Paul, “Editor's Introduction” in The Works of Jonathan Edwards, vol. 1, Freedom of the Will (New Haven: Yale University, 1957) 3Google Scholar; Ahlstrom, Sidney E., “Theology in America: A Historical Survey” in Smith, James Ward, ed., Religion in American Life (2 vols.; Princeton: Princeton University, 1961) 1. 251n.Google Scholar

13 (Boston, 1731) p. (1).

14 Edwards, Works (Worcester ed.) 4. 177–78.

15 Edwards, Works (Yale ed.) 4. 148.

17 Discourses on Various Important Subjects, Nearly concerning the Great Affair of the Soul's Eternal Salvation (Boston, 1738) ii-ivGoogle Scholar. The sermon on justification by faith was greatly expanded for the 1738 publication, so that it is a moderately extensive treatise.

18 Edwards, Works (Worcester ed.) 4. 64.

19 Edwards, Works (Yale ed.) 4. 11.

20 George Leon Walker, Some Aspects of the Religious Life of New England, 64. Cf. Miller, Perry, “'Preparation for Salvation’ in Seventeenth-Century New England”, Journal of the History of Ideas 4 (1943) 253–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

21 The Heart Prepared: Grace and Conversion in Puritan Spiritual Life (New Haven: Yale University, 1966) 19, 86–124.Google Scholar

22 See Cherry, Conrad, The Theology of Jonathan Edwards: A Reappraisal (New York: Doubleday, 1966) 210–11.Google Scholar

23 Edwards, Works (Dwight ed.) 1. 121.

24 Faust, Clarence H. and Johnson, Thomas H., eds., Jonathan Edwards: Representative Selections, with Introduction, Bibliography, and Notes (rev. ed.; New York: Hill & Wang, 1962) xxxv.Google Scholar

25 Jonathan Edwards, 68.

26 The Theology of Jonathan Edwards, 88.

27 The Philosophical Theology of Jonathan Edwards (New York: Columbia University, 1960) 131Google Scholar; see also 142–45. See Brauer, Jerald C., “Puritan Mysticism and the Development of Liberalism”, CH 19 (1950) 151–70.Google Scholar

28 Tillich, Paul, Systematic Theology (2 vols.; Chicago: University of Chicago, 1951) 1. 9, 4445.Google Scholar

29 Edwards, Works (Worcester ed.) 4. 438–39.

30 Ibid., 440.

31 Ibid., 442. Cf. Smith, John E., “Jonathan Edwards as Philosophical Theologian”, Review of Metaphysics 30 (1976) 321–24.Google Scholar

32 Edwards, Works (Worcester ed.) 1. 467, 471, 486.

33 The Varieties of Religious Experience (New York: Modern Library, 1902 and 1929) 112.Google Scholar

34 Edwards, Works (Worcester ed.) 1. 86–87.

35 The Works of Jonathan Edwards, vol. 2, A Treatise Concerning the Religious Affections, ed. Smith, John E. (New Haven: Yale University, 1959) 107Google Scholar (hereafter cited as Edwards, Works [Yale ed.], 2).

36 Ibid., 298.

37 Ibid., 197; the exposition of the twelfth sign begins on p. 383.

38 Thomas A. Schafer, “Jonathan Edwards’ Conception of the Church”, 57.

39 Edwards, Works (Dwight ed.) 1. 412; and elsewhere Edwards spoke of “Mr. Stoddard's known Presbyterian principles” and asserted that “Mr. Stoddard was a Presbyterian and abundantly preached his Presbyterian principles” (Ibid., 352, 359; see also 381). Cf. Edwards's remarks in Humble Inquiry, Works (Worcester ed.) 1.142. But cf. Lucas, Paul R., ‘“An Appeal to the Learned’: The Mind of Solomon Stoddard”, William and Mary Quarterly 30 (1973) 257–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Valley of Discord: Church and Society along the Connecticut River, 163–1725 (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1976) esp. chaps. 7 and 8.Google Scholar

40 Schafer, “Jonathan Edwards's Conception of the Church”, 58. Schafer is quoting Misc. 399.

41 Edwards, Works (Yale ed.) 4. 157.

42 Ola E. Winslow, Jonathan Edwards, 245.

43 Edwards, Works (Dwight ed.), 1. 134.

44 Edwards, Works (Yale ed.) 2. 340.

45 Ibid., 383.

46 Ibid., 383, 392, 397.

47 Ibid., 406–7.

49 Ibid., 412.

50 Ibid., 413.

51 Ibid., 416.

52 Ibid., 420.

53 Ibid., 460.

54 Ibid., 420, 422–23.

55 Ibid., 424–25.

56 Ibid., 450.

57 Ibid., 450–51.

58 Ibid., 452, 454.

59 Ibid., 455.

60 Ibid., 455–56, 458–59.

61 Ibid., 460.