Dictionary Definition
puritan adj : morally rigorous and strict; "blue
laws"; "the puritan work ethic"; "puritanic distaste for alcohol";
"she was anything but puritanical in her behavior" [syn: blue(a), puritanic, puritanical]
Noun
1 adheres to strict religious principles; opposed
to sensual pleasures
2 a person excessively concerned about propriety
and decorum [syn: prude]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Puritan
English
Noun
- (often disapproving): a puritanical person
Adjective
Synonyms
Translations
- Dutch: puriteins
- Finnish: puritaani, puristi
- German: puritanisch
Related terms
Extensive Definition
A Puritan of 16th and
17th
century England was a
Protestant
(usually Calvinist)
advocate of "purity" of worship, doctrine, and personal and
group morality.
The wellspring of the Protestant
Reformation had been the doctrines of Justification
by Faith and the
Priesthood of All Believers. These stressed the importance of
obtaining salvation
through the development of an individual relationship with God
(through the person of Jesus Christ) over attempting to obtain
salvation through the sacraments and ceremonies of
the church alone. The clergy and the sacraments could help an
individual find salvation, but could not guarantee it by dispensing
supernatural power. This was the Lutheran and
(later) the Anglican
position.
Puritans objected to this 'half-way-house'
concept. Salvation could only be obtained by the individual. Thus,
clergy might encourage sinners to repent by preaching, but had no
special power. Holy communion was a ceremony of remembrance and
fellowship, not a miraculous way of dispensing supernatural grace.
Indeed, as many Puritans accepted Calvinism and the
doctrine of predestination, it became
clear that salvation was only reserved for a godly 'elect' and not
the 'corrupt lump' of mankind.
Puritans were thus opposed to anything that
promoted a special religious hierarchy dispensing a kind of
supernatural power based upon apostolic
succession. They were largely opposed to bishops. Clergy ought not to
wear a surplus or vestments, since it set
themselves apart from other men and suggested a special status or
power. Holy
Communion could not take place at an altar behind wooden rails, since
it suggested a supernatural ceremony.
Terminology
Originally used to describe a third-century sect of strictly legalistic heretics, the word "Puritan" is now applied unevenly to a number of Protestant churches (and religious groups within the Anglican Church) from the late 16th century to the present. Puritans did not originally use the term for themselves. It was a term of abuse that first surfaced in the 1560s. "Precisemen" and "Precisions" were other early antagonistic terms for Puritans who preferred to call themselves "the godly." The word "Puritan" thus always referred to a type of religious belief, rather than a particular religious sect. To reflect that the term encompasses a variety of ecclesiastical bodies and theological positions, scholars today increasingly prefer to use the term as a common noun or adjective: "puritan" rather than "Puritan."The single theological momentum most
consistently defined by the term "Puritan" was Reformed or
Calvinist
and led to the founding of the Presbyterian,
Baptist,
and Independent or Congregationalist
churches; In the United
States, the church and religious culture of the Puritans of the
Massachusetts
Bay Colony formed the basis of post-colonial American Congregationalism,
specifically the Congregational Church proper. The term Puritan was
used by the group itself mainly in the 16th century, though it
seems to have been used often and, in its earliest recorded
instances, as a term of abuse. By the middle of the 17th century,
the group had become so divided that "Puritan" was most often used
by opponents and detractors of the group, rather than by the
practitioners themselves. As Patrick Collinson has noted, well
before the founding of the New England settlement, “Puritanism had
no content beyond what was attributed to it by its opponents.” The
practitioners knew themselves as members of particular churches or
movements, and not by the simple term.
Puritans who felt that the Reformation
of the Church of
England had not gone far enough but who remained within the
Church of England advocating further reforms are known as
non-separating Puritans. (The Non-Separating Puritans differed
among themselves about how much further reformation was necessary.)
Those who felt that the Church of England was so corrupt that true
Christians
should separate from it altogether are known as separating Puritans
or simply as Separatists. Especially after the
Restoration (1660), non-separating Puritans were called
Nonconformists
(for their failure to conform to the Book
of Common Prayer) while separating Puritans were called
Dissenters.
The term "puritan" is not normally used to
describe any religious group after the 17th century, although
several groups might be called "puritan" because their origins lay
in the Puritan movement. For example, in the late seventeenth
century, those Dissenters who had separated from the Church of
England organized themselves into separate denominations
(Presbyterians,
Congregationalists,
and Baptists),
particularly after the Act
of Toleration of 1689 made it legal to worship outside the
Church of England. The non-separating Puritans who remained within
the Church of England had by the early eighteenth century come to
be known as the Low Church
wing of the Church of England.
The term "puritan" might be used by analogy
(usually unfavorably) to describe any group that shares a
commitment to the Puritans' strong commitment to the purity of
worship, of doctrine, or of personal or group morality.
History
Background, to 1559
The English
Reformation, begun in the reign of Henry
VIII of England, was initially influenced by a number of
reforming movements on the continent: Erasmian, Lutheran, and
Reformed,
while the practice of the Church of
England continued to display many similarities with Roman
Catholicism. In the reign of Henry’s son, Edward
VI of England, the English Reformation began to take on a more
distinctly Calvinist tone.Of
all the debates about the extent of reforms in England, the one
which would ultimately prove to have the longest staying power was
the debate about whether the clergy should be required to wear
vestments. In his 1550 Lenten sermons before the king, John Hooper
called for the elimination of vestments. Later that year, Hooper
was to be appointed Bishop
of Gloucester, but refused on the grounds that he would be
required to wear vestments. Called before the English privy
council, a deal was worked out whereby Hooper could be excused
from wearing vestments, provided he allowed the clergy under him to
wear vestments if they saw fit. Cranmer ordered Nicholas Ridley to
perform the consecration of Hooper as
Bishop of Gloucester on the basis of the deal worked out in the
Privy Council; Ridley, however, refused, on the grounds that such a
consecration would violate the ordinal of the
Book of Common Prayer, which, since it had been passed by the
English
Parliament and signed by the king, was the law of the land.
This disagreement led to a subsequent October 1550 debate between
Hooper and Ridley which formed the basis of the Vestments
Controversy (also known as the "Vestiarian Controversy"). In
December, Hooper was placed under house arrest for refusing to be
consecrated as a bishop, which was a crime under the terms of the
1549
Act of Uniformity. In January 1551, Peter Martyr Vermigli
visited Hooper to encourage him to wear vestments, and John Calvin
wrote him a letter saying that, while he agreed with Hooper’s
position on vestments, the issue was not a big enough deal to
justify his refusing the bishopric.
The Return of the Vestiarian Controversy, 1563-1569
At the first
Convocation of the English Clergy of Elizabeth's reign, held in
1563, the Puritan faction of the Church of England set out its
desires for further reforms: 1) a reduction in the number of
saints' days; 2) the elimination of vestments; 3) the elimination
of kneeling at communion; 4) the elimination of "emergency baptism"
of sickly newborns; and 5) the elimination of organs from churches.
The Puritan faction achieved none of its goals at the 1563
Convocation, though many Puritan clergymen introduced these reforms
in their congregations on their own initiative in the following
years. For example, at Cambridge, William
Fulke convinced his students not to wear their surplices and to hiss at those
students who wore their surplices.
In this situation, Archbishop
Parker published a set of Advertisements, requiring uniformity
in clerical dress. The Puritan faction objected loudly, and
appealed to the continental reformers to support their cause.
Unfortunately for the Puritans many of the continental reformers
felt that the Puritans were just making trouble - for example, in a
letter to Bishop
Grindal, Heinrich
Bullinger accused the Puritans of displaying "a contentious
spirit under the name of conscience". Grindal proceeded to publish
the letter without Bullinger's permission. Theodore
Beza was more supportive of the Puritan position, though he did
not intervene too loudly because he feared angering the queen and
he wanted the queen to intervene in France on behalf of the
Huguenots.
In response to clergymen refusing to wear their vestments, 37
ministers were suspended. In response, in 1569, some ministers
began holding their own services, the first example of Puritan
separatism.
The Admonition to the Parliament (1572) and the Demand for Presbyterianism
Throughout the 1560s, England's return to
Protestantism had remained tentative, and large numbers of the
people remained committed to Catholicism and sought a return to
Catholicism. Three events around 1570 led to a re-enforcement of
Protestantism: (1) The Rising
of the North, when the northern earls revolted, demanding a
return to Catholicism; (2) Pope Pius V
issued the bull Regnans
in Excelsis, absolving Catholics of their duty of allegiance to Elizabeth; and
(3) the Ridolfi plot
sought to replace Elizabeth with the Catholic Mary,
Queen of Scots. In response to this Catholic rebelliousness,
the English government took several measures to shore up the
Protestantism of the regime: (1) all clergymen were required to
subscribe to the Thirty-Nine
Articles; (2) all laity were required to take communion
according to the rite of the Book
of Common Prayer in their home parish at least once a year; and
(3) it became a treasonable offense to say that the queen was a
heretic or a schismatic.
In this pro-Protestant, anti-Catholic
environment, the Puritan faction sought to push further reforms on
the Church of England. John Foxe and
Thomas
Norton presented a reform proposal initially drawn up under
Edward VI to Parliament. Elizabeth quickly killed this proposal,
however, insisting on adherence to the 1559 religious settlement.
Meanwhile, at Cambridge, professor
Thomas Cartwright, a long-time opponent of vestments, offered a
series of lectures in 1570 on the Book of
Acts in which he called for the abolition of episcopacy
and the creation of a presbyterian
system of church
governance in England.
Puritans were further dismayed when they learned
that the bishops had decided to merge the vestiarian controversy
into the requirement that clergy subscribe to the Thirty-Nine
Articles: at the time they swore their allegiance to the
Thirty-Nine Articles, the bishops also required all clergymen to
swear that the use of the Book of Common Prayer and the wearing of
vestments are not contrary to Scripture. Many of the Puritan
clergymen were incensed at this requirement. A bill authorizing the
bishops to permit deviations from the Book of Common Prayer in
cases where the Prayer Book required something contrary to a
clergyman's conscience was presented and defeated at the next
parliament.
Meanwhile, at Cambridge, Vice-Chancellor
John
Whitgift moved against Thomas Cartwright, depriving Cartwright
of his professorship and his fellowship in 1571.
Under these circumstances, in 1572, two London
clergymen - Thomas
Wilcox and John
Field - penned the first classic expression of Puritanism,
their Admonition to the Parliament. According to the Admonition,
the Puritans had long accepted the Book of Common Prayer, with all
its deficiencies, because it promoted the peace and unity of the
church. The years 1583-1585 saw the brief ascendancy in Scotland of
James Stewart, who claimed the title of Earl of Arran. This period
saw Scotland pass the Black Acts, which outlawed the
Second Book of Discipline. As a response, many Scottish
ministers, including Andrew
Melville, sought refuge in England. These refugees participated
in the English conventicles (as did John Field, now released from
prison) and convinced many English Puritans that they should renew
their fight to establish presybterianism in England. As such, in
the 1584 Parliament, Puritans introduced legislation to replace the
Book of Common Prayer with the Genevan
Book of Order and to introduce presbyterianism. This effort
failed.
At this point, John Field, Walter Travers, and
Thomas Cartwright were all free and back in England and determined
to draft a new order for the Church of England. They drafted a Book
of Discipline, which circulated in 1586, and which they hoped would
be accepted by the 1586 Parliament. Again, the Puritan effort
failed in Parliament.
Martin Marprelate, 1588-89, and response
In 1588-89, a series of virulently anti-episcopal
tracts were published under the pseudonym of Martin
Marprelate. These Marprelate
tracts, published by Welsh publisher John Penry,
denounced the bishops as agents of Antichrist, the
strongest possible denunciation for Christians. The Marprelate
tracts called the bishops "our vile servile dunghill ministers of
damnation, that viperous generation, those scorpions."
Unforunately for the Puritans, the mid- to
late-1580s saw a number of the defenders of the Puritans in the
English government die:
Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford in 1585;
Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester in 1588; and Francis
Walsingham in 1590. In these circumstances, Richard
Bancroft (John Whitgift's chaplain) led a crackdown
against the Puritans. Cartwright and eight other Puritan leaders
were imprisoned for eighteen months, before facing trial in the
Star
Chamber. The conventicles were disbanded.
Some Puritans followed Robert Browne's lead and
withdrew from the Church of England. A number of those separatists
were arrested in the woods near Islington in
1593, and John
Greenwood and Henry
Barrowe were executed for advocating separatism. Followers of
Greenwood and Barrowe fled to the Netherlands, and would form the
basis of the Pilgrims, who
would later found the Plymouth
Colony.
The Puritans turn inwards
Following the suppression of Puritanism in the
wake of the Marprelate Tracts, Puritans in England assumed a more
low-key approach in the 1590s. Ministers who favoured further
reforms increasingly turned their attention away from structural
reforms to the Church of England, instead choosing to focus on
individual, personal holiness. Theologians such as William
Perkins of Cambridge continued to maintain the rigorously high
standards of previous Puritans, but now focused their attention on
improving individual, as opposed to collective, righteousness. A
characteristic Puritan focus during this period was for more
rigorous keeping of the Christian
Sabbath. William Perkins is also credited with introducing
Theodore
Beza's version of double
predestination to the English Puritans, a view which he
popularized through the use of a chart he created known as "The
Golden Chain".
Some Puritan clergymen and laity, who
increasingly referred to themselves as "the godly", began to view
themselves as a spiritual elite, especially chosen by God, who were
distinct from the regular members of the Church of England. At
times, this tendency led for calls for "the godly" to separate
themselves from the Church of England. While the majority of
Puritans remained "non-separating Puritans", they nevertheless came
to constitute a distinct social group within the Church of England
by the turn of the seventeenth century. In the next reign, "the
Puritan" as a type was common enough that playwright Ben Jonson
could satirize Puritans in the form of the characters Tribulation
and Ananais in The
Alchemist (1610) and Zeal-of-the-land Busy in Bartholomew
Fair (1614).
Reign of James I, 1603-1625
====The Millenary Petition (1603) and the Hampton Court Conference (1604)====Elizabeth I died in March 1603, whereupon
James VI of Scotland, who had been King of
Scots since the abdication of his mother, Mary,
Queen of Scots in 1567 (when James was 1 year old), inherited
the English throne. James had had little contact with his mother
and was raised by guardians in the Presbyterian Church
of Scotland. John Knox had
led the Scottish
Reformation, beginning in 1560, and the Church of Scotland
looked broadly like the type of church that the Puritans wanted in
England. As such, the Puritans hoped that the further reforms which
had been blocked under Elizabeth could now be carried out under the
new king. They were somewhat worried because in his 1599 book
Basilikon
Doron, the king had had harsh words for Puritans. However, his
criticisms seemed directed at the most extreme of the Puritans and
it seemed likely that the king would agree to at least the more
moderate Puritan reforms.
Thus, throughout 1603, Puritan ministers
collected signatures for a petition, known as the Millenary
Petition because it was signed by 1,000 Puritan ministers. The
Petition was careful not to challenge the royal
supremacy in the Church of England, and called for a number of
moderate church reforms to remove ceremonies perceived as overly
popish: 1) the use of the
sign of
the cross in baptism
(which Puritans saw as superstitious); 2) the
rite of confirmation (which
Puritans criticized because it was not found in the Bible); 3) the
performance of baptism by midwives (which Puritans argued
was based on a superstitious belief that infants who died without
being baptized could not go to heaven); 4) the exchanging of
rings during
the marriage ceremony
(again seen as unscriptural and superstitious); 5) bowing at the
Name
of Jesus during worship (again seen as superstitious); 6) the
requirement that clergy wear vestments (see above); and 7)
the custom of clergy living in the church building. The Petition
argued that a preaching minister should be
appointed to every parish (instead of one who simply read the
service from the Book of Common Prayer). In opposition to
Archbishop Whitgift's policy that clergy must subscribe to the Book
of Common Prayer and the use of vestments, the Petition argued that
ministers should only be required to subscribe to the 39 Articles
and the royal supremacy. Finally, the Petition called for the
ending of episcopacy,
and the setting up of a presbyterian
system of church governance.
James I, who had studied theology, and who
enjoyed debating theological points, agreed to hold a conference at
Hampton
Court Palace, where supporters and opponents of the Millenery
Petition could debate the merits of reforms to the church. After
being postponed due to an outbreak of the plague,
the Hampton
Court Conference was held in January 1604. The king chose four
Puritans to represent the Puritan cause: John Reynolds (president
of
Corpus Christi College, Oxford), Laurence
Chaderton (master of
Emmanuel College, Cambridge), Thomas Sparks, and John
Knewstubs. Archbishop Whitgift led a delegation of eight bishops (including Whitgift's
protege, Richard
Bancroft, Bishop of
London), seven deans,
and two other clergymen in opposition to the Puritans.
At the first meeting of the Hampton Court
Conference, held January 14, James met only with Archbishop
Whitgift's party. On the second day, January 16, he met with the
Puritans - this day of the conference ended badly for the Puritans
when John Reynolds mentioned the Puritan proposal for creating
presbyteries in
England. James had long regarded bishops (who were appointed by the
monarch) as the main instrument of royal power in the church, and
viewed the proposal to replace bishops with presbyteries as an
attempt to diminish his power in the church. As such, James issued
his famous maxim "No bishop, no king!" on this occasion, before
ending the day's meeting early. On January 18, the king initially
met with Whitgift's party and an assemblage of ecclesiastical
lawyers, before calling in the Puritans to hear his verdict.
James declared that the use of the Book of Common Prayer was to
continue, and made no provisions for a preaching ministry. He did,
however, approve a few changes in the Book of Common Prayer: 1) the
mention of baptism by midwives was to be eliminated; 2) the term
"absolution" (which
Puritans associated with the Catholic
sacrament of penance, which was rejected by Protestants) was
replaced by the term "remission of sins"; 3) confirmation was
renamed "laying on of hands" to dissociate it from its Catholic
sacramental meaning; and 4) a few other minor changes. James also
announced that he agreed to support the Puritan project for a new,
authorized translation of the Bible, thus setting the stage for the
production of the
Authorized King James Version of the Bible, which would
ultimately be published in 1611.
Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1604-1610
The Puritans were further disappointed when,
following the death of John Whitgift, James selected Richard
Bancroft as his replacement as Archbishop of Canterbury. Bancroft
had argued against the Puritans at the Hampton Court Conference,
and his selection signaled that James would not be willing to go
ahead with any further reforms. Shortly after his selection,
Bancroft presented a book of canons to the
Convocation of the English Clergy - these canons received royal
approval and as such became part of the Church of England's
canon
law. This outraged the Parliament
of England, which in 1559 had passed the Act
of Uniformity approving the Book of Common Prayer, and which
claimed that Parliament, not Convocation, was the only body
authorized to pass new canon law. The Puritans, who opposed
Bancroft's book of canons, argued that the bishops were attempting
to aggrandize themselves at the Parliament's expense. In the end,
James acceded to Parliament's demand, and withdrew the book of
canons. The 1604 parliament marks the first time that the Puritans
had allied themselves with the cause of Parliament over against the
cause of the bishops. Over the next several decades, this alliance
would become one of the most pronounced features of English
politics, and would form the basis of the divisions in the English
Civil War in the 1640s.
The discovery of the Gunpowder
Plot (a plot by Guy Fawkes to
kill the king and parliament by bombing the
State Opening of Parliament in order to restore Catholicism in
England) led to a period of particularly virulent anti-Catholicism.
Since the Puritans were the most passionately anti-Catholic group
in England, they enjoyed some cachet in this period. Nevertheless,
their reform proposals were always successfully blocked by
Archbishop Bancroft.
George Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1611-1633
Following Archbishop Bancroft's death in 1610,
James chose
George Abbot as his successor. James had been hoping to bring
the Church of England and the Church of Scotland closer together,
in the hope that the two churches might eventually merge. James
re-introduced bishops (abolished at the time of the Scottish
Reformation) into the Church of Scotland, though with less
power than bishops elsewhere, with the Scottish bishops serving
essentially as the permanent chairman of their presbytery (so that
the presbyterian structure of the church was essentially
maintained). In 1608, Abbot had impressed James after he
accompanied
George Home, 1st Earl of Dunbar to Scotland as part of his
efforts to unify the English and Scottish churches, and James had
named Abbot Bishop
of Lichfield in 1609. James intended Abbot's appointment as
Archbishop of Canterbury to further his project of unifying the
English and Scottish churches.
While every Archbishop of Canterbury since
Matthew Parker had been a Calvinist, Abbot
is generally regarded as "The Calvinist Archbishop" or even as "The
Puritan Archbishop", and is the closest the Puritans ever got to
seeing an Archbishop of Canterbury endorse their proposals. (The
one issue on which Abbot was distinctly non-Puritan was the issue
of episcopacy - Abbot was one the most vocal proponents of the
doctrine of Apostolic
Succession in the Church of England.)
The Book of Sports Controversy, 1617
As has been noted earlier, one of the
characteristic features of the Puritan movement was an insistence
on a strict keeping of the Christian
Sabbath on Sundays. (Of all the
Reformed movements on the continent, none ever came anywhere close
to the Puritans' extreme Sabbatarianism.) The Puritans insisted
that the Fourth Commandment (which Catholics and Lutherans regard
as the Third Commandment) of the Ten
Commandments required not only that no work be performed on
Sundays, but also that the entire day should be dedicated to the
worship of God.
It had long been a custom in England that Sunday
mornings were dedicated to Christian worship, and were then
followed by sports and
games on Sunday afternoons.
The Puritans loudly objected to the practice of Sunday sports,
believing that playing games on the Sabbath constituted a violation
of the Fourth Commandment.
In the early seventeenth century, Puritans came
to dominate several localities and managed to succeed in banning
Sunday sports. In 1617, in Lancashire,
there was a particularly intense quarrel between the Puritans and
the local gentry (many of
whom were Catholic recusants) over the issue of
Sunday sports. In response to the controversy raging in his
diocese, Thomas
Morton, Bishop of
Chester, asked the king for a ruling on the propriety of Sunday
sports.
In response to Bishop Morton's request, King
James issued the Book of
Sports, a declaration declaring that it was lawful to play some
sports on Sundays, but not others. Criticizing the opinions of
"puritans and precise people", the Book listed archery, dancing, "leaping, vaulting, or any other
such harmless recreation" as permissible sports for Sundays. It
forbade bear-baiting,
bull-baiting,
"interludes" and bowling.
Needless to say, the Book of Sports was very
controversial among the Puritans. The king commanded all Anglican
ministers to read the Book of Sports to their congregations, but
Archbishop Abbot, a supporter of Sabbatarianism, ordered his clergy
not to read the Book of Sports.
The Five Articles of Perth, 1618
As part of his policy of moving the English and
Scottish churches closer together, in 1618, King James proposed the
Five
Articles of Perth, which imposed English practices on the
Scottish church. The Five Articles required 1) kneeling at Communion; 2)
provisions allowing for private baptism; 3) provisions allowing
reservation
of the sacrament for the ill; 4) only a bishop was allowed to administer
the rite of confirmation; and 5) the
Church of Scotland, which had previously abolished all holy days,
was obliged to accept some holy days.
The Five Articles of Perth were ultimately
accepted by the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, though a sizable
minority of Scottish Presbyterians objected. The Articles of Perth
were also distressing for English Puritans - the Puritans had hoped
that the Church of England would be reformed to be brought in line
with the practice of the Church of Scotland. Instead, the Articles
of Perth appeared to English Puritans to be heading in the wrong
direction, by forcing English errors on the Church of
Scotland.
Controversy over the Spanish Match, 1623-1624
King James saw himself as the potential
peacemaker of Europe, and his propaganda portrayed him as the
modern Solomon. In
addition to attempting to reconcile the Church of Scotland and the
Church of England, James hoped that he would be able to reconcile
Catholic and Protestant Europe. (This is part of the reason why he
favoured the Church of England over the Church of Scotland while
pursuing his reforms - he felt that the Church of England could
provide a model middle ground, and that both Catholics and
Protestants would be able to accept churches modeled after the
Church of England. In this regard, he subscribed to the theory that
the Church of England represented a via media, a
middle way between Protestantism and Catholicism, a view first
propounded by Richard
Hooker in the reign of Elizabeth I.) As such, when his son
Charles
became old enough to marry, James mused about marrying Charles to a
Catholic princess in order to further his reconciliation of
Catholicism and Protestantism.
James' opinions about the possibility of a
reconciliation of Catholicism and Protestantism were challenged by
the outbreak of the Thirty
Years' War in 1618, a war which would prove to be the biggest
Protestant-Catholic war since the sixteenth century (which had seen
the Schmalkaldic
War, the French
Wars of Religion, etc.) and which thus signaled the end of two
decades of relative Catholic-Protestant peace. The outbreak of the
Thirty Years' War was particularly tragic for James since it was
caused by the actions of his son-in-law
Frederick V, Elector Palatine, who was married to James'
daughter Elizabeth.
With the outbreak of war against the Catholics,
English Protestants - and especially the English Puritans -
demanded that James intervene on behalf of his son-in-law. James
initially refused, but after Fredrick was ousted as King of Bohemia
by
Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor in 1620, the clamor for
English intervention grew so loud that James was forced to call a
parliament to raise funds to support an expedition on behalf of
Frederick (the first parliament James had called since the 1614
Addled
Parliament). Unfortunately for James, Parliament, ably led by
Edward
Coke, refused to grant adequate funds for this expedition
unless the king agreed that his son would marry a Protestant. James
responded that Parliament had no business interfering in matters of
royal
prerogative. Parliament responded by passing a protest,
asserting its ancient rights. At the urging of his favourite,
George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, and of the Spanish
ambassador
Diego Sarmiento de Acuña, conde de Gondomar, James tore this
protest out of the record book and dissolved
Parliament.
Buckingham had gained considerable influence, not
only over James, but also over Prince Charles. In 1623, he
convinced the 23-year-old Prince Charles that England should ally
with Spain and that Prince Charles should marry a Spanish princess.
The two thus sailed for Spain so that Charles could court Maria
Anna of Spain, daughter of Philip
III of Spain. This proposed marriage is known to history as the
Spanish
Match. The Spanish Match was wildly unpopular among English
Protestants, and allowed the Puritans a great deal of credibility.
Puritans argued that the Spanish Match was part of a plot to
restore England to Catholicism, a position that was deeply
unpopular in England. As such, when James called another parliament
in 1623, the anti-Catholic outpouring was so virulent that it was
obvious the parliament would agree to none of the king's requests.
Meanwhile, in Spain, the Spanish insisted that they would only
agree to the Spanish Match if Charles agreed to convert to
Catholicism and agree to spend a year receiving Catholic
instruction in Spain. Under the circumstances, Charles ultimately
declined the Spanish Match in 1624. His return to England was
greeted with widespread celebrations and treated as a national
holiday, celebrating the fact that the Spanish Match had not
occurred.
In response to his rebuff by Spain, Charles came
to favour alliance with France and war with Spain. At the
Puritan-dominated 1624 parliament, the parliament impeached
Lionel Cranfield, 1st Earl of Middlesex, the minister most
associated with advocacy in favour of the Spanish Match. The
parliament agreed to fund a war with Spain in principle, though
they did not actually allocate funding for the war.
The rise of the Arminian party and the New Gagg controversy (1624)
As noted earlier, King James had been a doctrinal
Calvinist all his life. Therefore, when the
Quinquarticular Controversy broke out in the Dutch
Republic in the years following the death of theologian
Jacobus
Arminius in 1609, James naturally supported the Calvinist
Gomarists
against the Arminian Remonstrants.
James handpicked the British delegates to the 1618 Synod of
Dort (whose five canons form the basis of the Five
Points of Calvinism) and concurred in the outcome of the
Synod.
However, as James was increasingly faced with
Puritan opposition (over the Book of Sports, the Five Articles of
Perth, the Spanish Match, etc.), he grew disillusioned with the
Puritans, and began to seek out Church of England clergymen who
would be more supportive of his ecumenical ecclesiastical
plans.
Since the reign of Elizabeth, England had
contained a number of theologians who opposed the extreme predestinarian views in
the high Calvinism propounded by Theodore
Beza and accepted by the Puritans. For example, Peter Baro,
the
Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity at the University
of Cambridge had opposed Archbishop Whitgift's attempts to
impose the Calvinistic Lambeth
Articles on the Church of England in 1595. Several of Baro's
disciples at Cambridge - notably Lancelot
Andrewes, John
Overall, and Samuel
Harsnett - had repeated Baro's criticisms of predestination in
terms roughly equivalent to those propounded by Arminius. As such,
when James was looking for anti-Puritan allies, he found this party
willing, and, although few members of this party actually accepted
the Arminian position tout court, they were quickly labeled "the
Arminian party" by the Puritans.
This came to a head in 1624, when a hitherto
obscure Cambridge scholar, Richard
Montagu, obtained royal permission to publish A New Gagg for an
Old Goose. The book was framed as a rebuttal of a Catholic critique
of the Church of England. In response, Montagu argued that the
Calvinist positions objected to were held only by a small, Puritan
minority in the Church of England, and that the vast majority of
clergy in the Church of England rejected high Calvinism. A New Gagg
was incredibly important in the history of the Puritans in that it
marked the first time the Puritans had ever been associated with a
doctrinal position (as opposed to a question of proper practice).
For example, George
Carleton, Bishop
of Chichester, who had been an English delegate at the Synod of
Dort, was shocked to find his doctrinal position being equated with
Puritanism.
Reign of Charles I, 1625-1649
Laudianism adopted as government policy
Prince Charles became King of England upon the
death of his father in 1625. Charles was deeply distrustful of the
Puritans (who had led a sustained opposition to his father's
ecclesiastical policies), seeing them as rebellious (Charles, like
his father,believed in the Divine
Right of Kings). During the latter years of his reign, James,
rebuffed by Parliament, had increasingly come to rely on clergymen
of the "Arminian party" as political advisors and administrators.
Charles accelerated this tendency. Charles had no particular
interest in theological questions such as the doctrine of
predestination, but he preferred the "Arminians'" emphasis on
order, decorum, uniformity, and spectacle in Christian
worship.
Besides the Duke of Buckingham, Charles' closest
political advisor was William
Laud, the Bishop
of St David's, whom Charles translated
to the more prestigious (and higher-paid) position of
Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1626. Under Laud's influence,
Charles shifted the royal ecclesiastical policy markedly. Whereas
James had supported the Canons of the Synod of Dort, Charles
forbade preaching on the subject of predestination altogether.
Richard Montagu was made Bishop
of Chichester in 1628. Whereas James had been lenient towards
Puritan clergy who omitted parts of the Book of Common Prayer,
Charles urged the bishops to strictly enforce compliance with the
Prayer Book, and to suspend ministers who refused to comply.
The central ideal of Laudianism (the common name
for the ecclesiastical policies pursued by Charles and Laud) was
the "beauty of holiness." This emphasized a love of ceremony and
harmonious liturgy.
Many of the churches in England had fallen into disrepair in the
wake of the English Reformation, especially in Puritan areas, since
Puritans believed it was superstitious to attempt to beautify
church buildings. Laudianism, however, called for making churches
beautiful. Churches were ordered to make repairs and to enforce
greater respect for the church building. A policy particularly
odious to the Puritans was the installation of altar rails
in churches, which Puritans associated with the Catholic position
on transubstantiation
(the idea that Christ becomes physically present in the consecrated
host):
in Catholic practice, altar rails served to physically demarcate
the space where Christ became incarnate in the host
and only
priests, acolytes,
and altar boys
were allowed inside the altar rail. Since the Puritans rejected the
idea of transubstantiation, and professed the
priesthood of all believers, they also objected to creating a
physical space in the church where only priests could go. Further,
they argued that the practice of receiving communion while kneeling
at the rail too much resembled Catholic Eucharistic
adoration, which they felt was a form of idolatry (since it involved
offering the honour due to God to a piece of bread). The Laudians
insisted on enforcing kneeling at communion and receiving at the
rail, though they denied that this involved accepting the Catholic
position on these points.
Conflict between Charles I and the Puritans, 1625-1629
The controversy over Richard Montagu's New Gagg
was still on parliamentarians' minds in 1625, when Parliament met
in May 1625. Furthermore, shortly before the opening of the
parliament, Charles was married by proxy to
Henrietta Maria of France, the Catholic daughter of Henry
IV of France (thus cementing an alliance with France in
preparation for war against Spain). As such, at this parliament,
Puritan MPs openly worried that Charles was preparing to restrict
the recusancy laws
(which Charles was, in fact, planning on doing, having agreed to do
so in the secret marriage treaty he negotiated with Louis
XIII of France).
Puritan MP John Pym
launched an attack on Richard Montagu in the House of Commons. As a
response, Montagu wrote a pamphlet entitled Appello Caesarem
(Latin "I
Appeal to Caesar") (a reference to
Acts 25:10-12), in which he appealed to Charles to protect him
against the Puritans. Charles responded by making Montagu a royal
chaplain, signaling that he was willing to defend Montagu against
Puritan opposition.
In this atmosphere, Puritan suspicions that
Charles was secretly planning to restore Roman Catholicism in
England mounted. As such, the Parliament, heavily influenced by its
Puritan members, was reluctant to grant Charles revenue, since they
feared that any revenue granted might be used to support an army
that would re-impose Catholicism on England. For example, since
1414, every English monarch had been authorized by their first
Parliament to collect the customs duties of Tonnage
and Poundage for the duration of their reign; the 1625
Parliament, however, voted to allow Charles to collect Tonnage and
Poundage for only one year. Furthermore, when Charles wanted to
intervene in the Thirty Years' War by declaring war on Spain,
Parliament granted him only £140,000, a totally insufficient sum to
pursue the war.
The war with Spain went ahead (partially funded
by tonnage and poundage collected by Charles even after he was no
longer authorized to do so). Buckingham was put in charge of the
war effort, and failed miserably. As such, in 1628, Parliament
called for Buckingham's replacement, but Charles stuck by
Buckingham. Parliament went on to pass the Petition
of Right, a declaration of Parliament's rights. Charles
accepted the Petition, though this did not lead to a change in his
behaviour.
In August 1628, Buckingham was assassinated by a
disillusioned soldier, John Felton.
The nation responded with spontaneous celebration, which angered
Charles.
When Parliament resumed sitting in January 1629,
Charles was met with outrage over the case of John Rolle, an MP who
had been prosecuted for failing to pay Tonnage and Poundage even
though Charles had agreed to "no taxation without representation"
(to use a slogan from a later era) in the Petition of Right.
John
Finch, the
Speaker of the House of Commons, was famously held down in the
Speaker's Chair in order to allow the House to pass a resolution
condemning the king.
Charles was so outraged by Parliament's
opposition to his policies that he determined to rule without ever
calling a parliament again, thus initiating the period known as his
Personal
Rule (1629-1640), which his enemies termed the Eleven Years'
Tyranny. This period also saw the ascendancy of Laudianism in
England (see previous section), which led Puritan critics to term
this period the Caroline Captivity of the Church (a reference to
the so-called
Babylonian Captivity of the Church, which was itself a
reference to the Babylonian
Captivity).
The Great Migration, 1630-1642
The events of 1629 convinced many Puritans that
King Charles was an ardent foe of further church reforms who would
enforce Laudianism on the Church of England throughout his reign.
Since King Charles was only 29 years old in 1629, they were thus
faced with the prospect of countless decades without reforms and
with their proposals being suppressed. Given this situation, some
Puritans began considering founding their own colony where they
could worship in a fully-reformed church, far from the prying eyes
of King Charles and the bishops.
The Pilgrims were Separatists who held views
similar to those proclaimed by Robert
Browne, John
Greenwood, and Henry
Barrowe. The Pilgrims emerged in Elizabethan England at roughly
the same time as the Brownists.
The Pilgrims trace their lineage to Richard
Clyfton, minister of Babworth, Nottinghamshire.
Beginning in the 1580s, Clyfton advocated separation from the
Church of England. Clyfton's movement attracted William
Brewster, the postmaster of Scrooby. Tobias
Matthew, the Bishop of
Durham, who had been part of Archbishop Whitgift's delegation
at the Hampton Court Conference, was selected by James to become
Archbishop
of York in 1606. He led an anti-Separatist crackdown and
Clyfton was removed from his ministry. In response, Brewster
offered to organize a dissenting congregation in the manor house in
which he lived in Scrooby. Clyfton served as the congregation's
pastor, John
Robinson as its teacher, and William Brewster as its chief
elder. This congregation was subject to ecclesiastical
investigation, and its members faced social hostility from
conforming church members, but was not actively persecuted.
Nevertheless, disliking the social hostility, and fearing future
persecution, the group decided to leave England.
150 members of the congregation made it to
Amsterdam, where
they met up with a group of Separatist exiles led by John
Smyth, which had joined the congregation of English exiles led
by Francis Johnson. After a year at Amsterdam, tensions between
Smyth and Johnson grew so high, that the Pilgrims decided to move
to Leiden.
While there, many worked at Leiden
University or in the textile, printing and brewing trades. John
Robinson participated in the
Calvinist-Arminian Controversy while at Leiden University,
arguing on behalf of the Gomarists.
By 1617, many members of the congregation had
grown disillusioned with Leiden and wanted to move somewhere where
they could retain their English identity, while also worshipping
God in the way they believed was required. As such, the
congregation voted to leave Leiden and to found a colony. The group
ultimately decided to move to New England.
In 1620, after receiving a patent from
the London
Company, the Pilgrims left for New England onboard the Mayflower,
landing at Plymouth
Rock. The colony founded by the Pilgrims was called Plymouth
Colony.
The early seventeenth century saw the foundation
of many joint
stock companies, which were commercial ventures designed to
profit from trade or the foundation of colonial settlements. The
most famous of the joint stock companies was the
Honourable East India Company, chartered in 1600. In 1606, King
James had issued a royal
charter to two companies referred to collectively as the
Virginia
Company: the London
Company (which successfully established the Colony
of Virginia in 1608) and the Plymouth
Company (which was unsuccessful at establishing settlements,
which explains why they were eager to grant a patent to the
Pilgrims in 1620).
Two of the Pilgrim settlers in Plymouth Colony -
Robert
Cushman and Edward
Winslow - believed that Cape Ann would
be a profitable location for a settlement. They therefore organized
a company which they named the Dorchester Company and in 1622
sailed to England seeking a patent from the London Company giving
them permission to settle there. They were successful and were
granted the Sheffield
Patent (named after Edmond, Lord Sheffield, the member of the
Plymouth Company who granted the patent). On the basis of this
patent, Roger
Conant led a group of fishermen to found Salem
in 1626, being replaced as governor by John
Endecott in 1627.
During their time in England, Cushman and Winslow
had convinced many Puritan members of the landed
gentry to invest in the Dorchester Company. In 1627, the
Dorchester Company went bankrupt, but was succeeded by the New
England Company (the membership of the Dorchester and New England
Companies overlapped). The New England Company sought clearer title
to the New England land of the proposed settlement than provided by
the Sheffield Patent and in March 1629 succeeded in obtaining from
King Charles a royal
charter changing the name of the company to the Governor and
Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England and granting them
the land to found the Massachusetts
Bay Colony. It is unclear why Charles agreed to this, but it
would appear that he did not realize that the group was dominated
by Puritans and believed that it was a purely commercial
company.
As the Puritans' relationship with the new king
soured, Puritan John
Winthrop, a lawyer who had practiced in the Court of
Wards, began to explore the idea of creating a Puritan colony
in New England. After all, the Pilgrims at Plymouth Colony had
proven that such a colony was viable. Instead of living in England
under the rule of a king hostile to their interests, the Puritans
could establish a colony in New England far from the king's
interference. Throughout 1628 and 1629, Puritans in Winthrop's
social circle discussed the possibility of moving to New England.
It was noted that the royal charter establishing the Massachusetts
Bay Company had not specified where the company's annual meeting
should be held; this raised the possibility that the governor of
the company could move to the new colony and serve as governor of
the colony, while the general court of the company could be
transformed into the colony's legislative assembly. John Winthrop
participated in these discussions and in March 1629, signed the
Cambridge
Agreement, by which the non-emigrating shareholders of the
company agreed to turn over control of the company to the
emigrating shareholders. As Winthrop was the wealthiest of the
emigrating shareholders, the company decided to make him governor,
and entrusted him with the company charter.
Winthrop sailed for New England in 1630 along
with 700 colonists on board eleven ships known collectively as the
Winthrop
Fleet. Winthrop himself sailed on board the Arbella. During the
crossing, he preached a sermon entitled "A Model of Christian
Charity", in which he called on his fellow settlers to make their
new colony a City
upon a Hill (a reference to Matthew
5:14-16), meaning that they would be a model to all the nations
of Europe as to what a properly reformed Christian commonwealth
should look like. (This was particularly poignant in 1630, since
the Thirty
Years' War was going bad for the Protestants and Catholicism
was being restored in lands previously reformed - e.g. by the 1629
Edict
of Restitution.)
The Great Migration
Most of the Puritans who emigrated settled in the New England area. However, the Great Migration of Puritans was relatively short-lived and not as large as is often believed.http://members.aol.com/ntgen/hrtg/engl.html It began in earnest in 1629 with the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and ended in 1642 with the start of the English Civil War when King Charles I effectively shut off emigration to the colonies, and when Puritans felt less menaced by Royalist decree. From 1629 through 1643 approximately 21,000 Puritans emigrated to New England.http://www.wfu.edu/~matthetl/perspectives/two.html This is actually far less than the number of British subjects who emigrated to Ireland, Canada, and the Caribbean during this time.The Great Migration of Puritans to New England
was primarily an exodus of families. Between 1630 and 1640 over
13,000 men, women, and children sailed to Massachusetts.
The religious and political factors behind the Great Migration
influenced the demographics of the
emigrants. Rather than groups of young men seeking economic success
(as predominated Virginia colonies), Puritan ships were laden with
“ordinary” people, old and young, families as well as individuals.
Just a quarter of the emigrants were in their twenties when they
boarded ship in the 1630s, making young adults not predominant in
New England settlements. The New World Puritan population can be
seen as more of a cross section in age of English population than
those of other colonies. This meant that the Massachusetts
Bay Colony retained a relatively “normal” population
composition. In contrast to the Chesapeake
colony in Virginia – where the ratio of colonist men to
women was 4:1 in early decades and at least 2:1 in later decades
and where considerable intermarriage with native women took place
– nearly half of the Puritan immigrants to the New World
were women, and there was little intermarriage with natives. The
majority of families who traveled to Massachusetts Bay were
families in progress, with parents who were not yet through with
their reproductive years and whose continued fertility would make
New England’s population growth possible. The women who emigrated
were critical agents in the success of the establishment and
maintenance of the Puritan colonies in North America. Success in
the early colonial economy depended largely on labor, which was
conducted by members of Puritan families. It was through this labor
that Puritans endeavored to create their “city on a hill”, a
productive, morally exemplary colony far from the corruption of the
Church of England.
New England theological controversies, 1632-1642
As noted earlier, the vast majority of Puritans
who settled in the Massachusetts Bay Colony were non-separating
Puritans. This meant that, while they deeply abhorred many of the
practices of the Church of England, they refused to separate from
the Church of England because they placed an extremely high value
on the doctrine of the unity of the Church. They denounced the
Separating Puritans as schismatics.
Thus, although the Puritans in Massachusetts erected their church
along Presbyterian-Congregational lines, they technically remained
in full
communion with the Church of England. This position led to two
major theological controversies with Separating Puritans in the
course of the 1630s: the Roger Williams controversy, and the Anne
Hutchinson controversy.
The Roger Williams Controversy
Roger Williams, a Separating Puritan minister,
arrived in Boston in 1631. He
was almost immediately invited to become the pastor of the local
congregation. Williams refused the invitation on the grounds that
the congregation had not separated from the Church of England. He
then attempted to become pastor of the church at Salem,
but was blocked by Boston political leaders, who objected to his
separatism. He thus spent two years with his fellow Separatists in
the Plymouth Colony, but ultimately came into conflict with them
and returned to Salem. There, he became pastor in May 1635, against
the objection of the Boston authorities. Williams set forth a
manifesto in which he declared that 1) the Church of England was
apostate and fellowship
with it was a grievous sin; 2) the Massachusetts Colony's charter
falsely said that King Charles was a Christian; 3) that the colony
should not be allowed to impose oaths on its citizens because that
was forbidden by
Matthew 5:33-37
Williams' actions so outraged the Puritan leaders
of the Massachusetts Bay Colony that they expelled him from the
colony. In 1636, the exiled Williams founded the city of Providence,
Rhode Island. Williams was one of the first Puritans to
advocate
separation of church and state and Rhode Island was one of the
first places in the Christian world to recognize freedom
of religion.
The Anne Hutchinson Controversy
Anne Hutchinson and her family moved from
Boston,
Lincolnshire to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634, following
their Puritan minister John
Cotton. Cotton began pastoring a congregation in Boston,
Massachusetts, and Hutchinson joined his congregation.
Following the Puritan practice of conventicling, Hutchinson set up
a conventicle in her home. At the conventicle, a group would meet
during the week to discuss John Cotton's sermon from the previous
Sunday. Hutchinson proved to be extremely charismatic at
propounding on Cotton's ideas during these conventicles, and
eventually the size of her conventicle swelled to 80 people and had
to be moved from her home to the church building.
Cotton had long denounced Arminianism in his
sermons. Hutchinson took up the anti-Arminian cause in strong
language, propounding an extreme form of double
predestination (a view popularized among English Puritans by
William
Perkins), which held that God chose those who would go to
heaven (the elect) and
those who would go to
hell (the reprobate), and that His
decision inevitably and infallibly came to pass. Applying this
framework to the Arminian controversy, Hutchinson argued that
people were either under a covenant
of works (they were relying on good works for their salvation,
and therefore were really damned) or else a covenant of
grace (in which case they were dependent only on God's grace,
and were therefore really saved).
By 1637, Hutchinson's teachings had grown
controversial within the colony for a number of reasons. First,
some Puritans objected to a woman occupying such a prominent role
as a teacher in the church. Second, Hutchinson began denouncing
various Puritan ministers in the colony as really preaching a
"covenant of works" and sometimes spoke as if John Cotton were the
only minister in the entire colony who was preaching a "covenant of
grace" correctly. Thirdly, some of Hutchinson's views on the
"covenant of grace" seemed indistinguishable from the heresy
of antinomianism,
the view that the elect did not have to follow the laws of God or
morality.
Hutchinson was called before the
Massachusetts General Court to explain herself. She sparred
verbally with the magistrates successfully on a number of issues,
but was ultimately undone when she said that she had determined
that she would be persecuted when she came to New England. When the
magistrates asked her how she had determined this, she responded
"by an immediate revelation" i.e. God had spoken to her and told
her so. The Puritans generally followed the principle of sola
scriptura and believed that God communicated with individuals
only through the medium of scripture. As such, for the
magistrates of the General Court, who were already suspicious of
Hutchinson's orthodoxy, the claim that God was speaking directly to
her was the final straw. They therefore voted to banish her from
the colony. As a result, in 1638, Hutchinson and several of her
followers left the Massachusetts Bay Colony and founded the town of
Pocasset, which today is Portsmouth,
Rhode Island.
Life in the New World
New England society rested on the rock of the
Puritan family, economically and religiously. Women were thus
entrusted with the responsibility of ensuring that children grew
into virtuous Puritan adults. This new moral and religious
significance given to everyday life, marriage, and family brought
women’s activities into the spotlight. Although the patriarch
directed work and devotion within the family, the proof of success
in the New World was in a harmonious marriage and godly children-
both of which fell under the jurisdiction of the Puritan woman. The
success of The Great Migration and establishment of successful
Puritan colonies in the New World thus depended heavily on the role
of women within the settlement. (For more on the religious roles of
women in Puritan colonies see "Beliefs" section below.)
The struggle between the assertive Church of
England and various Presbyterian and Puritan groups extended
throughout the English realm in the 17th Century, prompting not
only the re-emigration of British Protestants from Ireland to North
America (the so-called Scotch-Irish),
but prompting emigration from Bermuda, England's
second-oldest overseas
territory. Roughly 10,000 Bermudians emigrated before US
Independence. Most of these went to the American colonies,
founding, or contributing to settlements throughout the South,
especially. Many had also gone to the Bahamas, where a
number of Bermudian Independent Puritan families, under the
leadership of William
Sayle, had established the colony of Eleuthera in
1648.
In the 1660s the Puritan settlements in the New
World were confronted with the challenge posed by an aging first
generation. Those who created the colonies were the most fervent in
their religious beliefs, and as their numbers began to decline, so
did the membership of churches. The demographics of the churches
changed because fewer men were joining. The resulting decrease in
male religious participation was a problem for the established
church (that is, the colony’s official church for which people were
taxed and which they were expected to attend), since men were the
ones with secular power.
If the men who wielded secular power in the colony were absent from
the church, its legitimacy would be undermined. As early as 1660,
women constituted the great majority of church members. However,
since Anne
Hutchinson’s banishment, they were not allowed to talk in
church (for more information, see below under "Beliefs"). Puritan
ministers, concerned for the continued existence and power of their
churches in the colonies, pushed for a solution to declining church
membership. This effort led to the creation of the Halfway
Covenant, in order to boost participation in the Puritan
church.
Emigration resumed under the rule of Cromwell,
but not in large numbers as there was no longer any need to "escape
persecution" in England. In fact, many Puritans returned to England
during the war. "In 1641, when the English Civil War began, some
immigrants returned to fight on the Puritan side, and when the
Puritans won, many resumed English life under Oliver Cromwell's
more congenial Puritan sway."http://www.historynet.com/exploration/great_migrations/3035471.html?page=2&c=y
Some Puritans also migrated to colonies in
Central
America and the Caribbean, see
Providence
Island Company, Mosquito
Coast and Providencia
Island.
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1633-1645: The "Caroline Captivity of the Church"
Meanwhile, back in England...
As noted above, Charles
I favored a formal style of worship known as Laudianism (often,
though not necessarily, associated with theological Arminianism).
Although the ascendancy of this position within the Church of
England dates from the beginning of Charles' reign, it became
particularly marked after 1629, as we move into the period of
Charles' Personal Rule (the Puritans' "Caroline Captivity of the
Church"). The triumph of Laudianism is best symbolized by the fact
that in 1633, George
Abbot, the so-called "Puritan Archbishop" died, and Charles
chose William Laud
as his successor as Archbishop of Canterbury. George Abbot had been
basically suspended from his functions in 1617 after he refused to
order his clergy to read the Book of
Sports. As a sign of the loyalty of the new archbishop, Charles
now re-issued the Book of Sports in October 1633. Unlike Abbot,
Laud ordered his clergy to read the Book of Sports to their
congregations and suspended any Puritan minister who refused to
read the Book to their congregation.
The 1630s in general saw a renewed concern by the
bishops of the Church of England to enforce uniformity in the
church by ensuring strict compliance with the style of worship set
out in the Book of Common Prayer. The Court
of High Commission, initially set up to enforce uniformity in
the Church of England by routing out Catholic recusants in the
Church, came to be the primary means for disciplining Puritan
clergy who refused to conform to the Book of Common Prayer. The
Court of High Commission was particularly useful in this regards
because, unlike regular courts, in the Court of High Commission,
there was no right against self-incrimination,
meaning that the Court could compel testimony from Puritan
clergymen accused of violating the Book of Common Prayer.
Much to the chagrin of the Puritans, some bishops
went even further than the Book of Common Prayer, and required
their clergy to conform to a level of ceremonialism beyond that
required by the Prayer Book. As noted above, the introduction of
altar
rails to churches was the most controversial such requirement.
Puritans were also dismayed by the re-introduction of images (e.g.
stained
glass windows) to churches which had been without religious
images since the iconoclasm of the
Reformation.
Silencing of Puritan laymen
The ejection of Puritan ministers from the Church of England in the 1630s provoked great controversy. Not only did their ejection result in dissatisfaction with the worship on offer in the Church of England, it also provoked outrage that "godly" ministers were deprived of their livelihoods and left destitute.In these circumstances, many Puritan laymen spoke
out against Charles' policies. The first, and most famous, critic
of the Caroline regime was William
Prynne. In the late 1620s and early 1630s, Prynne had authored
a number of works denouncing the spread of Arminianism in the
Church of England. Prynne was also deeply opposed to Charles'
marrying the Catholic
Henrietta Maria and feared that her party at court was plotting
to restore Catholicism in England. Prynne became a critic of what
he perceived to be the lax moral standards which prevailed at
court, particularly in Henrietta Maria's circle.
Prynne was also a critic of societal morals more
generally. Echoing John
Chrysostom's criticism of the stage, in 1631-32, Prynne penned
a book, Histriomastix,
in which he denounced the stage in vehement terms for its promotion
of lasciviousness.
The book, which represents the highest point of the Puritans'
attack on the
English Renaissance theatre, attacked the stage as promoting
lewdness. Unfortunately for Prynne, his book appeared at about the
same time that Henrietta Maria became the first royal to ever
perform in a masque,
William Montagu's The
Shepherd's Paradise, in January 1633. Histriomastix
was widely read as a Puritan attack on the queen's morality.
Shortly after becoming Archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud
prosecuted Prynne in the Court of Star Chamber
on a charge of seditious
libel. (Unlike the common law
courts, which could only punish people for violation of
strictly-defined crimes,
Star Chamber was allowed to order any punishment short of the
death
penalty - including torture - for crimes which were
founded on equity, not
on law. Seditious libel was one of the "equitable crimes" which
were prosecuted in the Star Chamber.) Star Chamber found Prynne
guilty and sentenced him to imprisonment, a £5000 fine, and the
removal of part of his ears.
Prynne continued to publish from prison, and in
1637, he was tried before Star Chamber a second time. This time,
Star Chamber ordered that the rest of Prynne's ears be cut off, and
that he should be branded
with the letters S L for "seditious libeller". (Prynne would
maintain that the letters really stood for stigmata Laudis (the
marks of Laud).) At the same trial at which Prynne was sentenced to
have his ears cut off, Star Chamber also ordered that two other
critics of the regime should have their ears cut off for writing
against Laudianism: John
Bastwick, a physician who wrote anti-episcopal pamphlets; and
Henry
Burton. Many Puritans consequently regarded Prynne, Bastwick,
and Burton as "martyrs"
of the Puritan cause. (Later generations of Englishmen would be
more inclined to see the trio as "martyrs" of the cause of freedom
of speech.)
A year later, the trio of martyrs were joined by
a fourth, John
Lilburne, who had studied under John Bastwick. Since 1632, it
had been illegal to publish or import works of literature not
licensed by the
Stationers' Company (which basically allowed the government the
ability to view and censor any work prior to publication). Over the
course of the 1630s, it became common for Puritans to have their
works published in Amsterdam and
then smuggled into England. In 1638, Lilburne was prosecuted in
Star Chamber for importing religious works critical of Laudianism
from Amsterdam. Lilburne thus began a process which would see him
later hailed as "Freeborn John" and as the preeminent champion of
"English liberties". In Star Chamber, he refused to plead to the
charges against him on the grounds that the charges had been
presented to him only in Latin. The court then
threw him in prison and again brought him back to court and
demanded a plea. Again, Lilburne demanded to hear in English
the charges brought against him. The authorities then resorted to
flogging him with a
three-thonged whip on his bare back, as he was dragged by his hands
tied to the rear of an oxcart from Fleet Prison
to the pillory at
Westminster.
He was then forced to stoop in the pillory where he still managed
to campaign against his censors, while distributing more unlicensed
literature to the crowds. He was then gagged. Finally he was thrown
in prison. He was taken back to the court and again
imprisoned.
The Bishops' Wars, 1638-1640
As noted above, James had tried to bring the
English and Scottish churches closer together. In the process, he
had restored bishops to the Church of Scotland and forced the Five
Articles of Perth on the Scottish church, moves which upset
Scottish Presbyterians. Charles now further angered the
Presbyterians by elevating the bishops' role in Scotland even
higher than his father had, to the point where in 1635, the
Archbishop of St Andrews, John
Spottiswoode, was made
Lord Chancellor of Scotland. Presbyterian opposition to Charles
reached a new height of intensity in 1637, when Charles attempted
to impose a version of the Book of Common Prayer on the Church of
Scotland. Although this book was drawn up by a panel of Scottish
bishops, it was widely seen as an English import and denounced as
Laud's Liturgy. What was worse, where the Scottish prayer book
differed from the English, it seemed to be re-introducing old
errors which had not yet been re-introduced in England. As a
result, when the newly-appointed Bishop
of Edinburgh, David
Lindsay rose to read the new liturgy in St.
Giles' Cathedral, Jenny
Geddes, a member of the congregation, threw her stool at
Lindsay, thus setting off the Prayer Book Riot.
The Scottish prayer book was deeply unpopular
with Scottish noblemen and gentry, not only on religious grounds,
but also for nationalist reasons: Knox's Book of Common Order had
been adopted as the liturgy of the national church by the Parliament
of Scotland, whereas the Scottish parliament was not consulted
in 1637 and the new prayer book imposed solely on the basis of
Charles' alleged royal
supremacy in the church, a doctrine which had never been
accepted by either the Church or Parliament of Scotland. A number
of leading noblemen drew up a document known as the National
Covenant in February 1638. Those who subscribed to the National
Covenant are known as Covenanters.
Later that year, the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland ejected the bishops
from the church.
In response to this challenge to his authority,
Charles raised an army and marched on Scotland in the "First
Bishops' War" (1639). The English Puritans - who had a longstanding
opposition to the bishops (which had reached new heights in the
wake of the Prynne, Burton, Bastwick, and Lilburne cases) - were
deeply dismayed that the king was now waging a war to maintain the
office of bishop. The First Bishops' War ended in a stalemate,
since both sides lacked sufficient resources to defeat their
opponents (in Charles' case, this was because he did not have
enough revenues to raise a war since he had not called a Parliament
since 1629), which led to the signing of the Treaty
of Berwick (1639).
Charles intended to break the Treaty of Berwick
at the next opportunity, and upon returning to London, began
preparations for calling a Parliament that could pass new taxes to
fund a war against the Scots and to re-establish episcopacy in
Scotland. This Parliament - known as the Short
Parliament because it only lasted three weeks - met in 1640.
Unfortunately for Charles, many Puritan members were elected to the
Parliament, and two critics of royal policies, John Pym and
John
Hampden, emerged as loud critics of the king in the Assembly.
These members insisted that Parliament had an ancient right to
demand the redress of grievances and insisted that the nation's
grievances with the past ten years of royal policies should be
dealt with before Parliament granted Charles the taxes that he
wanted. Frustrated, Charles dissolved Parliament three weeks after
it opened.
In Scotland, the rebellious spirit continued to
grow in strength. Following the signing of the Treaty of Berwick,
the General Assembly of Scotland met in Edinburgh and confirmed the
abolition of episcopacy in Scotland, and then went even further and
declared that all episcopacy was contrary to the Word of God. When the
Scottish Parliament met later in the year, it confirmed the Church
of Scotland's position. The Scottish Covenanters now determined
that Presbyterianism could never be confidently re-established in
Scotland so long as episcopacy remained the order of the day in
England. They therefore determined to invade England to help bring
about the abolition of episcopacy. At the same time, the Scots (who
had many contacts among the English Puritans) learned that the king
was intending to break the Treaty of Berwick and make a second
attempt at invading Scotland. When the Short Parliament was
dissolved without having granted Charles the money he requested,
the Covenanters determined that the time was ripe to launch a
preemptive strike against English invasion. As such, in August
1640, the Scottish troops marched into northern England, beginning
the "Second Bishops' War". Catching the king unawares, the Scots
gained a major victory at the Battle of
Newburn. The Scottish Covenanters thus occupied the northern
counties of England and imposed a large fine of £850 a day on the
king until a treaty could be signed. Believing that the king was
not trustworthy, the Scottish insisted that the Parliament of
England. Bankrupted by the Second Bishops' War, Charles had little
choice but to call a Parliament to grant new taxes to pay off the
Scots. He therefore reluctantly called a Parliament which would not
be finally dissolved until 1660, the Long
Parliament.
From 1625 to 1660
By this time, Puritans were more often referred to as Dissenters. Since English Dissenters were barred from any profession that required official religious conformity, Puritans became instrumental in a number of new industries. They dominated the export/import business and were eager to colonize the New World. With the flourishing of the trans-Atlantic trade with America, Puritans in England were growing quite wealthy. Similarly, the artisan classes had become increasingly Puritan. Therefore, the economic issues of the English Civil War (tax levies, liberalization of royal charters), the political issues of the English Civil War (purchasing of peerages, increasing discontent between the House of Lords and the people, rebellion over the attempt to introduce a Divine right of kings by Charles I), and the religious tensions were all bound together into a general dispute that pitted Church of England "Cavaliers" against Puritan "Roundheads".Puritan factions played a key role in the
Parliamentarian
victory and became a majority in Parliament,
after the withdrawal of royalists and the forcible exclusion of
those who wished to continue negotiation with the King. In due
course, the Puritan military leader Oliver
Cromwell became head of the English
Commonwealth. In the Commonwealth period, the Church of England
was removed from royal control and reorganized to grant greater
authority to local congregations, most of which developed in a
Puritan and semi-Calvinist direction. There was never an official
Puritan denomination; the Commonwealth government tolerated a
somewhat broader debate on doctrinal issues than had previously
been possible, and considerable theological and political conflict
between Puritan factions continued throughout this period. The
label "Puritan" fell out of use when their movement became the
status
quo; it was replaced by the broader term Nonconformist,
which was used after the English
Restoration to refer to all Protestant denominations outside of
the official Church. The pejorative name "Dissenter" (for
non-Conforming Anglicans, as opposed to Roman Catholics) was also
used.
From 1660 to present day
The influence of the Puritan movement persisted in England in various forms. All official discrimination against Puritans in England ended in the 1640s when Puritan forces under Oliver Cromwell overthrew the monarchy in the English Civil War.Great Ejection
With the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 the Church of England attempted to re-assert its authority as the official English church. In 1662, the "Great Ejection" followed the passage of the Act of Uniformity in England. Around two thousand Puritan ministers were forced to resign from their positions as Church of England clergy following the restoration of Charles II. Persecution of the Puritans then occurred sporadically under the terms of what later became known as The Clarendon Code (Gatiss, The Tragedy of 1662). Persecution from the state and the established church was somewhat abated under James II and then after the Glorious Revolution under William and Mary.Later trends
Puritan experience also motivated the later Latitudinarian and Evangelical trends in the Church of England. Meanwhile, in Europe, in the 17th and 18th centuries, a movement within Lutheranism based on puritan ideology became a strong religious force known as pietism. In the USA, the Puritan settlement of New England was a major influence on American Protestantism.With the start of the English Civil War in the
1640s, fewer and fewer immigrants to New England were Puritans.
Very few immigrants to Virginia and other early colonies were
Puritans. Most immigrants to Virginia and other colonies in the
1600s came to America for economic reasons. By 1660 Puritan
migration to the New World had ended and was officially
discouraged.http://library.thinkquest.org/20619/Timelinex.html
Puritan populations in New England, however, continued to grow
rapidly, owing to the prosperity of many large Puritan families.
(See Estimated Population 1620–1780: Immigration
to the USA.)
Many immigrants to New England, who had been
motivated by a desire for greater religious freedom, actually soon
found repression under the Puritan theocracy to be far more
repressive than any oppression of their faith that they had
experienced back in Britain. (For example see:
Roger Williams, Stephen
Bachiler, Anne
Hutchinson, Mary Dyer,
etc.)
Decline of power and influence
Puritan oppression, including torture and imprisonment of many leaders of non-Puritan Christian sects, led to the (voluntary or involuntary) "banishment" of many Christian leaders and their followers from the Massachusetts Bay Colony. This negative impact of Puritanism on many new colonists had a positive result on American history in that it led to the founding of many new colonies—Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, New Hampshire, and others—as religious havens that were created for devout Christians who wanted to live outside the oppressive reach of Puritan theocracy.The power and influence of Puritan leaders in New
England declined further after the Salem
Witch Trials in Salem,
Massachusetts, in the 1690s. Although they began as a trial of
one or several self-avowed witches who admitted to practicing
voodoo-type rituals with
malicious intent, the trials got out of hand and ended with a
number of innocent people being falsely accused, found guilty, and
executed by Puritan leaders. Although most of the magistrates never
admitted fault in the matter, at least one, Samuel
Sewall, publicly apologized in later life. Many other witch
trials wrongly accused others of supernatural crimes elsewhere in
New England and in various parts of Europe of the time. Because
most people of that era believed in the existence and efficacy of
witchcraft, the witch
trials can be seen as a very unfortunate miscarriage of justice in
the face of public hysteria, and less as the
result of a prejudice specific to the Puritan leaders.
In addition to rival Christian clergy members and
suspected witches, the Puritan leaders' strict governing of their
own people—as depicted in Nathaniel
Hawthorne's fictional novel The
Scarlet Letter—led to their being ousted from direct political
control in Massachusetts by 1700 and the decline of the influence
of Puritanism as a religious sect in many areas by the
mid-1700s.
Some modern Presbyterian
denominations are descended, at least in part, from the Puritans
(for example the Presbyterian
Church (USA)), although others pre-date the English
influence.
Congregational
Churches also trace their lineage back to the Puritans. One
example is the Congregational Christian Churches (CCC) denomination
in the United States (which merged with the
Evangelical and Reformed Church in 1957 to form the United
Church of Christ). The CCC is the direct descendant of New
England Puritan congregations, although in the early 19th century a
few of these old congregations adopted Unitarianism.
Another example is the United
Reformed Church in England and Wales (the modern URC also has
congregations in Scotland, but its southern
components—the Congregational Church in England and Wales
and the Presbyterian Church in England—partly descend
from Restoration Dissenters).
A number of contemporary Unitarian
congregations such as
The First Parish in Cambridge also trace their roots back to
English and New England Puritan congregations.
Various Baptist
denominations also grew in strength in England during the
Commonwealth. During this period, the
Religious Society of Friends (popularly known as "Quakers") was
founded and grew remarkably in strength, though the theology of the
Society of Friends is radically different from that of Puritanism
(for example, they rejected the doctrine of predestination), and can
be seen as a reaction against Calvinist belief
in a period of religious upheaval. This period of religious
upheaval also saw the appearance of more radical sects, such as the
Diggers and
the allegedly antinomian Ranters.
Beliefs
The central tenet of Puritanism was God's supreme authority over human affairs, particularly in the church, and especially as expressed in the Bible. This view led them to seek both individual and corporate conformance to the teaching of the Bible, and it led them to pursue both moral purity down to the smallest detail as well as ecclesiastical purity to the highest level.The words of the Bible were the origin of many
Puritan cultural ideals, especially regarding the roles of men and
women in the community. While both sexes carried the stain of
original
sin, for a girl, original sin suggested more than the roster of
Puritan character flaws. Eve’s
corruption, in Puritan eyes, extended to all women, and justified
marginalizing them within churches' hierarchical structures. An
example is the different ways that men and women were made to
express their conversion
experiences. For full membership, the Puritan church insisted not
only that its congregants lead godly lives and exhibit a clear
understanding of the main tenets of their Christian faith, but they
also must demonstrate that they had experienced true evidence of
the workings of God’s grace in their souls. Only those who gave a
convincing account of such a conversion could be admitted to full
church membership. Women were not permitted to speak in church
after 1636 (although they were allowed to engage in religious
discussions outside of it, in various women-only meetings), and
thus could not narrate their conversions.
On the individual level, the Puritans emphasized
that each person should be continually reformed by the grace of God
to fight against indwelling sin and do what is right before God.
A humble and obedient life would arise for every Christian. Puritan
culture emphasized the need for self-examination and the strict
accounting for one’s feelings as well as one’s deeds. This was the
center of evangelical experience, which women in turn placed at the
heart of their work to sustain family life.
The Puritans tended to admire the early church
fathers and quoted them liberally in their works. In addition
to arming the Puritans to fight against later developments of the
Roman
Catholic tradition, these studies also led to the rediscovery
of some ancient scruples. Chrysostom, a
favorite of the Puritans, spoke eloquently against drama and other worldly endeavors,
and the Puritans adopted his view when decrying what they saw as
the decadent culture of England, famous at
that time for its plays and bawdy London. The Pilgrims (the
separatist, congregationalist Puritans who went to North
America) are likewise famous for banning from their New England
colonies many secular entertainments, such as games of chance,
maypoles, and drama, all
of which were perceived as kinds of immorality.
At the level of the church body, the Puritans
believed that the worship in the church ought to be strictly
regulated by what is commanded in the Bible (known as the
regulative principle of worship). The Puritans condemned as
idolatry many worship
practices regardless of the practices' antiquity or widespread
adoption among Christians, which their opponents defended with
tradition. Like some of Reformed churches on the European
continent, Puritan reforms were typified by a minimum of ritual and
decoration and by an unambiguous emphasis on preaching. Like the early
church fathers, they eliminated the use of musical
instruments in their worship services, for various theological
and practical reasons. Outside of church, however, Puritans were
quite fond of music and encouraged it in certain ways.
Another important distinction was the Puritan
approach to church-state relations. They opposed the Anglican idea
of the supremacy of the monarch in the church (Erastianism),
and, following Calvin, they
argued that the only head of the Church in heaven or earth is
Christ (not the Pope or the monarch).
However, they believed that secular governors are accountable to
God (not through the church, but alongside it) to protect and
reward virtue, including "true religion", and to punish wrongdoers
— a policy that is best described as non-interference
rather than
separation of church and state. The separating
Congregationalists, a segment of the Puritan movement more radical
than the Anglican Puritans, believed the Divine
Right of Kings was heresy,
a belief that became more pronounced during the reign of Charles
I of England.
Other notable beliefs include:
- An emphasis on private study of the Bible
- A desire to see education and enlightenment for the masses (especially so they could read the Bible for themselves)
- The priesthood of all believers
- Simplicity in worship, the exclusion of vestments, images, candles, etc.
- Did not celebrate traditional holidays that they believed to be in violation of the regulative principle of worship.
- Believed the Sabbath was still obligatory for Christians, although they believed the Sabbath had been changed to Sunday
- Some approved of the church hierarchy, but others sought to reform the episcopal churches on the presbyterian model. Some separatist Puritans were presbyterian, but most were congregationalists.
In addition to promoting lay education, it was
important to the Puritans to have knowledgeable, educated pastors,
who could read the Bible in its original Greek,
Hebrew,
and Aramaic, as well as
ancient and modern church tradition and scholarly works, which were
most commonly written in Latin, and so most of
their divines undertook rigorous studies at the University
of Oxford or the University
of Cambridge before seeking ordination. Diversions for
the educated included discussing the Bible and its practical
applications as well as reading the classics such as Cicero, Virgil, and Ovid. They also
encouraged the composition of poetry that was of a religious
nature, though they eschewed religious-erotic poetry except for the
Song of
Solomon, which they considered magnificent poetry, without
error, regulative for their sexual pleasure, and, especially, as an
allegory of Christ and
the Church.
In modern usage, the word puritan is often used
as an informal pejorative for someone who has strict views on
sexual
morality, disapproves of recreation, and wishes to impose these
beliefs on others. None of these qualities were unique to
Puritanism or universally characteristic of the Puritans
themselves, whose moral views and ascetic tendencies were no
more unusual than those of many other Protestant reformers of their
time, and who were relatively tolerant of other denominations, at
least in England. The popular image is slightly more accurate as a
description of Puritans in colonial America, who were among the
most radical Puritans and whose social experiment took the form of
a Calvinist theocracy.
Family life
According to Puritan belief, the order of creation was simple: the world was created for man, and man was created for God. If God had created the world with some beings subordinate to others, he applied the same principle to his construction of human society. Thus the Puritans honored hierarchy among men as divine order; this order presupposed God’s “appointment of mankind to live in Societies, first, of Family, Secondly Church, Thirdly, Common-wealth.” Order in the family, then, fundamentally structured Puritan belief. Puritans usually migrated to New England as a family unit, a pattern different from other colonies where young, single men often came on their own. Puritan men of the generation of the Great Migration (1630–1640) believed that a good Puritan wife did not linger in Britain but encouraged her husband in his great service to God.The essence of social order lay in the authority
of husband over wife, parents over children, and masters over
servants in the family. Puritan marriage choices were influenced by
young people’s inclination, by parents, and by the social rank
of the persons involved. Upon finding a suitable match, husband and
wife in America followed the steps needed to legitimize their
marriage, including: 1) a contract, comparable to today’s
practice of engagement; 2) the
announcement of this contract; 3) execution of the contract at a
church; 4) a celebration of the event at the home of the groom and
5) sexual intercourse. Problems with consummation could terminate a
marriage: if a groom proved impotent, the contract between
him and his bride dissolved, an act enforced by the courts. The
courts could also enforce the duty of a husband to support his
wife, as English
Common Law provided that when a woman married, she gave all her
property to her husband and became a feme covert,
losing her separate civil identity in his. In so doing, she legally
accepted her role as managing her husband’s household, fulfilling
her duty of “keep[ing] at home, educating her children, keeping and
improving what is got by the industry of man.”
Although without property in New England,
a wife in some ways had real authority in the family, although hers
derived from different sources from her husband’s, and she
exercised it in different ways. Because the laws of God explicitly
informed the earliest laws of the Massachusetts
civil code, a husband could not legally command his wife anything
contrary to God’s word. Indeed, God’s word often prescribed
important roles of authority for women; the Complete Body of
Divinity stated that “…as to Servants, the Metaphorical and
Synecdochial usage of the words Father and Mother, heretofore
observed, implys it; for tho’ the Husband be the Head of the Wife,
yet she is an Head of the Family.” Adhering to this ideology,
Samuel
Sewall, a magistrate, advised his son’s servant that “he could
not obey his Master without obedience to his Mistress; and vice
versa.” For the Puritans, ideas of proper order both sharply
defined and confined a woman’s authority.
In Puritan New England, the family was the
fundamental unit of society, the place where Puritans rehearsed and
perfected religious, ethical, and social values and expectations of
the community at large. The English Puritan William Gouge wrote:
“…a familie is a little Church, and a little common-wealth, at
least a lively representation thereof, whereby triall may be made
of such as are fit for any place of authoritie, or of subjection in
Church or commonwealth. Or rather it is as a schoole wherein the
first principles and grounds of government and subjection are
learned: whereby men are fitted to greater matters in Church or
common-wealth.”
The relationships within the nuclear family,
along with interactions between the family and the larger
community, distinguished Puritans from other early settlers. Authority and
obedience characterized the relationship between Puritan parents
and their children. Proper love meant proper discipline; in a society
essentially without police, the family was the basic
unit of supervision. Disciplining disobedient children mostly
derived from a spiritual concern: a breakdown in family rule
indicated a disregard of God’s order. “Fathers and mothers have
‘disordered and disobedient children,’” said the Puritan Richard
Greenham, “because they have been disobedient children to the Lord
and disordered to their parents when they were young.” Thus
disobedient parents meant disobedient children. Because the duty of
early childcare fell almost exclusively on women, a woman’s
salvation necessarily
depended upon the observable goodness of her child.
Puritans connected the discipline of a child to
later readiness for conversion. Accordingly, parents attempted to
check their affectionate feelings toward a disobedient child, at
least after the child was about two years old, in order to break
his or her will. This suspicious regard of “fondness” and heavy
emphasis on obedience placed complex pressures on the Puritan
mother. While Puritans expected mothers to care for their young
children tenderly, a mother who doted could be accused of failing
to keep God present. Furthermore, Puritan belief prescribed that a
father’s more distant governance check the mother’s tenderness once
a male child reached the age of 6 or 7 so that he could bring the
child to God’s authority.
The home gave women the freedom to exercise
religious and moral authority, performing duties not open to them
in public (after the banishment of Anne
Hutchinson, most congregations did not permit women to speak in
church). The Puritan family structure at once encouraged some
measure of female authority while supporting family
patriarchy.
Education
As John Winthrop sailed toward New England in 1630, he exhorted his fellow passengers that the society they would form in New England would be "as a city upon a hill”, and that they must become a pure community of Christians who would set an example to the rest of the world. To achieve this goal, the colony leaders would educate all Puritans. These men of letters, who viewed themselves as a part of an international world, had attended Oxford or Cambridge and could communicate with intellectuals all over Europe. Just six years after the first large migration, colony leaders founded Harvard College.By the 1670s, all New England colonies (excepting
Rhode Island) had passed legislation that mandated literacy for children. In 1647,
Massachusetts passed a law that required towns to hire a
schoolmaster to teach writing. Different forms of schooling
emerged, ranging from the “dame” or “reading” school, a form of
instruction conducted by women in their private homes for small
children, to “Latin” schools for boys already literate in English
and ready to master grammar through Latin, Hebrew,
and Greek. Reading schools would often be the single source of
education for girls, whereas boys would leave their reading
mistresses to go to the town grammar schools. Indeed, gender
largely determined educational practices. Women introduced all
children to reading, and men taught boys in higher pursuits. Since
girls could play no role in the ministry, and since grammar schools
were designed to “instruct youth so farr as they may be fited for
the university,” Latin grammar schools did not accept girls (nor
did Harvard). Evidence mostly suggests that girls could not attend
even the less ambitious town schools, the lower-tier
writing-reading schools mandated for townships of over fifty
families.
The motive to educate was largely religious. In
order for Puritans to become holy, they needed to read the Scriptures. As
the articles
of faith of 1549 had proclaimed, “Holy Scripture containeth all
things necessary to salvation”. Although reading the Bible did not
guarantee conversion, it laid its groundwork, and a good Puritan’s
duty was to search out scriptural truth for oneself.
Social motives for mandating reading instruction
grew out of a concern that children not taught to read would grow
“barbarous”; the 1648
amendment to the Massachusetts law and the 1650 Connecticut code,
both used the word “barbarisme”. Further, children needed to read
in order to “understand…the capital lawes of this country,” as the
Massachusetts law declared. Order was of the utmost importance for
the Puritan community, a group trying to make a home in a new
wilderness and create a perfected society from scratch.
The emphasis on education in Puritan New England
differed significantly from other regions of colonial America. The
founding fathers established New England in pursuit of a model of
Christian living, fueling strong motivations for literary
instruction. But New England also differed from its mother country,
as nothing in English statute required schoolmasters or the
literacy of children. Indeed, with the possible exception of
Scotland, the Puritan model of education did not exist anywhere
else in the world.
The Puritan spirit in the United States
Some have suggested that it is a "Puritan spirit" in the United States' political culture that creates a tendency to oppose things such as alcohol and open sexuality.http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/goldman/aando/puritanism.html However, the Puritans were not opposed to drinking alcohol in moderation or to enjoying their sexuality within the bounds of marriage as a gift from God. In fact, spouses (albeit, in practice, mainly females) were disciplined if they did not perform their sexual marital duties, in accordance with 1 Corinthians 7 and other biblical passages. Because of these beliefs, the Puritans did publicly punish drunkenness and sexual relations outside of marriage.Alexis
de Tocqueville suggested in Democracy
in America that the Pilgrims'
Puritanism was the very thing that provided a firm foundation for
American democracy,
and in his view, these Puritans were hard-working, egalitarian, and
studious. The theme of a religious basis of economic discipline is
echoed in sociologist Max Weber's
work, but both de Tocqueville and Weber argued that this discipline
was not a force of economic determinism, but one factor
among many that should be considered when evaluating the relative
economic success of the Puritans. In Hellfire Nation, James A.
Morone suggests that some opposing tendencies within
Puritanism—its desire to create a just society and its moral fervor in
bringing about that just society, which sometimes created paranoia and intolerance for
other views—are at the root of America's current
political landscape.
Orthography
In the United States, "Puritan" has not always been the only acceptable spelling. Through the 20th century, "Puritain" was an acceptable alternative spelling in British English. During the 17th and 18th centuries in England, the word was spelled both with and without the second i. "Puritain" was more common in the 16th century. The word derives from "purity" in English, and the suffix meaning "dweller"/"practitioner" can be spelled -ain or -an, depending upon the language.See also
References
Further reading
- Addison, Albert Christopher The Romantic Story of the Puritan Fathers and their founding of new Boston 1912 published by L C Page Boston Mass USA
- Beeke, Joel, and Pederson, Randall, Meet the Puritans: With a Guide to Modern Reprints (2006) ISBN 9781601780003
- Bennett, Arthur G., ed., The Valley of Vision: A Collection of Puritan Prayers and Devotions (While not directly about the puritans, this anthology gives a representative overview of the ways they viewed their relationship with God.)
- Bozeman, Theodore Dwight, To Live Ancient Lives: The Primitivist Dimension in Puritanism
- Bozeman, Theodore Dwight, The Precisionist Strain: Disciplinary Religion and the Antinomian Backlash in Puritanism to 1638
- Brachlow, Stephen, The Communion of Saints: Radical Puritan and Separatist Ecclesiology, 1750–1625
- Bremer, Francis J., John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father
- Cohen, Charles Lloyd, God's Caress: The Psychology of Puritan Religious Experience (1986) ISBN 0-19-503973-4
- Collinson, Patrick, The Elizabethan Puritan Movement
- Collinson, Patrick, Godly People
- Collinson, Patrick, Religion of Protestants
- Foster, Stephen, The Long Argument
- Gatiss, Lee, The Tragedy of 1662: The Ejection and Persecution of the Puritans, ISBN 9780946307609
- Graham, Judith, "Puritan Family Life: The Diary of Samuel Sewall"
- Haigh, Christopher, English Reformations: Religion, Politics, and Society under the Tudors
- Haigh, Christopher, "The Continuity of Catholicism in the English Reformation," in Past and Present, No. 93. (Nov., 1981), pp. 37–69.
- Hall, David D., Puritans in the New World: A Critical Anthology
- Hall, David D., Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment: Popular Religious Belief in Early New England
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel., The Scarlet Letter (1850)
- Kapic, Kelly M. and Randal Gleason, eds. The Devoted Life: An Invitation to the Puritan Classics
- Kizer, Kay. "Puritans"
- Lake, Peter, Moderate Puritans and the Elizabethan Church
- Lake, Peter, "Defining Puritanism—again?" in Bremer, Francis J., ed., Puritanism: Transatlantic Perspectives
- Leverenz, David, "The Language of Puritan Feeling: An Exploration in Literature, Psychology, and Social History"
- Lewis, Peter, The Genius of Puritanism
- Logan, Samuel T. Jr., Reformation for the Glory of God
- Packer, J. I., A Quest for Godliness: The Puritan Vision of the Christian Life, Crossway Books: 1994 (reprint), ISBN 0-89107-819-3
- Monaghan, Jennifer, "Learning to Read and Write in Colonial America"
- Ryken, Leland, Worldly Saints: The Puritans As They Really Were, ISBN 0-310-32501-3
- Tyacke, Nicholas, Anti-Calvinists: The Rise of English Arminianism
- Underdown, David, Fire From Heaven
- Morgan, Edmund S., The Puritan Family
- Morgan, Edmund S., The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop, ISBN 0-321-04369-3
- Miller, Perry, The American Puritans: Their Prose and Poetry
- Packer, J.I., A Quest For Godliness: The Puritan Vision of the Christian Life
- Porterfield, Ann, "Female Piety in Puritan New England: The Emergence of Religious Humanism"
- Saxton, Martha, "Being Good: Women's Moral Values in Early America"
- Spurr, John, English Puritanism, 1603-1689
- Vaughn, Alden and Francis Bremer, "Puritan New England"
- Larousse Dictionary of Beliefs and Religions
- Oxford Dictionary of World Religions''
External links
- A Puritan's Mind, some writings of the Puritans and their admirers
- Puritan sermons
- Extensive Puritan resources on Monergism.com
- Sermons by Puritans at Reformed Sermon Archives
puritan in Bulgarian: Пуританство
puritan in Catalan: Puritanisme
puritan in Danish: Puritaner
puritan in German: Puritanismus
puritan in Estonian: Puritaan
puritan in Spanish: Puritanismo
puritan in French: Puritanisme
puritan in Western Frisian: Puriteinen
puritan in Korean: 청교도
puritan in Italian: Puritani
puritan in Hebrew: פוריטניות
puritan in Lithuanian: Puritonai
puritan in Hungarian: Puritanizmus
puritan in Dutch: Puritein
puritan in Japanese: ピューリタン
puritan in Norwegian: Puritanisme
puritan in Polish: Purytanizm
puritan in Portuguese: Puritanismo
puritan in Romanian: Puritanism
puritan in Russian: Пуритане
puritan in Simple English: Puritanism
puritan in Slovenian: Puritanci
puritan in Finnish: Puritanismi
puritan in Swedish: Puritanism
puritan in Vietnamese: Thanh giáo
puritan in Ukrainian: Пуританин
puritan in Chinese: 清教徒
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Albigensian, Catharist, Franciscan, Grundy, Sabbatarian, Trappist, Victorian, Waldensian, abstainer, anchorite, ascetic, austere, bhikshu, bigoted, bluenose, dervish, disapproving, dour, fakir, fanatic, firm, flagellant, fundamentalist,
goody-goody, hard,
hard-line, hard-nosed, hermit, hidebound, impliable, inexorable, inflexible, intolerant, iron, ironbound, ironclad, ironhanded, mendicant, mid-Victorian,
moralistic,
muscle-bound, narrow-minded, obdurate, obstinate, old maid, orthodox, pietist, pietistic, prig, prim, procrustean, proper, prude, prudish, purist, puristic, puritanic, puritanical, relentless, religionist, rigid, rigorist, rigoristic, rigorous, rockbound, sannyasi, severe, stern, stiff, stiff-necked, straightlaced,
strait-laced, straitlaced, strict, stubborn, stuffy, unbending, uncompromising, unrelenting, unyielding, uptight, yogi, yogin, zealot