“Holding Up the Light of Heaven”: Presbyterian and Congregational Reform Movements in Lorain...
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Transcript of “Holding Up the Light of Heaven”: Presbyterian and Congregational Reform Movements in Lorain...
“Holding Up the Light of Heaven”:
Presbyterian and Congregational Reform Movements in Lorain County, Ohio, 1824-1859
Joshua FahlerSenior Honors Thesis Kent State University
Presented May, 2007 Edited January, 2014
[email protected] http://jfahler.weebly.com
Although the desire of acquiring the good things of this world is the prevailing passion of the American people, certain momentary outbreaks occur, when their souls seem suddenly to burst the bonds of matter by which they are restrained, and to soar impetuously towards heaven.”
Alexis de TocquevilleDemocracy in America
“
Lorain County, OhioElyria, Ohio
Founded 1816 Census 2000 population:
55,953Oberlin, Ohio
Founded 1833 Oberlin Colony and
Collegiate Institute 2000: 8,195
Wellington, Ohio Founded 1818 2000: Population 4,511
“Society is perfect where what is right in theory exists in fact: where practice coincides with principle and the law of God is the law of the land… [temperance and antislavery] … are the means… the agencies by which the Millennium is to be ushered in.”
Jonathan Blanchard“A Perfect State of
Society”(Speech given at
Oberlin College, 1839)
Robert Abzug, in Cosmos Crumbling (1994), argues that antebellum reformers envisioned themselves on a timeline of divine importance. Antebellum reformers as “religious virtuosos”
Leo Hirrel’s Children of Wrath (1998), along with Abzug, highlights the importance of theology in studying antebellum reform
More recent works by Michael P. Young (Bearing Witness Against Sin, 2007) and T. Gregory Garvey (Creating the Culture of Reform in Antebellum America , 2006) reflect the importance of religious belief in the study of antebellum reform.
My work combines these frameworks, drawing heavily from Abzug and Hirrel, but focusing more on church polity than theology.
Historiography
Charles Finney of Oberlin College is central to this thesis and reform as his understanding of “entire sanctification” provided the basis for a new interpretation of Calvinism known as “Perfectionism.”Born during his revival tours in upstate
New York, “Perfectionism” would allow humans to take more agency in leading “holy” lives.
This would translate well into reform. If one needed to live a holy life, they would be more encouraged to exercise this holiness in the public sphere.
This was highly controversial, and led to Oberlin being excluded from the American Presbyterian-Congregational mainstream.
Theological Shifts and Ecclesiastical Conflict
Henry Cowles (L) and James A. Thome of Oberlin College. Both ministers acted as stated supplies in Wellington’s congregational churches.
Financial ledgers for Wellington Free Congregational Church (L) and Wellington First Congregational Church. Note the difference in antislavery institutions to which each church sends money. Both documents ca. 1856 in each church’s records.
American disestablishment gives way to a “creative exploitation” of the marketplace of ideas
Reform joins the ranks of revivalism as a force which changes the meaning of American religion Found through the sacralization, and to some extent a
canonization, of issuesIssues and events in Lorain County are
representative of the national “religious landscape,” solidifying recent scholarly interest in the religious roots of antebellum reform However, the dynamic nature of American religion must
be considered as these reformers worked within a changing world
Major Roots and Results