A Churchless Man Seeking the Pure Fellowship: Or, Will the Real Roger Williams Please Stand Up?
I'm happy today to post this guest gig from Curtis Freeman, Research Professor of Theology at Duke Divinity School. Freeman specializes in Baptist history, and here reflects on views of Roger Williams as seen in John Barry's new book and elsewhere. We had previously blogged about this book here.
Gordon
Wood has written an insightful review
of John Barry’s important book, Roger
Williams and the Creation of the American Soul: Church, State, and the Birth of
Liberty, in the current issue of The New York Review of Books.
Wood credits Barry with having written one of best biographies of Williams to
date, which as he observes is significant “since Williams is surely the most
written about figure in seventeenth-century America.” Barry
confesses to not being interested in the biography of Williams’ life per
se, but rather in his role in the shape of religion in American public life,
and in particular the beginning of the argument about church and state. It is
here, however, where Wood observes that Barry’s book overreaches, noting the
title, which suggests that Williams was the creator of the American soul, is surely
exaggerated.
Barry, however, is not alone in linking Williams with the
founding of American democracy. Robert Bellah
appealed to Roger Williams as the fountainhead of radical American individualism.
More recently Martha Nussbaum, in her book Liberty of Conscience, similarly appealed
to Williams as the progenitor of American democratic liberalism. It is an old
thesis, forgotten but not dead, first voiced by Vernon Lewis Parrington, in his
1927 Main Currents in American Thought.
Parrington
presented Williams as a seminal thinker, describing him as an individualistic
mystic and forebear of Transcendentalism, but most importantly as
a political philosopher and forerunner of democratic liberalism. Parrington
portrayed Williams as a proto-Jeffersonian who anticipated Locke and the
natural rights school, thus becoming one of the great heroes in the progressive
vision of American intellectual life.
But it is not just academics that have bought into the view
of Williams as a civil libertarian. Denominational newspaper editor and church-state
separation advocate, J. M. Dawson, claimed Williams as a representative of the
historic Baptist position of church-state separation that was
transmitted through Isaac Backus and John Leland to Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison. Dawson’s panegyric account in his 1956 book Baptists and the American Republic
makes for a nice story, if it were only true. It is not the fact that Williams
was only a Baptist for a few months that makes Dawson’s claim unbelievable. It
is that Dawson showed no historical connection of the appropriation
of Williams by Jefferson. There is, however, historically demonstrable evidence
to indicate that John Locke, not Roger Williams,
was the principle source of religious liberty for Jefferson and Madison.
Perry Miller countered the progressive view of Williams
derived from Parrington and challenged scholars to engage
Williams on his own terms, which were theological not political.
Though Barry identifies Williams as puritan, as Wood notes, he looks chiefly to
Edward Coke and Francis Bacon (neither of which was a puritan) to find sources
of Williams’ political thought. Wood’s suspicion of historical revisionism puts
him in the company of his Brown colleague, William McLoughlin, and his Harvard
mentor, Perry Miller. McLoughlin concluded that “despite the valiant efforts of
Williams, almost no one in colonial New England ever praised his experiment,
sought his advice, quoted his books, or tried to imitate his practices.” Perry
Miller put it succinctly: “As for any direct influence of [Roger Williams’]
thought on the ultimate achievement of religious liberty in America, he had
none.”
What Wood reminds us, and what Barry misses, is that Williams
was a radical separating puritan. In his classic study on Williams, Edmund
Morgan corrected the view of Cotton Mather that Williams had “a
windmill in the head” and “less light than fire in him.” Still, Morgan
concluded that Mather was right to see the danger of the radicalism Williams represented
to civic life. The often invoked analogy in which Williams likened the church
to a garden was not an account of the separation of the church and the state
where Williams
expressed equal concern about protecting the integrity of both
church and state.
On the contrary, Williams envisioned a radical
ecclesiology in which the church must be strictly separated from the
world. Initially
he thought this could be achieved by weeding the garden, first among the
Separatists and then with the Baptists. When his hopes of a radically
pure church faded, he renounced ties to all churches. He
lamented that God had broken down the wall and the worldly vines
had choked out the garden. The only hope was to await the coming
of Christ, the heavenly gardener, who would prune back the weeds so that the
roses might again bloom. Far from being a forerunner of
Jeffersonian democracy, Williams was a stickler for an apocalyptic separatist ecclesiology.
He
became, as Perry Miller aptly described him, “a churchless man seeking the pure
fellowship.” Revisionists seem to want the myth of a de-puritanized
Williams as the champion of liberal democracy. The real Roger Williams was a
much more complicated and untame figure than these sanitized versions can tolerate.
For a fuller account of the historiographical
interpretations of Roger Williams see Curtis W. Freeman, “Roger
Williams, American Democracy, and the Baptists,” Perspectives in Religious Studies, vol. 34
no. 3 (Fall 2007): 267-286.
Comments
But if we deny all influence of Williams on subsequent debates on religious liberty, aren't we ignoring (a) the publication of his Bloudy Tenet in England and his protracted stay there and (b) the probable influence of the early experiment with toleration in Rhode Island?
Never mind that Williams was only a Baptist for a short time. Isn't it clear that at least SOME early Americans and some sympathetic Britons must have read his works and that advocates for religious liberty would have looked to Rhode Island as a precedent?