Sacred Borders
by John Turner
I'm adapting the following review from a recent post on The Anxious Bench, partly because my mind is recovering from post-Mormon History Association haziness and laziness and because the below book is one of my favorites in recent years:
Until recent decades at least, nearly all Americans have believed in an unchanging God, "the same yesterday, today and forever." If God does not change, does God's manner and rate of revelation change over time?
I'm adapting the following review from a recent post on The Anxious Bench, partly because my mind is recovering from post-Mormon History Association haziness and laziness and because the below book is one of my favorites in recent years:
Until recent decades at least, nearly all Americans have believed in an unchanging God, "the same yesterday, today and forever." If God does not change, does God's manner and rate of revelation change over time?
Typically, those who have wrestled with the issue of canon
in the history of American religion have made only crude differentiation among
different groups. In colonial America, there were the Quakers and nearly
everyone else. In antebellum America, things became a bit more complex, but
there were Shakers, Mormons, and a cluster of prophets on the one hand and
"Bible alone" anti-creedal evangelicals on the other extreme. Toss in
Emerson and Thoreau.
Enter David Holland's eloquent and intelligent Sacred Borders: Continuing Revelation and
Canonical Restraint in Early America. For anyone who teaches in the field
of American religious history, this is essential reading. It should assume a
venerable place on graduate school exam lists.
Holland's argument is extended and detailed; it eludes
simple summary. The subtitle of the book points to its breadth. He brings into
conversation and contest both those whose belief in ongoing revelation
threatened (sometimes mildly, sometimes obviously and severely) a closed
biblical canon and those who answered such threats and policed the canon's
borders. What I realized while reading Sacred
Borders is that many, if not most, Christians believe in at least enough
continuing revelation to pose some sort of threat to a strictly closed canon.
At the same time, nearly all who challenged the closed canon maintained some
sort of belief in canonicity; indeed, many pulled back from the logical
conclusions of their ideas out of a traditionalist respect for the Bible. Along
the way, Holland engages the early Puritans, Quakers (from George Keith to
Elias Hicks), deists, Jonathan Edwards, prophets (such as Nimrod Hughes),
Swedenborgians, Shakers, Mormons, Adventists, Unitarians, Transcendentalists,
and more.
Before proceeding with Holland's argumentation, let me give
you a sample of the many pleasant surprises included in his narrative. In 1811,
Nimrod Hughes published a pamphlet about a visionary experience he had sitting
in a jail cell. His vision led him to believe that God would destroy one-third
of the earth's population on June 4, 1812. His Solemn Warning went through five editions and caught the attention
of former presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, who discussed both Hughes
and a mixed-race prophet named Christopher McPherson. Adams told Jefferson that
modern prophecy was "unphilosophical and inconsistent with the political
Safety of States and Nations." Jefferson, architect of religious freedom,
told Adams not to worry about McPherson. However, he quoted Jeremiah to the
effect that "every man that is mad, and maketh himself and prophet, thou
shouldst put him in prison and in the stocks." Adams looked up Jefferson's
verse and agreed, telling the sage of Monticello that he "could not help
wishing that the ancient practice had been continued down to more modern times
and that all the Prophets at least from Peter the Hermit to Nimrod Hews
inclusively, had been confined in the Stocks and prevented from spreading so
many delusions and shedding so much blood." Nimrod Hughes began a quick
fade from American consciousness on June 5, 1812. The former prisoner certainly
did not merit imprisonment because of his prophecies.
Hughes helps Holland make one of the central arguments of
his book: theology matters. Ideas matter. It would be tempting, he writes, to
explain Hughes away through the context of the brewing war with Great Britain.
"A fiery two-tailed comet in the sky," Holland writes, "wars and
rumors of wars, a frightened and backward-looking populace, and a fanatic ready
to make the most of their fear. What more do we need to know?" A great
deal, it turns out. As it happens, Hughes wrote his pamphlet prior to the comet
and prior to the war. Instead, Holland argues, Hughes tapped into a
"long-standing biblical tradition of prophetic revelation [rather] than
into any passing events." "Belief that God had ever spoken, Hughes
reasoned, must be open to the idea that He would speak again." Indeed,
throughout Sacred Borders, Holland
warns scholars not to reduce religious phenomena to simple social explanations
at the risk of ignoring longstanding religious traditions (in this case,
centuries of debates about the biblical canon). He finds that concern about the
canon was a constant in American
religious history through the antebellum period. The question of canon was
always timely, and he argues that Thomas Paine and Ethan Allen thought about
God and the Bible as much as "any of their evangelical
contemporaries."
Even more remarkably, to my eyes at least, Holland offers an
always necessary reminder (for scholars) that to the individuals about which he
writes, God was a presence, a real presence. God was a benevolent Father to
liberal Protestants (and many others), a "God of universality" and reason
to deists, etc. "God sat at the center" of debates about the canon,
Holland reminds us. "Arguments from the Almighty's character,"
Holland informs, "and what strikes me as a genuine impulse to know Him, really
do appear as the primary engines of the canonical discourse." What should
historians do with this realization, which Holland says came to him as a
surprise? "The most difficult question for historians engaging a religious
past is what to do with God." The answer to me seems simple. If we want to
understand Jonathan Edwards, Joseph Smith, Horace Bushnell, and Ellen White, we
have to take their quest for God's presence, voice, and spirit seriously.
It would turn this post into a very long review for me to
explain Holland's concise summaries of how his many subjects approached issues
of scripture and revelation. So read the book! However, it's worth noting that
Holland engages in no cheap shots. He takes his thinkers and their religious
quests seriously, partly because they all in many ways inhabited the same
intellectual world. For example, Theodore Parker clarified Proverbs 29:18 with
brackets: "'Where there is no vision [revelation] the people perish."
The Shaker Frederick Evans made the same point with dashes: "'Where there
is no vision' -- revelation -- 'the people perish.'" Transcendentalists,
Unitarians, Shakers, Mormons, and evangelicals all wrestled with many of the
same issues.
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