24
January 1722 A.D. Doubting Edward Wigglesworth—Appointed Thomas
Hollis Chair of Divinity, Harvard College
Graves,
Dan. “Harvard Chair Went to Doubting Wigglesworth.” Christianity.com.
May 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1701-1800/harvard-chair-went-to-doubting-wigglesworth-11630203.html. Accessed 10 Jul 2014.
How did America's great Christian colleges come to abandon their faith
and become the secular institutions they are today?
When Harvard College was founded
by the Puritans in 1636, they knew well what they wanted from their school.
"Let every Student be plainly instructed, and earnestly pressed to
consider well, the maine end of his life and studies is, to know God and Jesus
Christ which is eternal life, John 17:3, and therefore to lay Christ in the
bottome, as the only foundation of all found knowledge and Learning..."
The great school was intended to produce a godly clergy.
In less than a hundred years,
that high ideal faltered. Liberals won control of the school. On this day, January 24,
1722, they appointed Edward Wigglesworth to fill the newly created
Thomas Hollis chair at Harvard College. This made Mr. Wigglesworth the first
divinity professor commissioned in the American colonies, but what should have
been cause for rejoicing was actually reason to mourn.
Although Wigglesworth had
convinced orthodox members his theology was sound, it was not. In Three Centuries of Harvard, Samuel
Eliot Morison described what happened next: "One of the first theologians
in New England who dared publicly to challenge the 'five points of Calvinism,'
he [Wigglesworth] employed the deadly method of doubt in inquiry, rather than
direct attack... Wigglesworth was a prime favorite with Harvard students, and
he and his son Edward, who succeeded, had a very great influence on New England
theology. It was the Wigglesworths who trained the pioneers of liberal Christianity in New England--the ministers who led the way out of the lush but
fearsome jungles of Calvinism, into the thin, clear light of
Unitarianism."
When the evangelist George
Whitefield came to the United States, he denounced liberal colleges as
"abodes of darkness, a darkness which could be felt." The men of
Harvard were "Pharisees, resting on head knowledge," he said.
Wigglesworth retorted that Whitefield was fiscally corrupt, demonstrated bad
manners and unleashed dangerous enthusiasm among the masses, destroying the
peace of New England's parishes.
In 1701, Yale was founded to
counter Harvard's drift from orthodox Calvinism. By 1805, Unitarians controlled
Harvard. Had Wigglesworth had a fervent faith, his appointment this day might
have prevented that slide to heresy.
Bibliography:
Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Scribner, 1958 - 1964.
"Charles Chauncy; Edward Wigglesworth.
Philosophers and Divines, 1720–1789."
http://www.bartleby.com/225/0503.html.
Morison, Samuel Eliot. Three Centuries of Harvard, 1636-1926.
Cambridge, Massachussets: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, c1964.
Various encyclopedia articles.
Last updated May,
2007.
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