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Why did Henry Dunster Reject Infant Baptism? Circumcision and the Covenant of Grace in the Seventeenth-Century Transatlantic Reformed Community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 January 2021

KIRSTEN MACFARLANE*
Affiliation:
Keble College, OxfordOX1 3PG

Abstract

In 1653 Henry Dunster, Harvard's first President, refused to baptise his fourth child, initiating a controversy that would end in his resignation from the Harvard presidency in October 1654. This article offers an explanation for Dunster's rejection of infant baptism by re-examining the causes behind the spread of antipaedobaptism across 1640s England and New England, attributing special significance to the Anglophone reception of continental European covenant theology. Supporting this account, it presents an annotated edition of a previously unknown item in Dunster's correspondence, a letter sent to him by a concerned onlooker just months after his heterodoxy became public.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This research would not have been possible without the award of the Katharine F. Pantzer Jr Fellowship in Descriptive Bibliography from the Houghton Library, Harvard, as well as an Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship from the Massachusetts Historical Society. I would like to thank both institutions for their generosity, as well as the Andover-Harvard Theological Library for permission to publish an edition of the letter from Edward Holyoke to Henry Dunster in their collections. I would additionally like to thank Nell Carlson for her invaluable expertise in navigating the Andover-Harvard Theological Library's collections, Nicholas Hardy for his feedback on an early draft of this article, as well as Alec Ryrie and the anonymous peer reviewer for such helpful feedback on this article.

References

1 ‘Teachers haue ^in our natiue countrey^ most resisted Popery these 80. y. now they must looke to it against Anabaptistry’: Holyoke's copy of Broughton, Hugh, A concent of Scripture, London 1590Google Scholar (RSTC 3851), HL, *AC6 H7482 Zz590b, fo. 50r.

2 Broughton, Concent, AHTL, 343 B875co 1590. The letter is in an unpaginated, unfoliated manuscript insert bound into Broughton's Concent after sig. B[1]v. I will supply my own folio numbers in citation, with the first folio of the insert labelled fo.<1>r. The letter covers fos <32>r-<33>r.

3 Josiah Quincy, The history of Harvard University, i, Cambridge, Ma 1840, 17–21; Chaplin, Jeremiah, Life of Henry Dunster, first president of Harvard College, Boston 1872, 135–43Google Scholar; Morison, Samuel Eliot, Harvard College in the seventeenth century, Cambridge, Ma 1936, i. 312–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See generally Francis Bremer, ‘Dunster, Henry (bap. 1609, d. 1659)’, ODNB.

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8 Spinks, Bryan, Reformation and modern rituals and theologies of baptism: from Luther to contemporary practices, Burlington 2006, 32–4Google Scholar; Bingham, Orthodox radicals, 69–71.

9 Marshall, Stephen, A defence of infant-baptism in answer to two treatises, and an appendix to them concerning it, London 1646Google Scholar (Wing M.751), 165. For this distinction between parity and similarity see Blake, Thomas, Vindiciae foederis: or, A treatise of the covenant of God entered with man-kinde, London 1652/3Google Scholar (Wing B.3149), 374–9.

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11 Muller, ‘Divine covenants’, 19–29; Renihan, Samuel, From shadow to substance: the federal theology of the English Particular Baptists (1642–1704), Oxford 2018, 20–3Google Scholar.

12 Henry Ainsworth, A censure upon a dialogue of the Anabaptists, Amsterdam 1623 (RSTC 226), 42–5, 49–54. See also Thomas Hall, The font guarded with XX arguments containing a compendium of that great controversie of infant-baptism, London 1652 (Wing H.432), 8–22, and Baillie, Robert, Anabaptism, the true fountain of independency, brownisme, antinomy, familisme, London 1646 (Wing B.452), 138–41Google Scholar. This argument originated in Zwingli's anti-anabaptist writings: Jack Warren Cottrell, ‘Covenant and baptism in the theology of Huldreich Zwingli', unpubl. ThD diss. Princeton Theological Seminary 1971, 194–214, 236–49, 306–16.

13 Wynell, Thomas, The covenants plea for infants: or, The covenant of free grace, Oxford 1642Google Scholar (Wing W.3778), 36–8; Geree, John, Vindiciae paedo-baptismi: or, A vindication of infant baptism, London 1646Google Scholar (Wing G.603), 36–8.

14 Gerard Vossius listed Genesis xvii.13 as the foremost proof: De baptismo disputationes XX, Amsterdam 1648, 169.

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17 Henry Den [Andrew Ritor], The second part of the vanity & childishnes of infants baptisme, London 1642 (Wing, R.1541), 22–7; Bakewell, Thomas, A justification of two points now in controversie with the Anabaptists concerning baptisme, London 1646Google Scholar (Wing B.534), 19–20. On Lambe see Wright, Stephen, The early English Baptists 1603–1649, Woodbridge 2006, 99100Google Scholar.

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19 Den, The second part, 18–19, 22–5; Lambe, A confutation, 11–12, 15–16, 18–19.

20 Philips, George, A reply to a confutation of some grounds for infants baptisme, London 1645Google Scholar (Wing P.2026), sig. Bv, 1–33.

21 Cooke, William, A learned and full answer to a treatise intituled; the vanity of childish baptisme, London 1644Google Scholar (Wing C.6043), 32–3, 80–1.

22 Marshall, Stephen, A sermon of the baptizing of infants preached in the Abbey-Church at Westminster, London 1644Google Scholar (Wing M.774), 9–12; Blake, Thomas, The birth-priviledge: or, Covenant-holinesse of beleevers and their issue in the time of the Gospel, London 1644Google Scholar (Wing B.3143), 6–15; White, John, Infants baptizing proved lawfull by the Scriptures, London 1644Google Scholar (Wing I.162), 3–11; Wynell, The covenants plea, 29–33, 53–64.

23 Blake, Vindiciae foederis, 176; Thomas Shepard, The church membership of children and their right to baptisme, Cambridge 1663 [written 1649] (Wing S.3108), sig. A4r–v.

24 Robert Bellarmine, Disputationes Roberti Bellarmini politiani, societatis Iesu, de controversiis christianae fidei, adversus huius temporis haereticos, tribus tomis comprehensae, ii, Ingolstadt 1599, ii.17.254.

25 Bucanus, William, Institutiones theologicae seu locorum communium Christianae religionis … analysis, Geneva 1609, 208–15Google Scholar. See also van Asselt, Willem, ‘Christ, predestination, and covenant in post-Reformation Reformed theology’, in Lehner, Ulrich, Muller, Richard and Roeber, A. (eds), The Oxford handbook of early modern theology, 1600–1800, Oxford 2016, 221–6Google Scholar.

26 Rollock, Robert, Quaestiones et responsiones aliquot de foedere Dei, Edinburgh 1596Google Scholar (RSTC 21284), sigs B5v–B6r. See also Muller, ‘Divine covenants', 11–16, 53–6.

27 ‘Sic Circumcisio primariò Abrahae semen à reliquis Gentibus separabat, promissionem terrenam obsignabat, secundariò sanctificationem significabat': John Cameron, ‘De triplici dei cum homine foedere theses', in Joh. Cameronis S. Theologiae in academia Salmuriensi nuper professoris, praelectionum tomus tertius et ultimus, Saumur 1628, 629.

28 Renihan, From shadow to substance, 53–4.

29 Ball, John, A tryall of the new-church way in New-England and in old, London 1644Google Scholar (Wing T.2229), 36–45.

30 Letters that passed between Mr. Baxter and Mr. Tombes concerning the dispute, London 1652 (Wing T.1812), 412.

31 Blackwood, Christopher, The storming of AntiChrist, in his two last and strongest garrisons; of compulsion of conscience and infants baptisme, London 1644Google Scholar (Wing B.3103), 31–6, 65–8.

32 Spilsbury, John, A treatise concerning the lawfull subject of baptisme, London 1643Google Scholar (Wing S.4976), 5–7. For Spilsbury's context see Michael Haykin, ‘Separatists and baptists’, in John Coffey (ed.), The Oxford history of Protestant dissenting traditions, I: The post-Reformation era, 1559–1689, Oxford 2020, 123–7.

33 Spilsbury, A treatise, 12–14.

34 Ibid. 26–7, 29–31.

35 This is noted in most pamphlets, for example Cooke, A learned and full answer, 52.

36 Hooker, Thomas, The covenant of grace opened, London 1649Google Scholar (Wing H.2644), 4; Cobbet, Thomas, A just vindication of the covenant and church-estate of children of church-members, London 1648Google Scholar (Wing C.4778), 39; Blake, Vindiciae foederis, 175–88.

37 Hussey, William, An answer to Mr Tombes his scepticall examination of infants baptisme, London 1646Google Scholar (Wing H.3815), sigs A3v–A4r.

38 Tombes, John, An exercitation about infant-baptisme, London 1646Google Scholar (Wing T.1805), 1; c.f. Spinks, Reformation and modern rituals, 63.

39 Tombes, An apology or plea, 6–7; Renihan, Michael, Antipaedobaptism in the thought of John Tombes, Auburn 2001Google Scholar.

40 Vossius, De baptismo disputationes XX, 169–73.

41 Tombes, An exercitation, 2–3, and An examen of the sermon of Mr. Stephen Marshal, about infant-baptism, London 1645 (Wing T.1825), 39–47.

42 Idem, An examen, 49–50.

43 Idem, An exercitation, 2–5.

44 Ibid. 4, and An examen, 39.

45 Idem, An examen, 46–7, 78, 83–8.

46 Ibid. 85, 93.

47 Idem, Refutatio positionis eiusque confirmationis paedobaptismum esse licitum affirmantis ab Henrico Savage, London 1653 (Wing T.1814), 34–6.

48 Idem, An exercitation, 4, and An examen, 39.

49 Idem, An addition to the apology for the two treatises concerning infant-baptisme, London 1652 (Wing T.1794), 3; Bolton, Samuel, The true bounds of Christian freedome, London 1645Google Scholar (Wing B.3532), 353–401.

50 Tombes, An exercitation, 5–9; An examen, 2–3; and An apology or plea, 56–7.

51 Ball, John, A treatise of the covenant of grace, London 1645Google Scholar (Wing B.579), 55.

52 Homes, Nathaniel, A vindication of baptizing beleevers infants, London 1646Google Scholar (Wing H.2578A), 12–17; Hussey, An answer, 7–10, 16–18; Baillie, Anabaptism, 141–3; Baxter, Richard, Plain scripture proof of infants church-membership and baptism, London 1651Google Scholar (Wing B.1344), 251–2; Bakewell, A justification, 10–11.

53 Blake, Vindiciae foederis, sig. a3v.

54 Homes, A vindication, 18–20.

55 ‘if by primarily be intended principally, that Circumcision did chiefly seal earthly blessings, the opinion is too unsavory to be received': Marshall, A defence of infant-baptism, 98–9; Baillie, Robert, The disswasive from the errors of the time, London 1655Google Scholar (Wing B.458), 64.

56 Cobbet, A just vindication, 41.

57 Shepard, The church membership of children, sig. A3v.

58 Hall, The font guarded, 8.

59 Blake, Vindiciae foederis, sigs *4v, a2r.

60 Hooker, The covenant of grace opened, 1–2.

61 With the exception of Renihan's survey, From shadow to substance, 98–103.

62 McLoughlin, New England dissent, i. 27–42, and Soul liberty, 52; Gura, Philip, A glimpse of Sion's glory: Puritan radicalism in New England, 1620–1660, Middletown, Ct 1984, 94–5, 113–15, 125Google Scholar.

63 Greaves, Richard L., Glimpses of glory: John Bunyan and English dissent, Stanford, Ca 2002, 271301Google Scholar; Gribben, Crawford, ‘Lucy Hutchinson's theological writings', Review of English Studies lxxi (2020), 292306CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dobranski, Stephen and Rumrich, John, ‘Introduction: heretical Milton', in Dobranski, Stephen and Rumrich, John (eds), Milton and heresy, Cambridge 1998, 121CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

64 McDowell, Nicholas, The English radical imagination: culture, religion, and revolution, 1630–1660, Oxford 2003, 5089CrossRefGoogle Scholar. This trend is clearest is Anthony Milton (ed.), The Oxford history of Anglicanism, I: Reformation and identity, c. 1520–1662, Oxford 2017, and explicitly described in John Coffey, ‘Introduction’, in Coffey, Oxford history of Protestant dissenting traditions, 12–15.

65 Tombes, An examen, 89.

66 Idem, An apology or plea, 90.

67 Idem, Antipaedobaptism: or, No plain nor obscure scripture-proof of infants baptism, or church-membership, pt i, London 1652 (Wing T.1798), 102–7, 140–1.

68 Idem, An apology or plea, 5–6; Marshall, A defence of infant-baptism, 244; Matthew Bingham, ‘English Baptists and the struggle for theological authority, 1646–1646', this Journal liviii (2017), 551–62.

69 John Cotton, The grounds and ends of the baptisme of the children of the faithfull, London 1647 (Wing C.6436), 38.

70 Tombes, Antipaedobaptism, 90–1.

71 Mather, Richard, Church-government and church-covenant discussed, in an answer of the elders of the severall churches in New-England, London 1643Google Scholar (Wing M.1269), 12–14; Den, The second part, 18; Ball, A tryall, 36–45.

72 Cobbet, A just vindication, sig. a2v.

73 Hooker, The covenant of grace opened, 1.

74 MHS, ms N-1143, 145.

75 Ibid. 146.

76 Ibid. 146–7.

77 Ibid. 148–9.

78 Ibid. 150.

79 Tombes, Antipaedobaptism, HL, GEN *AC6.D9236.Zz652t.

80 Ibid. 2.

81 Chaplin, Life of Henry Dunster, 289–301; MHS, ms N-1143, 157ff.

82 MHS, ms N-1143, 157.

83 Ibid. 160–2.

84 Ibid. 159.

85 Ibid. 160.

86 Ibid. 161–2.

87 Ibid. 162.

88 Morison, Harvard College, i. 307.

89 Tolmie, Murray, The triumph of the saints: the separate churches of London, 1616–1649, Cambridge 1977, 50Google Scholar; Carla Gardina Pestana, Quakers and Baptists in colonial Massachusetts, Cambridge 1991, 22; Bingham, ‘English Baptists', 547, 555.

90 Holyoke's copy of Broughton, Concent, HL, *AC6 H7482 Zz590b, fo. 50r.

91 Broughton, Concent, AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fo.<23>v.

92 Edward Holyoke, The doctrine of life, or of mans redemtion, London 1658 (Wing H.2534), sig. A2r.

93 Ibid. 63–4, 69, 195–8.

94 Ibid. 57.

95 See Holyoke's annotations in HL, *AC6 H7482 Zz590b, fo. 14; AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fos <11>r-<13>v.

96 See the comments in HL *AC6 H7482 Zz590b, fo. 14; AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fo. <13>r-v; AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fo. <13>r; HL, *AC6 H7482 Zz590b, fo. 14.

97 Holyoke's covenant theology was near-identical to that of his friend William Pynchon: Michael Winship, ‘Contesting control of orthodoxy among the godly: William Pynchon reexamined', William and Mary Quarterly liv (1997), 795–822; C. de Jong, ‘“Christ's descent” in Massachusetts: the doctrine of justification according to William Pynchon (1590–1662)’, in C. de Jong and J. van Sluis (eds), Gericht Verleden: kerkhistorische opstellen aangeboden aan prof. dr. W. Nijenhuis ter gelegenheid van zijn vijfenzeventigste verjaardag, Leiden 1991, 129–58.

98 Holyoke, The doctrine of life, sig. A2r–v. Holyoke's annotated books and his relationship to Broughton will be discussed in my forthcoming book, Amateur divines: lay learning and the Bible in the seventeenth-century Atlantic world.

99 AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fo. <31>r.

100 Isaiah liv.5–6.

101 AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fo. <31>v.

102 Ibid. fos <31>v-<32>r.

103 Ibid. fo. <32>r.

104 Ibid. fo. <32>r–v.

105 Ibid. fo. <33>r.

106 Ibid. fo. <33>r.

107 Coffey, John, ‘From marginal to mainstream: how Anabaptists became Baptists', in Weaver, C. Douglas (ed.), Mirrors and microscopes: historical perceptions of Baptists, Colorado Springs 2015, 510Google Scholar; J. F. McGregor, ‘The Baptists: font of all heresy', in J. McGregor and B. Reay (eds), Radical religion in the English Revolution, New York 1984, 26; Bradstock, Andrew, Radical religion in Cromwell's England: a concise history from the English Civil War to the end of the Commonwealth, London 2010, 4Google Scholar; Gura, A glimpse of Sion's glory, 94.

108 I am grateful to the anonymous peer-reviewer for raising this important issue and suggesting lines of inquiry.

109 Mather, Cotton, Magnalia Christi Americana: or, The ecclesiastical history of New-England, London 1702, iv. 175Google Scholar.

1 This edition follows the conventions of semi-diplomatic transcription.

2 These mediations consist of (a) a paraphrase of Isa. liv. and (b) the address ‘To the Anabaptists', on which the letter is based.

3 The meditations were written between about 1637 and autumn 1653.

4 This refers to the curse of Ham's family in Genesis ix.20–7 and building of the tower of Babel, the latter of which according to Broughton and Holyoke occurred around 1936 annus mundi, approximately 2,000 years before Christ's life (3928–60 annus mundi), after which Ham's descendants were allowed into the Church along with Gentiles, as promised in Isaiah liv, according to Holyoke's reading.

5 Isa. liv.5.

6 Acts ii.38–9; note that earlier in Acts ii.1–12, a polyglot crowd miraculously understood each other, following the prophecy of Joel ii.28-32 (cited in Acts ii.17–22), and inverting the confusion of tongues at Babel that, in Holyoke's reading, marked the excommunication of certain families of Noah.

7 John x.1–21. Holyoke echoes the language of Isa. xl.11.

8 Ephesians iii.18; Psalm cxxxvii.8–9.

9 Ezekiel xvi.20 and xxiii.37, following the theme of Jerusalem as a sinful bride to God, describe how the bride sacrificed God's children to idols. Holyoke's point is that these verses demonstrate God's care for children born in his Church.

10 Isa. liv.17.

11 Isa. liv.12 uses the metaphor of exalted Jerusalem to represent the value of God's covenant. Holyoke interprets shaar, normally ‘gate', as window: compare AHTL, 343 B875co 1590, fo. <31>r.

12 1 Corinthians iii.12–13 contrasts buildings made of wood, hay and stubble with those of gold, silver and precious stone, with the quality of the building revealed by fire. The buildings represent different Churches and the fire represents God's final judgement.

13 Holyoke is thinking of the Münster rebellion, in which anabaptists took control of the German city Münster for a year: Haude, Sigrun, In the shadow of ‘savage wolves': anabaptist Münster and the German Reformation during the 1530s, Leiden 2000, 146–54Google Scholar.

14 Isa liv.16–17.

15 Following Broughton's chronology, the covenant with Abraham that created the nation of Israel occurred at 2108 annus mundi, which was over 1,500 years before the ‘divorce’ of that bond with the New Testament covenant of Jesus (c. 3928–60 annus mundi).

16 Deuteronomy xxxii.21.

17 Romans x.19, citing Deuteronomy xxxii.21, and Galatians iv.27, citing Isa. xliv.1.

18 Gen. xvii.17–21.

19 Isa. liv.13; Ezekiel lvi.20, xxiii.37.

20 Psalm cxlviii.12.

21 1 Cor. iii.12–13.

22 Exodus xxix.45-6 and Leviticus xxvi.15 refer to God forming a covenant with the Israelites and agreeing to be their God; 1 Cor. vi.15, Revelation xxi.3 and 1 Peter ii.5 are similar promises but between Jesus Christ and his followers, echoing the language of the earlier Old Testament promises (as, for example, Rev. xxi.3 echoes Lev. xxvi. 15).

23 Gen. xii.3.

24 The learned man is Hugh Broughton: the ‘like revolutions’ are the recurrence of numerical patterns throughout history. See Broughton, Concent, sig. Aiiir. Holyoke described these revolutions as ‘for ease of our memory, & pleasure of considering old & late matters’ in his copy of Broughton's Concent, HL, *AC6 H7482 Zz590b, fo. 10r.

25 Romans xi.11–16 and 1 Cor. vii.14 were commonly used to argue that the offspring of believers were members of the visible church and had a ‘covenant-holiness’ that enabled them to receive baptism from birth. See, for example, Baxter, Plain scripture proof, 43–9, 80–100, or Beza, Theodore, Novum testamentum, Geneva 1598Google Scholar, fos 130v–131r.

26 Gen. ix.27.

27 Holyoke's anxiety over whether infant baptism was in the earliest ecclesiastical writings is common: cf. Tombes, An apology or plea, 7. Holyoke's insertion could refer to any number of writers from Marshall, A defence of infant-baptism, 1–61 to Henry Savage, Quaestiones tres in novissimorum comitiorum vesperiis Oxon. discussae, Oxford 1653 (Wing S.761A), 5–9.

28 2 Chronicles xx.20.

29 Matthew xviii.7.

30 ‘Let us take heed.’

31 The Greek is 2 Timothy iii.13, which the English translates.