This week we cover the beginnings of post-transcendental Unitarianism through a paper by Thomas Wentworth Higginson, liberal Unitarian minister, supporter of John Brown, commander of the first Black regiment in the Civil War, and a friend of Theodore Parker and Emily Dickinson. Here is that paper in full and abridged versions, as well as access to Higginson's complete works and writings about several parts of Higginson's life.
Sympathy of Religions
HTML
from transcendentalists.com (abridged version)
Free
Kindle
as
PDF
Writings of Thomas Wentworth Higginson (PDF) [1] [2] [3] [4]
White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson by Brenda Wineapple (2008)
In 1867, the Free Religion Association was founded by ministers who wanted to go beyond the Christianity to which mainstream Unitarians were tied. The group's first national convention was in Boston on May 28, 1869 and was covered in some detail by the New York newspapers. We'll discuss that meeting and the "Fifty Affirmations" of Octavius Brooks Frothingham and the anonymous "Modern Principles" published in the "Free Religious Index", a weekly newspaper published by Francis Ellingwood Abbot with William James Potter, one of whom probably wrote them. Here are a lot more references by and about the people in this movement.
New
York Times on first Free Religion Conference [PDF image] 1869
New
York Herald on first Free Religion Conference [HTML] 1869
Free Religious Index: A Weekly Paper Devoted to Free Religion"
"Fifty Affirmations" and "Modern Principles" from The Index, No. 1
Octavius Brooks Frothingham: The religion of humanity 1873
Octavius Brooks Frothingham: Recollections and Impressions, 1822-1890 1891
"The Free Religious Association" by Rev. Richard A. Kellaway
Probably we should have covered this reaction to Transcendentalism earlier because it was what the Free Religionists were rebelling against, but this group was on top for a long time after the Free Religionists drifted out of the spotlight. While it is true that a more structured belief system advocated by Henry Wentworth Bellows at the 1865 Unitarian Convention was better at keeping a group together, it has not been that stable over time. James Freeman Clarke tried to bridge the differences, sort of, but our class found less affinity for any of these writers than for the Free Religionists.
New York Times on the April 7, 1865 Unitarian Convention
Henry Whitney Bellows: "A Suspense of Faith" 1859
James Freeman Clarke: "Orthodoxy: its truths and errors" 1866-1876
James Freeman Clark: "Imperfect and Perfect Theism" 1870
James Freeman Clark: Ten Great Religions: An Essay in Comparative Theology 1871
"The Things Most Commonly Believed To-day Among Us" 1887
Our last class of this series covers the state of Unitarianism as a liberal religion before the start of World War I, based on a widely respected 1913 paper by Harvard Divinity School Dean William Wallace Fenn. There will be conflicts to come...