Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T03:46:41.670Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Fall of the Ottoman Empire and the Restoration of Israel in the “Judeo-centric” Strand of Puritan Millenarianism1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Richard W. Cogley
Affiliation:
Richard W. Cogley is an associate professor of religious studies at Southern Methodist University.

Extract

For the American Puritan minister Increase Mather, the battle of Armageddon would be “the most terrible day of battel that ever was.” “Asia is like to be in a flame of war between Israelites and Turks,” he wrote in The Mystery of Israel's Salvation, “[and] Europe between the followers of the Lamb and the followers of the beast.” In the Asian and European spheres of action, or so Mather anticipated, God's Israelite and Protestant armies would “overthrow great Kingdoms, and make Nations desolate, and bring defenced Cities into ruinous heaps.” The inevitable victory would reshape the course of history, for the destruction of Roman Catholic and Ottoman power would be accompanied by the conversion of the Jews and the lost tribes of Israel to Christianity and by their restoration to their ancestral homeland in Palestine. Then would come the birth of the millennium in Jerusalem and the subsequent spread of the kingdom of Jesus Christ throughout Europe, the Middle East, and the rest of the world.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 2003

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

2. Mather, Increase, The Mystery of Israel's Salvation (London: John Allen, 1669), 3637.Google Scholar

3. Gribben, Crawford, The Puritan Millennium: Literature & Theology, 1550–1682 (Portland, Ore.: Four Courts, 2000), 1125Google Scholar; and Smolinski, Reiner, “Apocalypticism in Colonial North America,” in Bernard, McGinn, Collins, John J., and Stein, Stephen J., eds., The Encyclopedia of Apocalypticism (New York: Continuum, 1998) 3:3671.Google Scholar

4. Knight, Janice, Orthodoxies in Massachusetts: Rereading American Puritanism (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1994), especially 131–33, 166–67, 178–84.Google Scholar

5. This supposition is based on the following studies of Reformed eschatology outside England and America: Backus, Irena, Reformation Readings of the Apocalypse: Geneva, Zurich, and Wittenberg (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000)Google Scholar; Hotson, Howard, Paradise Postponed: Johann Heinrich Alsted and the Birth of Calvinist Millenarianism (Boston: Kluwer Academic, 2000)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Williamson, Arthur H., Scottish National Consciousness in the Age of James VI: The Apocalypse, the Union and the Shaping of Scotland's Public Culture (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1979)Google Scholar; van den Berg, J., “Eschatological Expectations Concerning the Conversion of the Jews in the Netherlands during the Seventeenth Century,” in Peter, Toon, ed., Puritans, the Millennium, and the Future of Israel: Puritan Eschatology, 1600–1660 (Cambridge: James Clarke, 1970), 137–53Google Scholar; and van der Wall, Ernestine G. E., “Petrus Serrarius and Menasseh ben Israel: Christian Millenarianism and Jewish Messianism in Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam,” in Yosef, Kaplan, Henry, Mechoulan, and Popkin, Richard H., eds., Menasseh ben Israel and His World (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1989), 164–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6. Holyoke, Edward, The Doctrine of Life (London: Nath. Ekins, 1658), 290 (mispaginated 298)Google Scholar; and Williams, , The Complete Writings of Roger Williams (New York: Russell and Russell, 1963), 2:269, 3:262, 4:354.Google Scholar

7. Pynchon, William, The Covenant of Nature made with Adam Described (London: for the author, 1662), 417, 423Google Scholar; and Parker, Thomas, The Visions and Prophecies of Daniel Expounded (London: Edmund Paxton, 1646), 149, 155Google Scholar. For Calvin, Beza, and Perkins, see Gribben, , The Puritan Millennium, 3840, 69Google Scholar; and for Baxter and Cotton Mather, see Smolinski, , “Israel Redivivus: The Eschatological Limits of Puritan Typology in New England,The New England Quarterly 63 (1990): 366, 385–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

8. This definition of millenarianism is adapted from Hotson, , Paradise Postponed, 18Google Scholar; Gribben, , The Puritan Millennium, 31Google Scholar; and Dwight Bozeman, Theodore, To Live Ancient Lives: The Primitivist Dimension in Puritanism (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988), 198–99.Google Scholar

9. For sixteenth-century Protestant amillennialism in England and elsewhere in Europe, see Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 199, 202–5, 211–12Google Scholar; Hotson, , Paradise Postponed, 3Google Scholar; Gribben, , The Puritan Millennium, 2640Google Scholar; and Backus, , Reformation Readings, 611, 2536, 7175, 108–12. Amillennialism was also the point of view of Augustine and Aquinas.Google Scholar

10. For Piscator and Alsted, see Hotson, , Paradise Postponed, especially 121–53Google Scholar; and for Mede, see Firth, Katharine R., The Apocalyptic Tradition in Reformation Britain, 1530–1645 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979), 213–38Google Scholar, and Christianson, Paul K., Reformers and Babylon: English Apocalyptic Visions from the Reformation to the Eve of the Civil War (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1978), 124–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar John Napier, a late-sixteenth-century Scottish Presbyterian, taught a future terrestrial millennium in his A Plaine Discovery of the whole Revelation of Saint John (Edinburgh: R. Walde-grave, 1593).Google Scholar Because he antedated Piscator, Alsted, Brightman, and Mede, Napier might seem to be more deserving of the credit for starting the shift to millenarianism. Napier, however, was not a millenarian in the sense the term is used in this essay; his future millennium was of short duration, approximately fifty years in length. For more on Napier's distance from millenarianism proper, see Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 205.Google Scholar

11. For the growth of millenarianism in seventeenth-century Puritanism, see Clouse, R. G., “The Rebirth of Millenarianism,” in Toon, ed., Puritans, the Millennium, and the Future of Israel, 4265Google Scholar; Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 216–17, 235–36Google Scholar; and Gribben, , The Puritan Millennium, 4256Google Scholar. For the continuation of amillennialism in Puritan circles, see Ball, Bryan W., A Great Expectation: Eschatological Thought in English Protestantism to 1660 (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1975), 160–64.Google Scholar

12. For Milton, see Firth, , The Apocalyptic Tradition, 232–37Google Scholar, and Gribben, , The Puritan Millennium, 130–31Google Scholar; for Eliot, see Cogley, Richard W., John Eliot's Mission to the Indians before King Philip's War (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999), 76103Google Scholar; and for Sewall, see Smolinski, , “Israel Redivivus,” 378–80.Google Scholar

13. Brightman's major works were full commentaries on the Books of Revelation and Canticles, a partial commentary on the Book of Daniel, and a treatise on the figure of the Antichrist written against the Jesuit controversialist Robert Bellarmine. These four were published as The Workes of That Famous, Reverend, and Learned Divine Mr. Tho. Brightman (London: John Field, 1644).Google Scholar For the millennium that ended around 1300, see ibid., 813, 816; and for scholarly treatments of Brightman, see Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 198214Google Scholar (quotation on 206), and Firth, , The Apocalyptic Tradition, 164–79.Google Scholar

14. For Finch's debt to Brightman, see Prest, Wilfrid R., “The Art of Law and the Law of God: Sir Henry Finch (1558–1625),” in Donald, Pennington and Keith, Thomas, eds., Puritans and Revolutionaries: Essays in Seventeenth-Century History presented to Christopher Hill (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978), 108, 112–13.Google Scholar

15. Mather, Increase, A Dissertation Concerning the Future Conversion Of The Jewish Nation (London: Nath. Hillier, 1709), 11.Google Scholar For time of authorship for the two works, see Hall, Michael G., The Last American Puritan: The Life of Increase Mather (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1988), 77, 273, 279, 325.Google Scholar

16. Students of English Puritanism are more concerned with the problem of defining “Puritanism” than their Americanist counterparts, who do not face the formidable challenge of trying to isolate a partisan minority within an established Anglican Church. For a discussion of the problems of definition, see Cohen, Charles L., “Puritanism,” in Cooke, Jacob Ernest and others, eds., Encyclopedia of the North American Colonies (New York: Charles Scribners' Sons, 1993), 3:577–79.Google Scholar A related issue is whether or not a person had to be of English nationality in order to qualify as a Puritan. David George Mullan has recently shown how definitions of Puritanism fit Scottish Presbyterianism equally well. Scottish Puritanism, 1590–1638 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar

17. Lake, Peter, Moderate Puritans and the Elizabethan Church (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982), 252–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Prest, , “The Art of Law and the Law of God,” 103, 112Google Scholar; Capp, Bernard S., The Fifth Monarchy Men: A Study in Seventeenth-Century English Millenarianism (Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Littlefield, 1972), 240241Google Scholar; and Batten, J. Minton, John Dury: Advocate of Christian Reunion (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1944), especially 100112Google Scholar. For Goodwin, , Archer, , Hooke, , Lee, , and Knollys, , see The Dictionary of National Biography on CD-ROM (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995).Google Scholar

18. I have read most of the printed sources written by New England Puritans, or by future or former New England Puritans, through about 1680. The eschatological views of many of these figures do not surface in their sources, or else do not surface to the extent needed to determine if the authors were Judeo-centrists, millenarians of a different sort, or amillennialists. Based on my research, I am prepared to say that for persons whose eschatologies can be confidently classified, millenarians outnumbered amillennialists in New England during this period, and Judeo-centrism was the dominant form of millenarianism. My research into the voluminous sources written by English Puritans is presently superficial, and I am reluctant to make any claims about the prevalence of any given form of eschatology there.

19. For example, Wilson, John F., Pulpit in Parliament: Puritanism during the English Civil Wars, 1640–1648 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969), 223–30Google Scholar; and Liu, Tai, Discord in Zion: The Puritan Divines and the Puritan Revolution, 1640–1660 (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1973), 2956, especially 3839.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

20. Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, especially 193226.Google Scholar

21. Several citations are normally furnished to document a given point. Many of the references come from Brightman, Cotton, Goodwin, and Increase Mather, who were the most expansive of the figures incorporated into this essay. Citations are occasionally taken from persons outside my roster of Judeo-centric millenarians, either to document something more generally true of Puritanism or else to illustrate a point about Judeo-centrism. In these last instances, the author's extant discussions of eschatology are not extensive enough to establish that he was clearly a Judeo-centrist; however, they are sufficiently intriguing to suggest that he was one. Examples of these probable Judeo-centrists include Edward Taylor, Peter Bulkeley, John Fiske, and Edward Johnson.

22. Fairfield, Leslie P., John Bale: Mythmaker of the English Reformation (West Lafayette, Ind.: Purdue University Press, 1976)Google Scholar; Lamont, William M., Richard Baxter and the Millennium (Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Littlefield, 1979)Google Scholar; Gilpin, W. Clark, The Millenarian Piety of Roger Williams (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979)Google Scholar; and Capp, , The Fifth Monarchy Men.Google Scholar

23. Firth, , The Apocalyptic TraditionGoogle Scholar; Christianson, , Reformers and BabylonGoogle Scholar; Gribben, , The Puritan MillenniumGoogle Scholar; Smolinski, , “Apocalypticism in Colonial North America”Google Scholar; and Bauckham, Richard, Tudor Apocalypse: Sixteenth-Century Apocalypticism, Millenarianism, and the English Reformation: From John Bale and John Foxe to Thomas Brightman (Oxford: Sutton Courtenay, 1978).Google Scholar

24. Wilson, , Pulpit in ParliamentGoogle Scholar; Liu, , Discord in ZionGoogle Scholar; and Christopher, Hill, The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas during the English Revolution (New York: Viking, 1972).Google Scholar

25. By the same token, there was probably no school of thought that did not hold some points in common with other schools. The destruction of Antichrist, for example, was anticipated by virtually all Puritans, as Hill, Christopher shows in Antichrist in Seven-teenth-Century England (London: Oxford University Press, 1971Google Scholar; revised edition New York: Verso, 1990); and the notion of a future Jewish conversion was not limited to Judeo-centrists, but was espoused by many amillennialists, as the cases of William Perkins and others indicate. Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 202.Google Scholar

26. Notable examples of thematic studies are Ball's A Great Expectation, Hill's Antichrist, and Davidson's, James WestThe Logic of Millennial Thought: Eighteenth-Century New England (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1977).Google Scholar

27. Much of the terrain covered in this essay has been surveyed by Nabil Matar in two books and in two articles: Islam in Britain, 1558–1685 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998)Google Scholar; Turks, Moors, and Englishmen in the Age of Discovery (New York: Columbia University Press, 1999)Google Scholar; “The Idea of the Restoration of the Jews in English Protestant Thought: From the Reformation until 1660,” Durham University journal 78 (1985): 2336Google Scholar; and “The Idea of the Restoration of the Jews in English Protestant Thought, 1661–1701,” Harvard Theological Review 78 (1985): 115–48. Although I have benefited greatly from Matar's able and provocative work, I disagree with several of his main points, particularly his explanation for why Puritan millenarians of the Judeo-centric type advocated the repatriation of Judah and Israel.Google Scholar

28. Matar, , Islam in Britain, 2149.Google Scholar

29. Hubbard, William, The Benefit Of A Well-Ordered Conversation (Boston: Samuel Green, 1684), 55Google Scholar; and Noyes, Nicholas, New-Englands Duty and Interest (Boston: John Allen, 1698), 32.Google Scholar

30. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the Arabic terms “Islam” and “Muslim” were not generally used in the English-speaking world until the nineteenth century, although the French loan word “Mussulman” was in circulation well before that time.

31. Matar, , Islam in Britain, 57158Google Scholar; and Napier, , A Plaine Discovery, 131.Google Scholar

32. For the Ottomans, see Brightman, , The Workes, 922–24Google Scholar; Cotton, John, The Bloudy Tenent Washed and Made White in the Bloud of the Lambe (London: Hannah Allen, 1647), 13Google Scholar; Hooker, Thomas, The Stay of the Faithfull (London: M. Flesher, 1638), 33Google Scholar; Hooke, William, A Discourse Concerning The Witnesses (London: Thomas Cockeril, 1681), 1617Google Scholar; and Huit, Ephraim, The whole Prophecie of Daniel Explained (London: H. Overton, 1643), 211, 325.Google Scholar For the Arabs and Persians, see Matar, , Islam in Britain, 155Google Scholar; and Marshall, J. and Williams, Glyndwr, The Great Map of Mankind: British Perceptions of New Worlds in the Age of Enlightenment (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982), 1718.Google Scholar

33. Wilson, John, Zacheus Converted (London: Fulke Clifton, 1631), 546–47.Google Scholar

34. Cotton, , The Bloudy Tenent Washed, 1213Google Scholar; and Mather, , A Dissertation, 1213.Google Scholar

35. Noyes, , New-Englands Duty, 33Google Scholar; and Goodwin, Thomas, An Exposition upon the Book of the Revelation, in Miller, John C., ed., The Works of Thomas Goodwin, D.D. (Edinburgh: James Nichol, 1861), 3:6162.Google Scholar

36. Cotton, John, The Powring Out of the Seven Vials (London: Ralph Smith, 1645), 90102Google Scholar; and Goodwin, , An Exposition, 8182, 130–31, 140–41.Google Scholar

37. Puritan usage of the words “Jew” and “Israelite” was rarely precise. Usually, the context of a given passage provides clues as to whether an author was talking about the descendants of the House of Judah, about the lost tribes of Israel, or about both branches of the posterity of Jacob.

38. Hooke, preface to Mather, The Mystery, f. [b5v]; Lee, Samuel, Israel Redux: Or the Restauration of Israel (London: John Hancock, 1677), 114Google Scholar; and Edward Taylor to Samuel Sewall, September 29, 1696, in Mukhtar Ali Isani, “The Pouring of the Sixth Vial: A Letter in a Taylor-Sewall Debate,” in Massachusetts Historical Society, Proceedings 83 (1971): 128.Google Scholar

39. Archer, John, The Personall Reigne of Christ Upon Earth (London: Benjamen Allen, 1642), 9Google Scholar; and Dury in Edward, Winslow, ed., The Glorious Progress of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New England (London: Hannah Allen, 1649), in Massachusetts Historical Society, Collections, 3rd series, vol. 4 (1834): 93–95.Google Scholar

40. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 93Google Scholar; Lee, , Israel Redux, 115Google Scholar; Mather, , The Mystery, 31, 56Google Scholar; and Dury in Winslow, , ed., The Glorious Progress, 9395Google Scholar, and in Thorowgood, Thomas, Iewes in America, Or Probabilities That the Americans are of that Race (London: Thomas Slater, 1650), ff. d2–e2.Google Scholar

41. Brightman, , The Workes, 542–44, 861, 930Google Scholar; Mather, , The Mystery, 5, 1517, 46, 54Google Scholar; Cotton, John, A Brief Exposition with Practical Observations upon the Whole Book of Canticles Never Before Printed (London: Ralph Smith, 1655), 185, 224Google Scholar; [Henry, Finch], The Worlds Great Restauration or the Calling of the Jews (London: Edward Griffin, 1621), 20, 50, 97Google Scholar; Thomas, Shepard, The Sincere Convert, Discovering The Paucity of True Believers (London: Humphrey Blunden, 1641), 8283Google Scholar; Hanserd, Knollys, The World that Now is; And The World that is to Come (London: T. Snowden, 1681), 2:2022Google Scholar; and Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 2526.Google Scholar The seventeenth-century Puritan perhaps most associated with the lost tribes theory, Thomas Thorowgood, was not a Judeo-centrist. See Cogley, Richard W., “The Ancestry of the American Indians: Thomas Thorowgood's Iewes in America (1650) and Jews in America (1660),” forthcoming, English Literary Renaissance.Google Scholar

42. Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 5180, 238–42.Google Scholar

43. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 97, 107–8, 130Google Scholar; and Goodwin, , An Exposition, 2122, 2829.Google Scholar

44. John, Cotton, An Exposition upon the Thirteenth Chapter of the Revelation (London: Livewell Chapman, 1655), 7, 225Google Scholar, and The Powring Out, 103, 108; and Hooke, , A Discourse, 5.Google Scholar

45. Brightman, , The Workes, 394–95Google Scholar; Cotton, , An Exposition, 81Google Scholar; William, Aspinwall, An Explication and Application of the Seventh Chapter of Daniel (London: Livewell Chapman, 1654), 39Google Scholar; Huit, , The whole Prophecie, 184Google Scholar; and Hanserd, Knollys, Mystical Babylon Unvailed (London: n.p., 1679), 30.Google Scholar

46. Brightman, , The Workes, 543–44Google Scholar; Cotton, , The Powring Out, 93Google Scholar; Samuel, Hutchinson, A Declaration of a Future Glorious Estate of a Church to be here upon Earth (London: for the author, 1667), 27Google Scholar; and Mather, , The Mystery, 31, 46.Google Scholar

47. Brightman, , The Workes, 548–49Google Scholar; Cotton, , The Powring Out, 90102Google Scholar; Isani, , “The Pouring of the Sixth Vial,” 127Google Scholar; and Hutchinson, , A Declaration, 27.Google Scholar

48. Matar, , Islam in Britain, 158–59.Google Scholar

49. [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 51.Google Scholar

50. Ibid., 50; Lee, , Israel Redux, 70Google Scholar; and Thomas, Weld, A Further Discovery of that Generation of men called Quakers (London:. S. B., 1654), 12.Google Scholar

51. Mather, , A Dissertation, 30Google Scholar, and A Mystery, 25, 46.

52. Brightman, , The Workes, 954, 967, 1065Google Scholar; [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 56, 99Google Scholar; Goodwin, , An Exposition, 198, 202Google Scholar; and Huit, , The whole Prophecie, 366 (mispaginated 356).Google Scholar

53. Ibid., 206, 334; and Goodwin, , An Exposition, 23.Google Scholar

54. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 130.Google Scholar See also Noyes, , New-Englands Duty, 68Google Scholar; John, Norton, A Discussion of that Great Point in Divinity, The Sufferings of Christ (London: G. Calvert, 1653), f. A3Google Scholar; and Knollys, , Mystical Babylon Unvailed, 3031.Google Scholar

55. Hanserd, Knollys, An Exposition Of the whole Book of the Revelation (London: for the author, 1689), 198–99Google Scholar; [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 57, 71Google Scholar; and Peter, Bulkeley, The Gospel-Covenant (London: Benjamen Allen, 1646), 8.Google Scholar

56. Dury in Thorowgood, Iewes in America, ff. e3v–[e4]; and Mather, , The Mystery, 1617.Google Scholar

57. Goodwin, , An Exposition, 6263; and Hooke, preface to Mather, The Mystery, ff. [b7–b7v]. Matar notes that some English millenarians also hoped that the Safavid Persians, enemies of the Ottomans, would fight on the Lord's side as unwitting allies of the forces of good. Islam in Britain, 175–76. None of the millenarians under discussion here advanced this idea.Google Scholar

58. Mather, , The Mystery, 5657.Google Scholar

59. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 107Google Scholar; William, Hooke, New-Englands Sence, of Old-England and Irelands Sorrowes (London: John Rothwell, 1645)Google Scholar, in Samuel, Emery, The Ministry of Taunton (Boston: J. P. Jewett, 1853), 125Google Scholar; and Goodwin, , An Exposition, 28.Google Scholar

60. Brightman, , The Workes, 830Google Scholar; Cotton, , A Brief Exposition, 181Google Scholar, and The Powring Out, 112; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 52Google Scholar; and Hutchinson, , A Declaration, 24Google Scholar. For Tartary, which early modern Europeans often called “Scythia” or “Cathay,” see Huddleston, Lee Eldrige, Origins of the American Indians: European Concepts, 1492–1729 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967), 121.Google Scholar

61. For the limited English knowledge of Asia and America, see Marshall, and Williams, , The Great Map of Mankind.Google Scholar

62. Brightman, , The Workes, 802–4Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 49Google Scholar; Cotton, , A Brief Exposition, 180–81Google Scholar; and Lee, , Israel Redux, 120–22.Google Scholar

63. Ibid., 118–19.

64. Dury in Thorowgood, Iewes in America, ff. [d4]–e, e3–[e4v]; Mather, , The Mystery, 46Google Scholar; and Huit, , The whole Prophecie, 340–41.Google Scholar

65. Hutchinson, , A Declaration, 27Google Scholar; Cotton, , A Brief Exposition, 180–81Google Scholar; and Goodwin, , An Exposition, 28.Google Scholar

66. Ibid., 120, 198; and Cotton, , The Powring Out, 96.Google Scholar

67. [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 147Google Scholar; Mather, , The Mystery, 5657Google Scholar; and Lee, , Israel Redux, 76.Google Scholar

68. Ibid., 119; and Huit, , The whole Prophecie, 340.Google Scholar

69. Mather, , The Mystery, 18, 46Google Scholar; [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 34Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 47Google Scholar; and Goodwin, , An Exposition, 201–2. Gribben observes that while most Puritan millenarians ‘thought that the conversion of the Jews would happen before the millennium,’ there were some who ‘argued that the great conversion would happen after the fall of Babylon and the beginning of the thousand years.’ The Puritan Millennium, 179. None of our millenarians held to this point of view.Google Scholar

70. Mather, , A Dissertation, 12, and The Mystery, 90Google Scholar; and Cotton, , The Powring Out, 134, and A Brief Exposition, 188–89.Google Scholar

71. Mather, , The Mystery, 9, and A Dissertation, 9.Google Scholar

72. Goodwin, , An Exposition, 62, 199Google Scholar; Mather, , The Mystery, 18Google Scholar; Lee, , Israel Redux, 130Google Scholar; and Knollys, , An Exposition, 198–99, and The World that Now is, 2:20–22, 43–44.Google Scholar

73. Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 209.Google Scholar

74. John, Cotton, The Churches Resurrection (London: Henry Overton, 1642), 56, 13Google Scholar, An Exposition, 164 (mispaginated 156), and The Powring Out, 152; Brightman, , The Workes, 813–14Google Scholar; [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 233Google Scholar; Mather, , A Dissertation, 33Google Scholar; and Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 2830.Google Scholar

75. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 45, 49, and A Brief Exposition, 202–7, 219, 222–23Google Scholar; [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 80Google Scholar; [Goodwin, ], A Glimpse of Sions Glory (London: William Larnar, 1641), 2526Google Scholar; and [Dury, ], Considerations Tending To the Happy Accomplishment of Englands Reformation in Church and State [London: Samuel Hartlib, 1647], 1718.Google Scholar

76. Aspinwall's major discussions of the political and legal institutions of the millennium were The Legislative Power Is Christs Peculiar Prerogative (London: Livewell Chapman, 1656)Google Scholar and A Brief Description of the Fifth Monarchy, or Kingdome That shortly is to come into the World (London: M. Simmons, 1653).Google Scholar

77. [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 34.Google Scholar For similar statements, see Aspinwall, , A Premonition of Sundry Sad Calamities Yet to Come (London: Livewell Chapman, 1654), 24 (mispaginated 30)Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 10Google Scholar; Knollys, , An Exposition, 150Google Scholar; Cotton, , The Churches Resurrection, 810Google Scholar; and Mather, The Mystery, f. [cv].

78. Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 238–62 (quotation on 261).Google Scholar

79. Cotton, , A Brief Exposition, 212.Google Scholar See also Lee, , Israel Redux, 70Google Scholar; Thomas, Shepard, The Parable Of The Ten Virgins Opened & Applied (London: John Rothwell, 1660), 2:5657Google Scholar; and Bulkeley, , The Gospel-Covenant, 6, 16;Google Scholar

80. Cotton, “Sermon upon A Day of Publique thanksgiving” (1651), in Bremer, Francis J., “In Defense of Regicide: John Cotton on the Execution of Charles I,” The William and Mary Quarterly, third series 37 (1980): 114CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pope, Robert G., ed., The Notebook of the Reverend John Fiske, 1644–1675, Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Publications 47 (1974): 97Google Scholar; [Goodwin, ], A Glimpse, 23Google Scholar; and Mather, , The Mystery, 64.Google Scholar

81. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 151, 154Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 5Google Scholar; Aspinwall, , The Legislative Power, 45Google Scholar; Knollys, , An Exposition, 153, 199Google Scholar; and Jameson, J. Franklin, ed., Johnson's Wonder-Working Providence, 1628–1651 (1910: reprint. New York: Barnes and Noble, 1967), 138. In contrast to other Judeo-centrists, who anticipated that the millennial kingdom would eventually span the globe, Samuel Lee was open to the possibility that the kingdom would be limited to the bounds of the Roman Empire. Israel Redux, 89–90.Google Scholar

82. Cotton, , The Powring Out, 145.Google Scholar

83. Thomas, Shepard, The Clear Sun-shine of the Gospel Breaking Forth upon the Indians in New-England (London: J. Bellamy, 1648), in Massachusetts Historical Society, Collections, 3rd series, vol. 4 (1834): 60Google Scholar. The many statements made by Judeo-centric millenarians about the expansion of the millennium to the Catholic, Muslim, and pagan worlds provide an ample basis for rejecting Matar's suggestions that “no Muslim … would survive” Armageddon and that “Protestant Britons (and converted Jews) alone would live to celebrate” the millennium. Islam in Britain, 183.

84. Aspinwall, , A Brief Description, 45Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 21, 32Google Scholar; Mather, , The Mystery, 80Google Scholar; and Hooke, , A Discourse, 29.Google Scholar

85. Brightman, , The Workes, 801Google Scholar (mispaginated 701); Lee, , Israel Redux, 88Google Scholar; Cotton, , The Powring Out, 115Google Scholar; and Shepard, , The Parable, 1:910.Google Scholar

86. Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 16, 19Google Scholar; Thomas, Goodwin, A Sermon of the Fifth Monarchy (London: Livewell Chapman, 1654), 2730, and An Exposition, 180–93Google Scholar; and Mather, , A Dissertation, 18, 27.Google Scholar

87. Brightman, , The Workes, 359–77, 816–22, 837Google Scholar; and Cotton, , The Churches Resurrection, 6, 18.Google Scholar

88. Hutchinson, , A Declaration, 6, 15Google Scholar; Mather, , A Dissertation, 17, 34Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 1516, 2122Google Scholar; and Aspinwall, , The Legislative Power, 34.Google Scholar

89. Brightman, , The Workes, 808Google Scholar; Cotton, , The Churches Resurrection, 4, A Brief Exposition, 219, and The Bloudy Tenent Washed, 51Google Scholar; Shepard, , The Parable, 1:910Google Scholar; and [Finch, ], The Worlds Great Restauration, 48, 75.Google Scholar For the middle advent, see Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 207–9.Google Scholar

90. Aspinwall, , An Explication, 4143, and The Legislative Power, 35Google Scholar; and Thomas, Goodwin, Zerubbabels Encouragement To Finish the Temple (London: R. Dawlman, 1642), 13, 48, and A Glimpse, 13–14.Google Scholar

91. Noyes, , New-Englands Duty, 68.Google Scholar For a similar expression of certitude, see Brightman, , The Workes, 544.Google Scholar

92. See Hill, , “‘Till the conversion of the Jews,’” in The Collected Essays of Christopher Hill (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1986), 2:269300, especially 270–76.Google Scholar

93. Brightman, , The Workes, 954, 967Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 49Google Scholar; [Finch, ], The Great Restauration, 56, 60Google Scholar; Huit, , The whole Prophecie, 366 (mispaginated 356)Google Scholar; Shepard, , The Clear Sun-shine, 60Google Scholar; and [Goodwin, ], A Glimpse, 32, and An Exposition, 198.Google Scholar

94. Goodwin, , An Exposition, 104–5Google Scholar; and Thomas, Shepard, The Sound Beleever; or, A Treatise of Evangelicall Conversion (London: R. Dawlman, 1645) 149, 250–51Google Scholar. Although first published in 1683, Goodwin's An Exposition was written in or around 1639.

95. Cotton, , An Exposition, 96, 259Google Scholar, The Powring Out, 77–78, 83, 95, The Churches Resurrection, 15, “Sermon upon A Day,” 117–20, and Cotton to Oliver Cromwell, July 28, 1651, in Sargent, Bush Jr., ed., The Correspondence of John Cotton (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press), 461Google Scholar; and Jameson, , ed., Johnson's Wonder-Working Providence, 270–71.Google Scholar

96. For Menasseh and Dury, see Katz, David S., Philo-Semitism and the Readmission of Jews to England, 1603–1655 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1982), 158244Google Scholar; and Benjamin, Braude, “Les contes persans de Menasseh Ben Israël: Polémique, apologétique et dissimulation à Amsterdam au xviie siècle,” Annales, Histoire, Sciences Sociales 49 (1994): 1107–38.Google Scholar

97. Matar, , Islam in Britain, 177–81Google Scholar; Gershom, Scholem, Sabbatai Sevi: The Mystical Messiah, 1626–1676, trans. Zwi Werblowsky, R. J. (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1973), 333–40, 348–54, 543–49Google Scholar; and van der, Wall, “Petrus Serrarius,” 185–89.Google Scholar

98. See David, Brady, “1666: The Year of the Beast,” in Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library 61 (19781979): 314–36.Google Scholar

99. Matar, , “The Idea of the Restoration of the Jews in English Protestant Thought, 1661–1701,” 145–46.Google Scholar

100. Mather, , A Dissertation, 12Google Scholar; and Noyes, , New-Englands Duty, 68.Google Scholar

101. Wilson, , Zacheus Converted, 546, 548.Google Scholar

102. The citations for these points are given in note 7 above.

103. Gribben, , The Puritan Millennium, 3940.Google Scholar

104. Mather, , A Dissertation, 11.Google Scholar

105. Mather, , The Mystery, 5657, 7983Google Scholar; Dury in Thorowgood, Iewes in America, ff. [d4v–e4]; and Goodwin, , A Sermon, 2425.Google Scholar

106. For discussions of early modern Jewish messianism, see Scholem, , The Messianic Idea in Judaism and Other Essays on Jewish Spirituality (New York: Schocken, 1971), 148, and Sabbatai Sevi, 8–102.Google Scholar

107. Ibid., 349.

108. Matar, , Islam in Britain, 171.Google Scholar

109. Scholem, , Sabbatai Sevi, 287, 449.Google Scholar

110. Matar, , Islam in Britain, 168–83 (quotations on 168, 169, 175, 181), and Turks, Moors, and Englishmen, 106–7.Google Scholar

111. Bozeman, , To Live Ancient Lives, 217–36Google Scholar; Smolinski, , “Israel Redivivus,” 361–66, 388–90Google Scholar; Knight, , Orthodoxies in Massachusetts, 159–61, 275Google Scholar; Olsen, V.N., John Foxe and the Elizabethan Church (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973), 3647Google Scholar; and Bauckham, , Tudor Apocalypse, 7088.Google Scholar

112. Cotton, , A Brief Exposition, 180Google Scholar; and Bulkeley, , The Gospel-Covenant, 21.Google Scholar

113. Aspinwall, , A Premonition, 25 (mispaginated 33)Google Scholar; Archer, , The Personall Reigne, 26Google Scholar; and Mather, , The Mystery, 58.Google Scholar